News of the Arroyo


Title:

Autry moves ahead with Southwest plans

Subtitle:

Date:

2006-09-24

Summary:

September 24, 2006 - The Autry has finally puts its plans for the Southwest Museum down on paper, but they don't take much space.

Author:

Christopher Reynolds

Publication:

Los Angeles Times

Content:

THREE years after the Autry National Center took control of the
impoverished Southwest Museum, Autry leaders and the Southwest\'s Mount
Washington neighbors are still having tense conversations about the
center\'s plans to move most of the Southwest\'s Native American
artifact collection and to boost nonmuseum uses of the Southwest\'s
historic but crumbling campus.

But now, for what it\'s worth, the debate is down on paper, and there\'s
a new target date for the beginning of the Southwest campus\' next
incarnation — five years down the road.

On Tuesday, Autry leaders, community activists and the city Human
Relations Commission held the last of six public meetings on the
subject, and the Autry offered a summary of public input to date:
1,013 pages of opinions, from postcards to petitions, including
thousands of signatures demanding that the museum\'s collection not
leave the neighborhood, and also a humble proposal for a bowling alley
at the museum\'s hilltop site. The crowd at the meeting was estimated
at between 150 and 200.

Much of the feedback, the Autry acknowledged, conflicts with its
ambitions for the site. But Autry leaders — who closed the Southwest
galleries June 30 for repairs and conservation of the collection — say
the Southwest\'s current setup doesn\'t pencil out financially and that
they see enough support to stick with their plans for the place.

Autry Chief Executive John Gray said he was \"excited and gratified\" by
the meeting and that he sensed \"growing acceptance\" of the Autry\'s plans.

There was no such acceptance, however, from Ann Walnum, co-founder of
the Friends of the Southwest Museum Coalition, which has accused the
Autry of \"cultural piracy.\"

\"I am definitely unsatisfied. Two rooms do not a museum make,\" Walnum
said, referring to a key aspect of the Autry plan. She said the group
would meet with community members Oct. 3 to ponder the next steps in
their fight against the Autry\'s plans.

\"We still want to be friends to a real museum,\" said Walnum.

Though details about money and the Autry\'s prospective partners remain
hazy, the center aims to expand its Griffith Park campus, which
includes the previous cowboy-heavy Museum of the American West, then
move most of the Southwest collection to the Autry campus. Meanwhile,
back in Mount Washington, it plans to upgrade the Southwest\'s
deteriorating buildings and reopen them as a multipurpose site with
cultural and educational programs along with two galleries of
exhibition space.

The Autry merged with the Southwest, the oldest museum in Los Angeles,
after a long decline left the older institution broke, with paltry
visitor traffic and on the brink of closure. (The Southwest\'s gift
shop and research library remain open.) Autry officials said Tuesday
that if fundraising, city permits and construction logistics in
Griffith Park can be handled as planned, the repurposed Southwest will
reopen in 2011. That\'s a year later than earlier estimates, Gray
acknowledged, but probably a more realistic reflection of the work
involved.

The next big step, Gray said, would be the completion of more detailed
Autry plans, which he said would be \"early in 2007.\"

*

— Christopher Reynolds

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