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Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego

The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD), in San Diego, California, United States, is an art museum focused on the collection, preservation, exhibition, and interpretation of works of art from 1950 to the present.

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego
Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla branch in 2008
Location within Northwestern San Diego
Former name
The Art Center in La Jolla, La Jolla Art Museum, La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art
Established1941 (1941)
LocationSan Diego, California, U.S.
Coordinates32°50′40″N 117°16′41″W / 32.84444°N 117.27806°W / 32.84444; -117.27806 (Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla)
TypeArt Museum
Websitewww.mcasd.org

Binational mandate edit

Located in the border city of San Diego, the museum's binational mandate includes a focus on artists from both sides of the US/Mexico border,[1] celebrating both San Diego and Tijuana’s artistic communities.[2] MCASD has held several exhibitions that explore cross-border themes, including Being Here With You / Estando aquí contigo: 42 Artists from San Diego and Tijuana,[3] The Very Large Array: San Diego/Tijuana Artists in the MCA Collection[4] and Strange New World: Art and Design from Tijuana.[5]

In 2023, artists Celia Álvarez Muñoz and Griselda Rosas have exhibited their artwork to express their lived experiences from living on both U.S. and Mexico borderlands. More than 35 pieces of art were exhibited by these two artists. They exhibited their special representations of artwork including sculptural installations, textile drawings, embroidery, book projects, and photographic series. Both exhibit a unique and share a circulation of cultures with their artwork.[6]

Locations edit

MCASD has two sites, about 13.2 miles (21 km) apart:

MCASD – 700 Prospect St, La Jolla, CA 92037.

Located on a 3-acre oceanfront campus (1.2 ha),[7] MCASD's flagship La Jolla location was originally an Irving Gill-designed residence, built in 1916 for philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps. Since opening in 1941, the property has undergone several expansions. Mosher & Drew completed a series of expansions in 1950, 1960, and again in the late 1970s; and a renovation by Venturi Scott Brown & Associates was done in 1996.[8] In 2017, MCASD began its most recent expansion led by architect Annabelle Selldorf, which increased its size and added a public park.[9] The La Jolla location reopened to the public after its four-year renovation on April 9, 2022.[10][11]

MCASD Downtown – 1100 Kettner Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92101.

In 1986 MCASD established a small gallery space in downtown San Diego and later opened a larger downtown outpost in 1993 inside America Plaza adjacent to the San Diego Trolley line, designed by artists Robert Irwin and Richard Fleischner along with architect David Raphael Singer.[12] In 2007, MCASD expanded its downtown facility with two buildings.[13]

  • Joan and Irwin Jacobs Building – The Jacobs Building is named for philanthropists Joan and Irwin Jacobs. It was formerly the baggage building for the landmark Santa Fe Depot, built in 1915-16 for the Panama-California Exposition.[14] The Jacobs building has featured large-scale installations and sculptures including Maya Lin's Systematic Landscapes.[15] Commissioned by MCASD, Richard Serra’s Santa Fe Depot (2004), six cube-like structures weighing a collective 156 tons, is located behind the building.[16][17]
  • David C. Copley Building – In 2004, benefactor David C. Copley supported the construction of a new building that would occupy the site adjacent to the Jacobs Building.[18] The Copley Building is outfitted with two specially commissioned permanent installations which feature Light and Space art. Roman De Salvo made light fixtures of industrial materials for walls of the stairwell. Outside the building, Jenny Holzer created a parade of her trademark truisms to be spelled out vertically in light-emitting diodes. The words run through clear plastic tubes that she calls icicles.[19]

History edit

 
A large art piece displayed projecting out from the La Jolla museum roof in 2007
 
The entrance of Museum of Contemporary Art, downtown San Diego
 
Museum of Contemporary Art, downtown San Diego

Founded in 1941 in La Jolla as The Art Center in La Jolla, a community art center, through the 1950s and 1960s the organization operated as the La Jolla Art Museum. The museum was originally the 1915 residence of newspaper heiress and philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps, designed by the noted architect Irving Gill.[20]

In the early 1970s, the name changed to the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, focusing the purview on the period from 1950 to the present. In 1990, the museum changed its name to San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, only to change it to Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, after confusion developed between its name and the San Diego Museum of Art.[21][22] The new name also acknowledged the larger geographic context and the population base of nearly 3 million in San Diego County, and opened a $1.2-million satellite facility downtown in 1993, further embracing the region.[22]

