
San Francisco has lost to Chicago in the high-profile contest to host filmmaker George Lucas' museum of popular and cinematic art. Lucas announced today that the new facility will be built on a 17-acre parcel on Chicago's Lake Michigan waterfront. The site of the newly rechristened Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is close to a cluster of established museums, including the Field Museum of Natural History, Shedd Aquarium and Adler Planetarium.
In a statement, Lucas said:
“We are honored to be partnering with the city of Chicago and the many cultural, educational and community groups that have come forward with ideas about how the LMNA will add to their vibrant work. I am humbled to be joining such an extraordinary museum community and to be creating the museum in a city that has a long tradition of embracing the arts.”
Lucas originally proposed building the museum on a site adjacent to Crissy Field in the Presidio. When he presented the plan in March 2013, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Lucas planned to spend $250 million to $300 million to build the museum and grant the institution $800 million in endowments. The filmmaker's vision for the San Francisco museum was a grand one, the Chronicle said:
Lucas is confident that his proposal, three years in the making, would fulfill those goals at no cost to the Presidio Trust. He will pay for everything. The museum would be a gathering place for families, he said, and showcase 150 years of populist art, including the illustrations of Norman Rockwell and Maxfield Parrish, comics, children's books, fashion, cinema and digital technology. There would be permanent and rotating exhibitions, and programs that would be an extension of Edutopia, the educational foundation he started in 1991 to improve K-12 learning.
But that plan collapsed last February when the group that controls development at the historic former Army base, the Presidio Trust, rejected a scaled-down Lucas museum plan and two other proposals for the site. The trust said none of the plans was appropriate for what is considered a marquee property.
Lucas' representatives immediately declared that the museum would consider sites in other cities, and Chicago quickly emerged as the leading contender. Lucas's wife, investment banker Mellody Hobson, is a Chicago native and reportedly lobbied fiercely for the Lake Michigan waterfront site. Los Angeles also began courting the filmmaker this month.