Fall Preview 2021

Amy Sherald, Michelle Obama, 2018
Los Angeles museums are planning a fall season with few parallels. Start with the debut of the brand-new Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, realization of a century-long dream. It opens Sep. 30 with ruby slippers, a big glass sphere, and a retrospective of anime master Hayao Miyazaki. 

Next to that, the hottest ticket will probably be the Obama portraits tour, landing at LACMA in November. But for sheer organizing skill, the biggest coup is a trio of Getty Museum loan exhibitions on Holbein, Watteau, and Rubens. Or make that a quartet, counting a Poussin show opening next February. Maybe that's a fluke of pandemic schedule juggling, but it's also a result of the Getty's commitment to small and mid-sized exhibitions with big intellectual heft. 

If you're thinking East Coast museums have Old Master line-ups like that all the time, think again. The Metropolitan Museum has no shows of European painting or sculpture opening this fall. Closest to it is, um, "the Met's first-ever exhibition exploring the work of Walt Disney… and the use of French motifs in his films and theme parks, drawing new parallels between the studios' magical creations and their artistic models."

A selection of upcoming shows in L.A.:
Miné Okubo, drawings for Citizen 13660, before 1946
A graphic novel of the WWII detention camps sounds like a natural. In fact such a work was published in 1946, within months of the last camp's closure. The Japanese American National Museum is presenting "Miné Okubo's Masterpiece," referring to the writer/artist's Citizen 13660. The JANM holds the original drawings; this will be the first time they've been exhibited. The show runs Aug. 28, 2021–Feb. 2022. (In the mean time, the book is back in print.)

The California African American Museum has a traveling show of LaToya Ruby Frazier's The Last Cruze, a set of 67 photographs, a video, and an architectural installation chronicling the closure of General Motors' Lordstown, Ohio plant. (Sep. 8, 2021–Mar. 2022).
Pipilotti Rist, Open My Glade (still from single-channel video), 2000
MOCA reopens the Geffen with "Pipilotti Rist: Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor" (Sep. 12, 2021–June 6, 2022) and "Judith F. Baca: The World Wall." As a muralist Baca long had trouble getting recognition from museums. That is changing: The MOCA show will overlap the Baca retrospective now at the Museum of Latin American Art and follows the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art's acquisition of Baca's archive for the Great Wall of Los Angeles.
Installation of Judy Baca's World Wall: A Vision of the Future Without Fear, 1990
Hayao Miyazaki, Porco Rosso (still), 1992
The Academy Museum's inaugural shows include "Hayao Miyazaki" and pop-up installations on the films of Pedro Almodóvar and Spike Lee (opening Sep. 30, 2021). The permanent collection galleries are to be ever-changing. They will initially foreground pre-cinematic technologies, The Wizard of Oz, and the art of background painting.
Otobong Nkanga, In Pursuit of Bling—Desire, 2014. To be shown in "Witch Hunt"
The UCLA Hammer Museum has two group shows opening in October: "Witch Hunt" (a global selection of feminist and queer artists, many never before shown in L.A.) and "No Humans Involved" (seven emerging artists and collectives). Both exhibitions run Oct. 10, 2021, to Jan. 9, 2022. 
Hans Holbein the Younger, Member of the von Wedigh Family, 1533. Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
The Getty's "Holbein: Capturing Character in the Renaissance," co-organized with the Morgan Library & Museum, assembles drawings and paintings for "the first major presentation of Holbein's art in the United States" (Oct. 19, 2021–Jan. 9, 2022). 
Unknown artist, Portrait of a Sailor (Paul Cuffe?), about 1800. LACMA
"The Obama Portraits Tour," at LACMA, runs Nov. 7, 2021, to Jan. 2, 2022. If you're on the fence about making timed reservations for two paintings, LACMA is supplementing Barack & Michelle with a companion installation, "Black American Portraits," containing about 150 images. Most are rarely exhibited photos and prints from the permanent collection (through Apr. 17, 2022).
Peter Paul Rubens, The Hunt of the Calydonian Boar, about 1611–12. J. Paul Getty Museum
At the Getty Villa, "Rubens: Picturing Antiquity" will juxtapose paintings, oil sketches, and drawings with ancient objects that inspired the artist (Nov. 10, 2021–Jan. 24, 2022).
Jean-Antoine Watteau, Reclining Nude, about 1713–1717. Norton Simon Museum
Back to Brentwood, the Getty's "La Surprise: Watteau in Los Angeles" is a focus show assembling a dozen works from area collections to mark the 300th anniversary of the artist's death (Nov. 23, 2021–Feb. 20, 2022).
Aztec Mirror, 1325–1521. LACMA
LACMA marks the 500th anniversary of the fall of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan with "Mixpantli: Space, Time, and the Indigenous Origins of Mexico" (Dec. 12, 2021–May 1, 2022). Mixpantli means "banner of clouds." The Nahua used it to describe a premonition of Spanish conquest. The LACMA exhibition will show Mesoamerican objects alongside early Spanish colonial pieces. 
Nicolas Poussin, Dance to the Music of Time, about 1634–1636. Wallace Collection, London
Looking into early 2022, the Getty's "Poussin and the Dance," organized with the National Gallery, London, is to include the famous Dance to the Music of Time in the Wallace Collection (Feb. 15–May 8, 2022). LACMA has a four-decade Barbara Kruger retrospective (Mar. 20–July 17, 2022).
Barbara Kruger, Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You, 2019

UPDATE: There's also a focus show of Manet "Philosophers" coming to the Norton Simon Museum in November. That means greater L.A. will have exhibitions on Manet, Watteau, Rubens, and Holbein running simultaneously. 

Comments

Anonymous said…
Now that LACMA is non-existent, or rattles on in name only, thank God for the Getty.
Anonymous said…
I understand what you mean, a show about black portraits = non-existent. To me it's the opposite, it affirms LACMA.
Anonymous said…
Wow, it's all about race for you, isn't it.

Even worse, I doubt you'd care about the race (or ethnicity, gender, nationality, sexuality) of people in paintings if they happened to be [insert name of race, ethnicity, gender, nationality, sexuality here] whose politics you didn't care for.
Anonymous said…
^^^ You are the one who made all it about race. Now, shut up...
Anonymous said…
So you're not a leftist?
Anonymous said…
LACMA pushed its Sam Francis exhibition to spring of 2023. https://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/sam-francis-and-japan-emptiness-overflowing