Complete star score: ★★★★
The Swiss architect Peter Zumthor’s new $724m constructing for the Los Angeles County Museum of Artwork (Lacma) campus is lastly right here, and so is the second of judgment. For practically twenty years essentially the most religious Zumthor followers—led by the museum director Michael Govan himself—have imagined a scrupulously considerate, even soulful, museum atmosphere, whereas others anticipated an oppressive concrete overpass constructed by an architect who doesn’t know the very first thing in regards to the metropolis.
It seems Zumthor is aware of one thing important—find out how to harness the acuity of the pure gentle right here and the horizontality of the constructed panorama. Now referred to as the David Geffen Galleries, his constructing is, at its greatest, superb: a swooping concrete-and-glass construction that makes a shocking showcase for antiquities specifically. And it by no means helps you to overlook the place you might be, in one of many fast-changing cultural hubs of the centre-less metropolis of Los Angeles.
From a number of factors on the campus, you’ll be able to see inside the brand new exhibition house, perched on seven legs, or “pavilions”, the place eating places, a store, a bar and an training centre will quickly be operational. From the sq. behind Chris Burden’s lamppost set up City Mild (2008), you’ll be able to see the purple, orange, blue and inexperienced flowering types of Henri Matisse’s 1953 ceramic mural La Gerbe, the artist’s final fee.
Exterior view southeast towards Wilshire Boulevard with Tony Smith’s Smoke (1967) in foreground, David Geffen Galleries at Lacma Artwork: © Tony Smith Property/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Picture: © Iwan Baan
Extra importantly, the constructing invitations town inside it, with a fringe of floor-to-ceiling home windows providing views of the La Brea Tar Pits, neighbouring museums and visitors alongside Wilshire Boulevard. Even when deep inside one of many inside galleries, the place many of the work and photo-sensitive objects are put in, you might be simply steps away from reconnecting to the cityscape and bathing in its gentle—fantastically modulated by the Japanese designer Reiko Sudō’s gauzy metallic curtains.
This feels very totally different to the nice encyclopaedic museum buildings of Paris, London, New York and Chicago, the place it’s simple to overlook the place you might be, not to mention the time of day. Then once more, Govan understood, from the second he took the highest job in 2006, that Lacma doesn’t have a group at that stage, however one riddled by main cultural gaps.
He sees Lacma as a cluster of collections or perhaps a cupboard of curiosities, and that’s how the brand new museum constructing operates, showcasing its nice Spanish spiritual work not too removed from its Arts and Crafts holdings and Persian antiquities, amongst different strengths. These sections, which frequently combine mediums and intervals, are loosely organised by a “4 oceans” rubric.
Massive and bizarre
All that uncooked concrete within the galleries performs favourites.
The Zumthor constructing performs fantastically when exhibiting sculpture and ornamental objects, which seem on minimalist wood tables, platforms or in wood-trimmed show instances of the architect’s design. An extended inside gallery with ultramarine-tinted partitions, a Buddhist theme and a profusion of Tibetan furnishings is especially beautiful.
Objects which are sizable fare nicely. These which are massive and bizarre fare the very best. The north elevators take you straight to a torso-less, six-legged, three-haunched beast made by the Los Angeles artist Liz Glynn (The Futility of Conquest, 2023) that defies logic and compels inspection. The Delhi-based artist Manjunath Kamath’s Vikatonarva (2024), a grand terracotta determine of a wild-eyed king topped by branches sprouting miniature heads, can also be stuffed with charisma. So is a paunchy Colima earthenware canine, caught mid-bark greater than 2,200 years in the past, within the “Historic Americas” part. A neo-Egyptian sphinx by the present art-star Lauren Halsey is simply icing on the antiquities cake—precise mummy masks and sepulchral effigies have by no means seemed so up to date.