In 1996, a major $9.2 million renovation and expansion of MCASD La Jolla took place, designed by Robert Venturi of the firm Venturi Scott Brown & Associates.[23] Venturi's 30,000 square feet (2,800 square metres) addition included four more galleries, doubling the museum's exhibition space to 10,000 square feet (930 square metres).[24] It also expanded the museum's educational space, storage space, bookstore library and restaurant. It transformed the garden into an outdoor exhibition space for sculpture.[24]

In 2007, a $25-million downtown location of the museum was opened, designed by architect Richard Gluckman of Gluckman Mayner Architects, New York.[19] The expansion added 30,000 square feet (2,800 square metres) of space to the downtown site and increases its exhibition space from about 6,000 square feet (560 square metres) to 16,500 square feet (1,530 square metres). At the north end of the building is a three-story structure of corrugated steel and textured glass. It houses curatorial offices, art-handling and storage facilities, an art education classroom, a lecture hall that opens onto a terrace and a boardroom with a view of the harbor.[19] The renovated baggage building is named for Irwin M. Jacobs, founder of the technology company Qualcomm, and his wife, Joan. The three-story Modernist structure bears the name of philanthropist and newspaper publisher David C. Copley.[19]

In 2014, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego chose architect Annabelle Selldorf to head a $30 million expansion[23] tripling the size of the museum's location in La Jolla. Upon completion, the museum had 3,700 square metres (40,000 square feet) of gallery space to exhibit the permanent collection, as well as additional space for education.[25] The museum's footprint was expanded to include properties (now residential but owned by the museum) on both sides of the institution, and the space that previously housed the Sherwood Auditorium was reconfigured as a gallery with exhibit space of approximately 740 square metres (8,000 square feet).[23]

Collection edit

The Museum of Contemporary Art has a nearly 5,500-object collection[26] of post-World War II art that includes key pieces by color field painter Ellsworth Kelly, minimalist sculptor Donald Judd and renowned California installation artist Robert Irwin.[27] In 2012, museum received 30 contemporary pieces from the 1950s to 1980s, with artworks from Piero Manzoni, Ad Dekkers, Christo, Jules Olitski and Franz Kline, as well as California artists Craig Kauffman and Ron Davis, from the collection of Vance E. Kondon and his wife Elisabeth Giesberger.[28]

As a site-specific installation, Irwin created 1° 2° 3° 4° (1997), consisting of squarish apertures cut into three lightly tinted museum windows so visitors have an unmediated view of the horizon line separating sea and sky and can feel the ocean breeze.[29]

Notable works edit

Deaccessioning edit

In May 2021, MCASD sent nine paintings and one sculpture from its collection to auction in New York, selling works by Roy Lichtenstein, Conrad Marca-Relli, Lorser Feitelson and six other postwar American artists for nearly $900,000.[30]

Management edit

MCASD has a permanent endowment fund of over $40 million, and an annual operating budget of approximately $6 million.[19] Annual support comes from a balanced mix of individuals, corporations, foundations, government agencies, and interest earned from the endowment, the majority of which came from a transformational 1999 bequest from Rea and Jackie Axline of more than $30 million.

From 1983 to 2016, Hugh Davies steered the museum as director. From October 2016, Kathryn Kanjo became the museum's director and CEO.[27]

