Annenberg Space Will Not Reopen

The Annenberg Foundation has announced the permanent closure of the Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City. Founded by Wallis Annenberg, and closed since the March lockdown, it had presented free, populist-themed photography exhibitions for just over a decade. A letter from Annenberg does not say why the space is being shut down, other than that the decision was "borne out of the pandemic that has upended public institutions across the world." The parent Annenberg Foundation remains active and will focus on COVID-19 relief and "our commitment to social and economic justice."

L.A. has no shortage of places to see photography. The Annenberg Space was uniquely middlebrow, with most of the shows focusing on celebrities, animals, and feel-good spins on topical themes. The title of the now-final exhibition captures the sensibility: "Vanity Fair: Hollywood Calling / The Stars, the Parties, and the Powerbrokers."

The Annenberg Space joins other public galleries that have shut down in recent years: the Pasadena Museum of California Art, the Main Museum, and the Marciano Art Foundation. If there's a connecting thread, it's that one person was writing the checks—and got tired of it.

Comments

Anonymous said…
There's only so much money to go around.

Tell that to people like Barry Munitz (formerly of the Getty, now I believe on the board of the Broad) and Michael Govan (currently of LACMA).

The people managing the AMPAS museum at Wilshire at Fairfax haven't needed to be told too much about that for awhile now.

A light is at the end of the tunnel. Its color may be red, but, oh well.
Anonymous said…
"The Annenberg Foundation has a 30-year history of providing support to the arts, public health, social justice, education and education reform, underserved communities, criminal justice reform, and racial equity. ASP has worked to reflect those values and priorities, and will ensure that its past exhibits, archives of interviews, and audio tours will live online through social media and www.annenbergphotospace.org."