Opening a Treasure Box

At the new Asian Art Museum, an unrivaled collection gets a splendid display, at last.

Martin Holden

The Buddha is levitating. Well, dangling from a forklift anyway. A mammoth 12th-century figure of Guanyin (the bodhisattva of compassion) from Northern China, it twirls gently, four feet above the dusty ebony floors, suspended in a straitjacket of yellow nylon webbing pulled tight across the folds of its marble robes. It's late December, and the 1,700-pound statue is one of the first artworks being installed in the still-unfinished north wing of the new Asian Art Museum, which opens this month in Civic Center.

It's easy to see why these stone and bronze statues are the first to go in. Around the corner, sparks are flying from the welders' torches as they rush to complete an installation in the Himalayas gallery, so no one is ready to unfurl any delicate ancient textiles or hanging scrolls just yet. But the fountains of yellow sparks, describing graceful arcs through the gloom of the unlit halls, might as well be fireworks celebrating the opening of the largest museum in the United States devoted exclusively to Asian art.

It is the realization of a long-held dream for San Francisco art lovers. For four decades, the Asian Art Museum's unparalleled collection of masterworks—now 14,000 pieces strong—has gone without a home worthy of its stature, languishing in storage or displayed in a sadly piecemeal fashion. With the long-planned new Jewish and Mexican museums, in Yerba Buena Center, proceeding fitfully at best, it's especially gratifying to see the new Asian opening at last.

"These large stone pieces are really very easy to install," principal preparator Guy Herrington, a big, easygoing art wrangler, says during a break. "Especially compared to the ceramics, like Beavis and Butt-head there." He's referring to a pair of colorful, nearly life-sized Tang Dynasty tomb-guardian figures, each sprouting a forest of delicate plumes, horns, and crests that look eminently breakable. He's not too fond of the lacquerware, either—those vanishingly thin coral-red bowls and ornamental objects covered with burnished extract from the tropical sumac tree. They are usually made of wood, and "sometimes the wood inside has completely rotted out," Herrington grumbles. "I don't even want to touch
'em."

As Herrington maneuvers his forklift between plastic-wrapped bodhisattvas, glimpses of shiny black basalt and gilt-flecked bronze hint at the treasures soon to be unveiled. That the museum has the luxury of devoting an entire wing of the third floor to Chinese Buddhist art symbolizes the extraordinary transformation it has undergone during its migration across town from its old home in Golden Gate Park. In this grand new space, ten exhibits, displaying some 1,200 objects on two floors, are devoted to Chinese art alone.

As the Guanyin Buddha dangles in midair, installation-team assistants Paul Palacios and Howard Faxon guide the statue toward its destination. Chief mount maker Vincent Avalos grabs the length of steel aircraft cable, the kind used to control 747s, that

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