References edit

  1. ^ Heidenry, Rachel (November 16, 2018). "A Vibrant Arts Community Bridges Two Cities Separated by a Contentious Border". Hyperallergic. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  2. ^ Knight, Christopher (March 21, 2024). "A San Diego museum is selling its buildings. What will happen to the extraordinary art built into it?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
  3. ^ Schimitschek, Martina (October 25, 2018). "MCASD's 'Being Here With You/Estando aquí contigo' celebrates artists from both sides of the border". San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  4. ^ Chute, James. "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego set to display local artists". mcall.com. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  5. ^ "Artnexus". www.artnexus.com. Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  6. ^ "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Debuts Two New Borderland-Inspired Art Exhibits". La Jolla. March 16, 2023. Retrieved October 8, 2023.
  7. ^ "An architect's unifying vision for MCASD". San Diego Union-Tribune. February 14, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  8. ^ Welch, Adrian (November 13, 2021). "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego MCASD". e-architect. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  9. ^ Frausto, Elisabeth (May 1, 2021). "'Bringing art to people': Lead architect for Museum of Contemporary Art renovation lays out her vision". La Jolla Light. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  10. ^ Hardison, Ryan (April 9, 2022). "7 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend". San Diego Magazine. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
  11. ^ Dixon Evans, Julia (April 7, 2022). "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego in La Jolla reopens to the public". KPBS Public Media. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
  12. ^ Saarinen, Eero (January 20, 2007). "Museum lays tracks all across the city". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  13. ^ Staff (January 19, 2007). "Museum expands downtown location, preserving intimate feel of La Jolla site". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  14. ^ Wood, Beth. "So much more than just a train station". mcall.com. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  15. ^ Artdaily. "Maya Lin: Systematic Landscapes at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego". artdaily.cc. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  16. ^ "Expanded Museum Opens In Downtown San Diego". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  17. ^ Kaitlyn Huamani (27 March 2024), Where to find Richard Serra’s sculptures in Southern California Los Angeles Times.
  18. ^ "Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to waive admission for all on Jan. 31 to honor its late benefactor David Copley". La Jolla Light. January 22, 2013. Retrieved January 8, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d e Suzanne Muchnic (January 7, 2007). "Modern art's train reaches the station". Los Angeles Times.
  20. ^ McCoy, Esther (1960). Five California Architects. New York: Reinhold Publishing Corporation. pp. 97–99. ASIN B000I3Z52W.
  21. ^ John R. Lamb (February 6, 1992), New Name for La Jolla Museum Los Angeles Times.
  22. ^ a b Kevin Brass (May 4, 1992). "La Jolla Museum Unveils Annex in San Diego". Los Angeles Times.
  23. ^ a b c James Chute (March 14, 2014). "MCASD names architect for expansion". The San Diego Union-Tribune.
  24. ^ a b Hilliard Harper (May 5, 1988). "La Jolla Museum of Art Unveils Venturi's Design for Expansion". Los Angeles Times.
  25. ^ David Ng (March 17, 2014), Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego picks architect for expansion Los Angeles Times.
  26. ^ Jori Finkel (5 April 2022), Light and much more Space: first look at the expanded Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego The Art Newspaper.
  27. ^ a b Miranda, Carolina A. (March 23, 2012). "Kathryn Kanjo named new director of Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego". Los Angeles Times.
  28. ^ Jamie Wetherbe (March 23, 2012), San Diego museums receive $40-million art collection Los Angeles Times.
  29. ^ Jori Finkel (5 April 2022), Light and much more Space: first look at the expanded Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego The Art Newspaper.
  30. ^ Christopher Knight (8 June 2021) Commentary: Art museum endowments soared in the pandemic. So why sell art to pay the bills? Los Angeles Times.

