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Wednesday, 20 April 2011 02:47

Los Angeles County Museum of Art hits the market

Christian Marclay's "The Clock." Christian Marclay's "The Clock." Todd-White Art Photography / April 19, 2011

In London this fall, art critics piled on the superlatives. In New York this winter, crowds braved the cold to line up outside Paula Cooper Gallery and get a look. Now Angelenos will have their chance to see Christian Marclay's video-art hit "The Clock," which the Los Angeles County Museum of Art has just purchased as part of an annual fundraising and collecting event.

Through this event, known as Collectors Committee Weekend, LACMA acquired eight artworks for roughly $2.7 million. Priced at under half a million dollars for one in an edition of six, "The Clock" was not the most expensive work of the group, but it was the biggest attention-getter.

A 24-hour-long meditation on the nature and artifice of time, "The Clock" consists of thousands of film (and to a lesser degree television) clips that feature clocks and watch faces, edited so that the time you see on-screen reflects the current time. "I can't imagine a piece more appropriate for LACMA, the epicenter for film and art," said associate contemporary art curator Christine Kim. The museum will screen the work in May.

Another high-profile purchase was a 2006 spherical sculpture by the Chinese artist-activist Ai Weiwei, who is currently in the news because of his detention by Chinese authorities. This sculpture, the first by the artist to enter LACMA's collection, was purchased for $400,000 from the Friedman Benda gallery in New York.

"We always try to pursue a very balanced group of artworks that reflect the encyclopedic nature of the museum," LACMA director Michael Govan said, "but it did happen this year that we had strong contemporary works.

"We don't have a general acquisitions endowment, which most museums of our size have, so this is an important occasion where we can buy works of art for the public," he added.

The collectors' event is also meant to be fun, making a semi-public sport out of the usual buttoned-up museum acquisition process. Instead of curators proposing new acquisitions before board members behind closed doors, they make pitches to a broader group of LACMA supporters who have ponied up money for the right to vote on acquisitions at a Saturday night gala dinner.

This year, 83 people bought gala tickets starting at $15,000 per couple, creating a kitty of nearly $1.5 million to spend on art. LACMA trustee Viveca Paulin-Ferrell, actor Will Ferrell's wife, chaired a live auction Saturday night that raised an additional $435,000 for purchases.

Some individual donors helped out. At the dinner on Saturday, Govan announced that Marclay's "The Clock" was no longer in the popular competition, as Steve Tisch, who became a LACMA trustee last year, pledged the $467,500 needed for the acquisition.

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