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    Back to Art Talk

    Art Talk

    I Wanna Wish You an 'Artsy' Christmas

    What would A Christmas Day Art Talk be without Mr. Scrooge? His latest misdeed is a royal screw-up of a major cultural exchange between Russia and Great Britain. A few weeks before the opening in London of a blockbuster exhibition from the Hermitage and three other major museums, the Russians called it off...

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    By Edward Goldman • Dec 26, 2007 • 4m Listen

    What would A Christmas Day

    Art Talk be without Mr. Scrooge? His latest misdeed is a

    royal screw-up of a major cultural exchange between Russia and Great Britain. A few weeks before the opening in London of a blockbuster exhibition from the Hermitage and three other major museums, the Russians called it off.

    They claim that the British government failed to provide full assurances protecting the loaned masterpieces, including the Matisse 'Dance,' against possible legal claims from ancestors of Russian collectors who owned these paintings before the 1917 October Revolution. Some suggest that the real beef is political tension over the murder of a Russian dissident, Alexander Litvinenko, which happened in London last year. The Brits are demanding the extradition of the main suspect in the case, a Russian citizen living in Moscow, but the Ruskies have flatly refused.

    You absolutely must visit Art Talk on the KCRW website to check out the hilarious cartoon based on Matisse with Vladimir Putin and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown as two of the dancers.

    Meanwhile, here in our City of Angels, the art scene is bright and bubbly: neither Scrooge nor Grinch can steal the Christmas spirit. The

    Museum of Contemporary Art show of Takashi Murakami is enjoying the highest attendance of any living artist exhibition in the museum's history. The Getty Center is celebrating its 10th anniversary with a bouquet of exhibitions, among them the exceptional '

    Medieval Treasures from the Cleveland Museum of Art.'

    And the Huntington Library, after a $20 million renovation, is getting ready to reopen its world famous Art Gallery.

    But it was a recent sneak peek at what's going on behind the scenes at

    LACMA that gave me the biggest thrill of this season of joy. It's only two months away from the unveiling of the new museum pavilion designed by

    Renzo Piano and named

    Broad Contemporary Art Museum, in honor of Los Angeles philanthropist/collector

    Eli Broad and his wife, Edyth. Once more, I urge you to go to the KCRW website to look at the exclusive pictures of the construction site I was allowed to visit the other day. Compared to LACMA's dark and bulky older buildings, the elegant and spacious Broad Museum is bathed in daylight a trademark of Piano's architecture which has made him the most sought-after architect for major museum projects around the world.

    I marveled at the rusty curves of the two latest gigantic

    sculptures by Richard Serra dominating the ground-floor galleries of the new pavilion. And who could resist the sophistication and innocent charm of Chris Burden's installation of 200 antique streetlights the artist collected from all over Los Angeles?

    To be honest, I was nursing a small grudge against LACMA for preventing me from getting a early look at the surprise gift of the Janice and Henri Lazarof Collection - including works by Picasso, Giacometti and Brancusi.

    But all was forgiven when I was invited to see the museum boardroom and director's office - magically transformed by John Baldessari in the spirit of the recent Magritte exhibition. You have to see it to believe it. Merry Christmas.

    '© Murakami'

    Through February 11, 2008

    Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

    152 North Central Avenue

    Los Angeles, CA 90013

    213-626-6222

    'Medieval Treasures from the Cleveland Museum of Art '

    Through January 20, 2008

    J. Paul Getty Museum

    1200 Getty Center Drive

    Los Angeles, CA 90049-1687

    310-440-7330

    Huntington Library

    1151 Oxford Road

    San Marino, CA 91108

    626-405-2100

    Los Angeles County Museum of Art

    5905 Wilshire Blvd

    Los Angeles, CA 90036

    323-857-6000

    • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

      Edward Goldman

      Host, Art Talk

      CultureArts
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