External links edit

  • Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego

museum, contemporary, diego, mcasd, diego, california, united, states, museum, focused, collection, preservation, exhibition, interpretation, works, from, 1950, present, jolla, branch, 2008location, within, northwestern, diegoformer, namethe, center, jolla, jo. The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego MCASD in San Diego California United States is an art museum focused on the collection preservation exhibition and interpretation of works of art from 1950 to the present Museum of Contemporary Art San DiegoMuseum of Contemporary Art San Diego La Jolla branch in 2008Location within Northwestern San DiegoFormer nameThe Art Center in La Jolla La Jolla Art Museum La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Museum of Contemporary ArtEstablished1941 1941 LocationSan Diego California U S Coordinates32 50 40 N 117 16 41 W 32 84444 N 117 27806 W 32 84444 117 27806 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego La Jolla TypeArt MuseumWebsitewww wbr mcasd wbr org Contents 1 Binational mandate 2 Locations 3 History 4 Collection 4 1 Notable works 4 2 Deaccessioning 5 Management 6 References 7 External linksBinational mandate editLocated in the border city of San Diego the museum s binational mandate includes a focus on artists from both sides of the US Mexico border 1 celebrating both San Diego and Tijuana s artistic communities 2 MCASD has held several exhibitions that explore cross border themes including Being Here With You Estando aqui contigo 42 Artists from San Diego and Tijuana 3 The Very Large Array San Diego Tijuana Artists in the MCA Collection 4 and Strange New World Art and Design from Tijuana 5 In 2023 artists Celia Alvarez Munoz and Griselda Rosas have exhibited their artwork to express their lived experiences from living on both U S and Mexico borderlands More than 35 pieces of art were exhibited by these two artists They exhibited their special representations of artwork including sculptural installations textile drawings embroidery book projects and photographic series Both exhibit a unique and share a circulation of cultures with their artwork 6 Locations editMCASD has two sites about 13 2 miles 21 km apart MCASD 700 Prospect St La Jolla CA 92037 Located on a 3 acre oceanfront campus 1 2 ha 7 MCASD s flagship La Jolla location was originally an Irving Gill designed residence built in 1916 for philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps Since opening in 1941 the property has undergone several expansions Mosher amp Drew completed a series of expansions in 1950 1960 and again in the late 1970s and a renovation by Venturi Scott Brown amp Associates was done in 1996 8 In 2017 MCASD began its most recent expansion led by architect Annabelle Selldorf which increased its size and added a public park 9 The La Jolla location reopened to the public after its four year renovation on April 9 2022 10 11 MCASD Downtown 1100 Kettner Boulevard San Diego CA 92101 In 1986 MCASD established a small gallery space in downtown San Diego and later opened a larger downtown outpost in 1993 inside America Plaza adjacent to the San Diego Trolley line designed by artists Robert Irwin and Richard Fleischner along with architect David Raphael Singer 12 In 2007 MCASD expanded its downtown facility with two buildings 13 Joan and Irwin Jacobs Building The Jacobs Building is named for philanthropists Joan and Irwin Jacobs It was formerly the baggage building for the landmark Santa Fe Depot built in 1915 16 for the Panama California Exposition 14 The Jacobs building has featured large scale installations and sculptures including Maya Lin s Systematic Landscapes 15 Commissioned by MCASD Richard Serra s Santa Fe Depot 2004 six cube like structures weighing a collective 156 tons is located behind the building 16 17 David C Copley Building In 2004 benefactor David C Copley supported the construction of a new building that would occupy the site adjacent to the Jacobs Building 18 The Copley Building is outfitted with two specially commissioned permanent installations which feature Light and Space art Roman De Salvo made light fixtures of industrial materials for walls of the stairwell Outside the building Jenny Holzer created a parade of her trademark truisms to be spelled out vertically in light emitting diodes The words run through clear plastic tubes that she calls icicles 19 History edit nbsp A large art piece displayed projecting out from the La Jolla museum roof in 2007 nbsp The entrance of Museum of Contemporary Art downtown San Diego nbsp Museum of Contemporary Art downtown San Diego Founded in 1941 in La Jolla as The Art Center in La Jolla a community art center through the 1950s and 1960s the organization operated as the La Jolla Art Museum The museum was originally the 1915 residence of newspaper heiress and philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps designed by the noted architect Irving Gill 20 In the early 1970s the name changed to the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art focusing the purview on the period from 1950 to the present In 1990 the museum changed its name to San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art only to change it to Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego after confusion developed between its name and the San Diego Museum of Art 21 22 The new name also acknowledged the larger geographic context and the population base of nearly 3 million in San Diego County and opened a 1 2 million satellite facility downtown in 1993 further embracing the region 22 In 1996 a major 9 2 million renovation and expansion of MCASD La Jolla took place designed by Robert Venturi of the firm Venturi Scott Brown amp Associates 23 Venturi s 30 000 square feet 2 800 square metres addition included four more galleries doubling the museum s exhibition space to 10 000 square feet 930 square metres 24 It also expanded the museum s educational space storage space bookstore library and restaurant It transformed the garden into an outdoor exhibition space for sculpture 24 In 2007 a 25 million downtown location of the museum was opened designed by architect Richard Gluckman of Gluckman Mayner Architects New York 19 The expansion added 30 000 square feet 2 800 square metres of space to the downtown site and increases its exhibition space from about 6 000 square feet 560 square metres to 16 500 square feet 1 530 square metres At the north end of the building is a three story structure of corrugated steel and textured glass It houses curatorial offices art handling and storage facilities an art education classroom a lecture hall that opens onto a terrace and a boardroom with a view of the harbor 19 The renovated baggage building is named for Irwin M Jacobs founder