Lucas Updates Website

The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art has updated its website with new photos of the essentially complete Ma Yansong building and campus. Also online are hi-res images of a selection of works in the collection. 

The Lucas opens Sep. 22, 2026.


Rendering of Library

Jacob Lawrence, "The Ant and the Grasshopper," illustration for Aesop's Fables, 1969. (c) 2026 The Jacob and Gwendolyn Knight Lawrence Foundation

Harlem Renaissance artist Jacob Lawrence produced a set of 23 black-and-white illustrations for a 1970 edition of Aesop's Fables published by Simon & Schuster. The original, large-format (29 by 23 in.) ink drawings were previously owned by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and lent to a 2013 show at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Willamette University. The drawings augment lithographs and a tempera painting by the artist in the Lucas collection.

Comments

Anonymous said…
I notice some of the listed works are described as on loan. I didn't think so early on in the game, the Lucas would need to borrow works in order to fill out its galleries. Just as LACMA since 2020 hasn't made much of an effort to include many items from its own collection (which isn't modern/contemporary), I wonder if the Lucas is going to do a version of the same thing?

But instead of inserting contemporary works on loan and not bothering with the permanent collection, will the Lucas insert a lot of "narrative" borrowed from outside sources and ignore a lot of its own Star Wars material?

A large portion of visitors to the Lucas will be likely most interested in the owner's output from the movie franchise he made famous.

As for LACMA, I wonder how many of its visitors are more interested in contemporary art compared with works from older periods and of other formats?
Re: "As for LACMA": I want the whole encyclopedia.
Many of the works credited "loan from a private collection" have previously been identified as owned by George Lucas. My guess is that all the "loans" shown on the site are from Lucas' or Hobson's personal collection. It is notable that only a few pieces are owned outright by the Lucas Museum—one is the Colescott "George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware."
Anonymous said…
^ That's what I was guessing, thinking it may be a legal-technical arrangement that allows Lucas and his wife to have greater control over what is or isn't exhibited.

Even among the closest of friends, relatives or colleagues, things can get sticky or messy.

When MOCA on Grand Ave was being planned, one of its original major supporters got into a big fight with who should or shouldn't be the architect and pulled out at the last moment. I believe a variation of the same thing occurred in the early 1960s when LACMA was being planned.

> whole encyclopedia.

After seeing the special-exhibition schedule for the past few years of the Metropolitan, I totally got why art critic Christoper Knight has been so dismissive of Govan and his management of LACMA.

Before then, I gave the museum more slack because its budget is much smaller and the Geffen is making that even worse. But then it occurred to me how the Resnick Pavilion since 2020 has had way too many displays of on-loan contemporary art. Meaning that Govan and his people have been spending even more money than they have to.

Although loans of contemporary art and temporary exhibits of it do cost way less than big-time shows, they still cost more than displays of a museum's own permanent collection.
Anonymous said…
The building is too much. The worst part is the podium.
The landscape design doubles down on the excess.
This is the Space Mountain of museum buildings.
Instead of art, there should be a roller coaster inside.
Perhaps, that is the plan in the long run.

--- J. Garcin
Anonymous said…
The "Art and Artists" page has replaced a previous web page on "Narrative Art," which featured a considerable number of works by twentieth-century artists of color and queer artists. No longer need to keep the smoke screen of social justice up, I guess, under Lucas's oversight of "content direction."

Now missing: Frida Kahlo, Kadir Nelson, George Herriman, Miguel Covarrubias, Criselda Vasquez, Judy Baca, Separate Cinema Archive, Charles White, Paul Cadmus, Jeffrey Catherine Jones, Carrie Mae Weems, Joey Terrill, Alfredo Ramos Martínez, Yinka Shonibare, Ernesto Yerena (with Shepard Fairey).

Also missing are more historical artworks, like Pieter Brueghel the Younger and Utagawa Kuniyoshi.

Here is the old site: https://web.archive.org/web/20250429003716/https://www.lucasmuseum.org/narrative-art

The new site uses an Ernie Barnes as a background, but doesn't identify the artist.

No more need to highlight works by artists who share the identities of people who live around this tax-dodge monstrosity of an old man's ego. Glad to see good old America classic imagery back to the forefront: men enacting violence, middle-class white people, and big-busted, sexy ladies.
The uncredited Ernie Barnes is "Quintet," which sold for $645,000 in 2023. Mellody Hobson, Lucas' wife and museum co-founder, is rumored to have been the underbidder on "Sugar Shack" when it sold for $15.3 million in 2022.
https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2022/05/inside-the-wild-west-auction-for-the-sugar-shack?srsltid=AfmBOordmUZ4oUS3PhPLJ8KF2y8ZT3NO7aNok1Azi0Qxyctr_i-dYEUy