Set up view of the inaugural presentation within the David Geffen Galleries at Lacma, April 2026 Picture © Museum Associates/Lacma
All that uncooked concrete within the galleries performs favourites. Wooden, stone, glass and clay objects have a tendency to come back alive on this atmosphere, enacting among the quasi-mystical, quasi-phenomenological beliefs about materiality which have lengthy guided the Japanese motion Mono-ha’s artists, comparable to Kishio Suga. Zumthor’s marriage of concrete and wooden additionally echoes Louis Kahn’s work with elemental supplies on the Salk Institute in San Diego. Textiles look beautiful right here, providing the sensual pleasures of soft-on-hard textures.
Oil work don’t at all times maintain up as nicely. The thick, generally tinted, inside partitions appear to work higher for work with sturdy varieties (suppose Paul Gauguin and Diego Rivera) than these with extra delicate imagery. The blue or purple tints themselves, streaky and irregular, might be distracting. How will you hold a portray on a portray?
In impact, the Zumthor constructing doesn’t merely flatten the normal, colonial museum hierarchies that privilege work (most of all European canvases) above, say, pottery—it inverts them. It is a museum made for issues, much more than painterly representations of issues.
Extra context, please
It will rank as a significant failure if the David Geffen Galleries had been the one constructing on the museum campus. However the Resnick Pavilion provides a versatile stage for non permanent exhibitions, the Broad Modern Artwork Museum has three flooring of huge, white-cube-style galleries and the flamboyant shrine-like Pavilion for Japanese Artwork, designed by the late Bruce Goff, provides a bespoke residence to Japanese scrolls, netsuke and extra. This wealth of exhibition areas drowns out the loud (however few) voices who waged a marketing campaign towards the Zumthor constructing for offering barely much less sq. footage than the decaying buildings it changed.
Sadly, the museum skimped on one thing else. Maybe as a part of its bigger challenge of refusing to conscript artwork into grand meta-narratives, Lacma has additionally stripped works of a lot particular historic and biographical context. One giant desk options ceramic vessels from a variety of cultures—a type of microcosm of the entire museum—the place makers are usually not recognized. Different artworks solely have fundamental labels. With quick panels, and one part flowing shortly into one other, it’s simple to do not know what you’re looking at, or why.

Set up view of the inaugural presentation within the David Geffen Galleries at Lacma, April 2026 Picture © Museum Associates/Lacma
Contemplate the part “Textile Conversations: Africa and Black America”, which juxtaposes 5 giant dizzyingly patterned African-American quilts with densely patterned Kuba and Mbuti textiles from Central Africa. You’ll not be taught from the house—and even from Lacma’s handbook—that two of the US artists, Laverne Brackens and Sherry Byrd, are mom and daughter. You’ll not be inspired to consider “ladies’s work” or “home labour,” not even should you comply with the QR codes. Nor will you uncover wherever that every one 5 quilts come from a late California collector, Eli Leon, whose romantic principle that “improvisational” African American quilt-making has African roots has been discredited by latest students.
What the gallery delivers are great textiles and apparent visible rhymes. Clearly the museum desires to let folks wander and have intense experiences with artwork. However is there no manner to offer extra info and interpretation, drawing on the curators’ deep experience? Is it not the job of museums to feed our curiosity, in addition to spark it? We have already got entry to a wealthy picture stream the place artwork objects float freed from context, in a fashion the Surrealists would have beloved: it’s referred to as Instagram. Our visionary museums—like Lacma—might and may discover methods do extra.
Member previews of the David Geffen Galleries proceed till 3 Could. The constructing opens to the general public on 4 Could.Curators: Numerous (45 in whole)Tickets: $25 (concessions obtainable
What the opposite critics stated
In The New York Instances, Michael Kimmelman calls the constructing “spectacular” and says the format is one which “encourages serendipity and through which it’s [..] helpful to get misplaced”. Nevertheless, Michael J. Lewis of The Wall Road Journal views it as “maddeningly troublesome to navigate” and provides: “for all its aspiration of freedom, it’s a straitjacket”. In the meantime, Edwin Heathcote in The Monetary Instances sees the constructing’s price and sheer use of fabric as “anachronistic” however concludes that “the brand new gallery is totally astonishing”.