of the technology company Qualcomm and his wife Joan The three story Modernist structure bears the name of philanthropist and newspaper publisher David C Copley 19 In 2014 the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego chose architect Annabelle Selldorf to head a 30 million expansion 23 tripling the size of the museum s location in La Jolla Upon completion the museum had 3 700 square metres 40 000 square feet of gallery space to exhibit the permanent collection as well as additional space for education 25 The museum s footprint was expanded to include properties now residential but owned by the museum on both sides of the institution and the space that previously housed the Sherwood Auditorium was reconfigured as a gallery with exhibit space of approximately 740 square metres 8 000 square feet 23 Collection editThe Museum of Contemporary Art has a nearly 5 500 object collection 26 of post World War II art that includes key pieces by color field painter Ellsworth Kelly minimalist sculptor Donald Judd and renowned California installation artist Robert Irwin 27 In 2012 museum received 30 contemporary pieces from the 1950s to 1980s with artworks from Piero Manzoni Ad Dekkers Christo Jules Olitski and Franz Kline as well as California artists Craig Kauffman and Ron Davis from the collection of Vance E Kondon and his wife Elisabeth Giesberger 28 As a site specific installation Irwin created 1 2 3 4 1997 consisting of squarish apertures cut into three lightly tinted museum windows so visitors have an unmediated view of the horizon line separating sea and sky and can feel the ocean breeze 29 Notable works edit Richard Hunt Linear Peregrine Forms 1962 Ellsworth Kelly Red Blue Green 1963 Andy Warhol Liz Taylor Diptych 1963 John Baldessari Terms Most Usefull 1966 1968 Helen Pashgian untitled 1968 1969 Maren Hassinger Wallflower 1975 Jack Whitten Chinese Sincerity 1974 John Valadez Pool Party 1986 Lorna Simpson Guarded Conditions 1989 Tschabalala Self Evening 2019 Mely Barragan Black Light 2017 Deaccessioning edit In May 2021 MCASD sent nine paintings and one sculpture from its collection to auction in New York selling works by Roy Lichtenstein Conrad Marca Relli Lorser Feitelson and six other postwar American artists for nearly 900 000 30 Management editMCASD has a permanent endowment fund of over 40 million and an annual operating budget of approximately 6 million 19 Annual support comes from a balanced mix of individuals corporations foundations government agencies and interest earned from the endowment the majority of which came from a transformational 1999 bequest from Rea and Jackie Axline of more than 30 million From 1983 to 2016 Hugh Davies steered the museum as director From October 2016 Kathryn Kanjo became the museum s director and CEO 27 References edit Heidenry Rachel November 16 2018 A Vibrant Arts Community Bridges Two Cities Separated by a Contentious Border Hyperallergic Retrieved January 4 2022 Knight Christopher March 21 2024 A San Diego museum is selling its buildings What will happen to the extraordinary art built into it Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 23 2024 Schimitschek Martina October 25 2018 MCASD s Being Here With You Estando aqui contigo celebrates artists from both sides of the border San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved January 4 2022 Chute James Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego set to display local artists mcall com Retrieved January 4 2022 Artnexus www artnexus com Retrieved January 4 2022 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Debuts Two New Borderland Inspired Art Exhibits La Jolla March 16 2023 Retrieved October 8 2023 An architect s unifying vision for MCASD San Diego Union Tribune February 14 2015 Retrieved January 8 2022 Welch Adrian November 13 2021 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego MCASD e architect Retrieved January 8 2022 Frausto Elisabeth May 1 2021 Bringing art to people Lead architect for Museum of Contemporary Art renovation lays out her vision La Jolla Light Retrieved January 8 2022 Hardison Ryan April 9 2022 7 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend San Diego Magazine Retrieved April 11 2022 Dixon Evans Julia April 7 2022 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego in La Jolla reopens to the public KPBS Public Media Retrieved April 11 2022 Saarinen Eero January 20 2007 Museum lays tracks all across the city Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 8 2022 Staff January 19 2007 Museum expands downtown location preserving intimate feel of La Jolla site Baltimore Sun Retrieved January 8 2022 Wood Beth So much more than just a train station mcall com Retrieved January 8 2022 Artdaily Maya Lin Systematic Landscapes at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego artdaily cc Retrieved January 8 2022 Expanded Museum Opens In Downtown San Diego www e flux com Retrieved January 8 2022 Kaitlyn Huamani 27 March 2024 Where to find Richard Serra s sculptures in Southern California Los Angeles Times Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to waive admission for all on Jan 31 to honor its late benefactor David Copley La Jolla Light January 22 2013 Retrieved January 8 2022 a b c d e Suzanne Muchnic January 7 2007 Modern art s train reaches the station Los Angeles Times McCoy Esther 1960 Five California Architects New York Reinhold Publishing Corporation pp 97 99 ASIN B000I3Z52W John R Lamb February 6 1992 New Name for La Jolla Museum Los Angeles Times a b Kevin Brass May 4 1992 La Jolla Museum Unveils Annex in San Diego Los Angeles Times a b c James Chute March 14 2014 MCASD names architect for expansion The San Diego Union Tribune a b Hilliard Harper May 5 1988 La Jolla Museum of Art Unveils Venturi s Design for Expansion Los Angeles Times David Ng March 17 2014 Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego picks architect for expansion Los Angeles Times Jori Finkel 5 April 2022 Light and much more Space first look at the expanded Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego The Art Newspaper a b Miranda Carolina A March 23 2012 Kathryn Kanjo named new director of Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Los Angeles Times Jamie Wetherbe March 23 2012 San Diego museums receive 40 million art collection Los Angeles Times Jori Finkel 5 April 2022 Light and much more Space first look at the expanded Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego The Art Newspaper Christopher Knight 8 June 2021 Commentary Art museum endowments soared in the pandemic So why sell art to pay the bills Los Angeles Times External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego amp oldid 1218943926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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