Sunday, February 23, 2025
HomeEntertainmentArtFire Risks for Fine Art in Los Angeles

Fire Risks for Fine Art in Los Angeles



I’ve seen no mention of risk to fine art in the context of the horrendous
fires in Los Angeles, California – so decided to see what I could find.

It seems to me there are four main risks

  • The Art Galleries housing fine art (eg Getty Museum; Los Angeles Museum of
    Art)
  • The Security Archives holding art bought as an investment
  • The Archives of individual artists with homes in the area – such as David Hockney
  • The homes of very rich people who buy art – I mourn the loss of the art…

This is a resume of what I can find out so far.

Art Galleries – appear OK

I remember back in 2019, during the last really bad wildfires near Los
Angeles, being extremely impressed with the precautions that the Getty Museum
had taken in relation to risks from potential natural disasters.

This time the Getty seems to be in the clear again – and this is part of the
reason why
How LA’s Getty Center built a fire-proof fortress for priceless art

I plugged in
“Art Galleries in Los Angeles, CA” into Google Maps
to see how close the major art galleries were to the six fires.

Fires are marked by a flickering fire motif
North: Hurst Fire
Central:
Sunset Fire
West: Pacific Palisades Fire
East: Eaton Fire


It looks as if most of the main galleries (eg Los Angeles County Museum of
Art) are all in built up areas which are more unlikely to wildfire
– although
who can tell given the extreme high winds carrying fiery embers all over the
city

West of Pacific Palisades the fire seems to be burning its way along Malibu
down to the coast.

News reports indicate the following

The Getty Villa had “made extensive efforts to clear brush from the
surrounding area as part of its fire mitigation efforts throughout the
year”, Katherine E Fleming, president and CEO of the J Paul Getty Trust


It seems as if the Getty Villa has the same superior protection measures as
The Getty Museum.

Officials confirmed no damage to the Getty Villa Museum or its collection,
but vegetation on the site has burned.

“Additional fire prevention measures in place at the Villa include water
storage on-site,” said Fleming in the statement. “Irrigation was
immediately deployed throughout the grounds Tuesday morning. Museum
galleries and library archives were sealed off from smoke by
state-of-the-art air handling systems. The double-walled construction of
the galleries also provides significant protection for the
collections.” 

 


Security Archives ??

Security Archives are the types of places where very expensive artwork bought as an investment languishes for years.

They are the sorts of places which don’t advertise their
existence – interestingly there are none in Los Angeles listed on Google that I can find – apart from the archives of public / museum collections. Yet I cannot believe none exist there for the art collections of wealthy people not on their walls.

As they are not cheap and also hold enormous value in the
vaults, normally one would expect them to have the sort of precautions against
risk such as those employed by the Getty Museum. 

I’m guessing these are probably OK – if they did their risk management plans
properly and followed up with appropriate action.

Artist Archives

The David Hockney website lists the artwork in public collections – and some
are in Los Angeles, notably very large ones at the LA County Museum and The
Getty Gallery. 


I came across a listing which said that his archives were held at his office
on Santa Monica Boulevard
– which now seems to be rather close to the Sunset
Fire.

David Hockney’s former home in Hollywood Hills


His home in the Hollywood Hills – at the junction of Woodrow Wilson Drive with
Montcal Avenue
now appears to be
a Historic Archive
– and is very, very close to the the mandatory evacuation area of Sunset Fire
which is spreading up Runyon Canyon. 

This is where he painted many of his famous paintings of California living. It would be extremely sad if this were to burn….

Homes of very rich people


The Pacific Palisades Evacuation Map

– burning west to Malibu and
east to Santa Monica 

A LOT of homes of very rich people in Pacific Palisades – including
billionaires – have burned to the ground.


Those homes undoubtedly included fine art of very considerable value
in terms
if individual pieces and as a collection of art hung in the home. If you have
a small painting, you can wrap it in a towel, pop it in a suitcase and get out
fast. Larger paintings are rather more difficult to transport safely.

What has been lost is anybody’s guess – but doubtless there will be comments
on this topic in the future.

Commiserations – and reminders…..

All that remains of Carol’s brand new studio after the fire.
Her home was also levelled. They had insurance to start again…


Although my interest is very much in art, I am – of course – very sad for all those people who have lost their homes and their possessions in ‘a flash’. 

People fleeing with just what they can carry is not a phenomena only associated with refugees in war zones. It happens to very ordinary people too.  

I vividly remember back in 2011, the account back by Carol Marine of how little time she had to collect the things that were important to her when she had to vacate her home very fast because of a really fierce fire which had erupted in Bastrop, Texas.

Carol’s blog – Before the Fire in which she tells us what she chose to grab as she left her home and studio fast

I use her story and a picture of what happened on the Insurance Page on my Art Business Info for Artists website (see above). Carol and her family had the insurance which allowed them to start again. They subsequently moved to a wetter part of the US.

Just a reminder that memories remain – if we remember to upload our photographic archives to the cloud before such disasters occur.

Plus we can always start again – so long as we have insurance.

PS Absolutely nothing would ever persuade me to live in a wooden house.



RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Skip to toolbar