The Man, the Metropolis, and the $720 Million Museum
In the ’90s, director Andrea Rich tried to recruit a then 33-year-old Govan, newly installed at the top perch at Dia, to join the museum, but he rebuffed the offer. He wasn’t sure that Los Angeles was a town for ambitious artists, the types of people who could support a thriving art ecosystem. He recalled what the artist John Baldessari said to his students around the time Govan was a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego, a decade earlier: After graduating from one of LA’s much-ballyhooed elite art schools, it was time to leave for a place where art was actually appreciated, namely New York. By the time Govan was recruited to come to LACMA in the early 2000s, he’d checked back with Baldessari. The artist had changed his tune. Los Angeles, he had decided, was a place where artists could actually live. “Yeah, he told them to stay—he always told them to go to New York, and he would say this and then there was a moment where he said, ‘No, …



