L to R: E. H. Shepard, “Christopher Robin at the enchanted place,” illustration for
Home Chat, 1928. Graphite, ink, and watercolor on paper, 9 3/4 x 7 in. (24.8 x 17.8 cm). Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, PKY.3820; Dorothea Lange,
Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936. Gelatin silver print, 18 3/4 x 14 1/2 in. (47.6 x 36.8 cm). Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, PKY.1062; N. C. Wyeth, “For a mile, or thereabouts, my raft went very well,” illustration for
Robinson Crusoe, 1920. Oil on canvas, 47 1/8 x 36 1/2 in. (119.7 x 92.7 cm). Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, PKY.3733; Rafael Navarro, art for
Sonámbulo: Mexican Stand-Off, 2006. Acrylic on canvas, 24 x 18 x 3/4 in. (45.7 x 60.9 x 1.9). Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, 2021.22.2.
George Lucas and Mellody Hobson co-founded the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art to honor the universal tradition of telling stories through images. Encompassing everything from prehistoric cave paintings to today’s screen art, the Museum explores and celebrates the power of visual storytelling to inspire individuals, give shape to beliefs and ideals, and forge community.
Built in Los Angeles’s Exposition Park, the Museum is housed in a 300,000-square-foot building designed by Ma Yansong of MAD Architects with Stantec to embody the emotional power of narrative art, creating a sense of wonder, possibility, and connection to something larger than ourselves. The building is integrated into a new 11-acre campus including a park designed by Mia Lehrer of Studio-MLA: a green, multilayered gathering place for local communities and an extraordinary programming resource that brings learning and engagement outdoors.
About the Inaugural Exhibitions
The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art explores how artists depict the essential myths that help us make sense of the world, giving us shared values and common beliefs, bringing us together as a community, and creating a sense of belonging.
Inaugural exhibitions include more than 1,200 objects representing narrative art across time and around the world. Installed across more than 30 galleries, they occupy approximately 100,000 square feet of gallery space.
Drawn from the Museum’s founding collection, the exhibitions trace the evolution of human culture through storytelling, from ancient sculptures of gods and goddesses to Renaissance paintings to photographs, comics, and modern cinema.
Many exhibitions are organized by theme, focusing on myths about love, family, community, and adventure that connect every generation. These shared stories, told over and over in many forms, bind us together and define our human experience.
Other exhibitions are devoted to individual artists of the 20th century, whose images connected our modern imaginations with ancient emotions and beliefs.
The exhibitions are filled with familiar and recognizable objects and art that’s part of everyday life, creating welcoming spaces that feel warmly human and provide a sense of belonging.
Contemporary vehicles of visual storytelling such as illustration, comics, and graphic stories have not always received the respect they deserve. The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art creates a home for what George Lucas has called “the people’s art.”
Exhibitions include:
- Architecture - the innovative designs that inspired the architectural vision of the museum
- Benton - selected works of Thomas Hart Benton’s depiction of American life
- Children's stories - illustrations of children’s literature by Beatrix Potter, Leo Politi, E.H. Shepard, Jacob Lawerence, and more
- Cinema - a selection of production designs, props, and costumes from the Lucas Archives
- Everyday life – a series of galleries dedicated to visual stories about Childhood, Community, Family, Love, Motherhood, Play, School, Sports, and Work, expressing the myths that have both reflected and shaped modern American society
- Civic Life – artists’ portrayals of experience in the courthouse, the polling place, the political headquarters, and more
- Comics • Graphic Stories - a showcase of the museum’s deep holdings of American and European comics, including works by Mœbius, Marie Severin, Jack Kirby, Alison Bechdel, Jim Lee, Frank Miller, and Rafael Navarro
- Manga • Anime – selections from the Museum’s collection of the influential work in Japanese illustration and animation
- Frazetta – selected illustrations and book covers by the flamboyant Frank Frazetta
- History - paintings, prints, and illustrations telling (and pointedly re-telling) the stories of major historical events
- Jessie Willcox Smith - classic scenes by the illustrator of fairy tales and childhood scenes
- Murals – large-scale, public works of narrative art by Judith F. Baca, Diego Rivera, and JR
- Narrative Forms: a series of galleries highlighting narrative art across genres of Adventure, Fantasy, Romance, and Science Fiction by artists including Julie Bell, Boris Vallejo, Ken Kelly, Georges Méliès, John C. Berkey, and Jeffrey Catherine Jones
- Parrish – lush, dreamy visions from the early 20th century by illustrator Maxfield Parrish
- Photography – powerful documentary images by Robert Capa, Gordon Parks, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Dorothea Lange, and others
- Rockwell – a selection of the Museum’s renowned holdings of works by premier American illustrator Norman Rockwell
- Wyeth – book illustrations from the 1910s through the 1940s by the incomparable N.C. Wyeth
- Western Stories – myths of the American West, including wagon trains, shoot-outs, frontier towns, and more