The most Prestigious Galleries, Private Art Collections, and Museums of
2016 D I R E C T O R Y
Roman Mosaic from Lod, Israel (detail), Roman, c. 300 CE, excavated at Lod (Lydda), Israel, stone tesserae, Photographs Š Israel Antiquities Authority.
This exhibition is made possible by the generosity of Patricia & Phillip Frost. Courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Shelby White and Leon Levy Lod Mosaic Center. The Frost Art Museum receives ongoing support from the Steven and Dorothea Green Endowment; the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture; the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners; Agustin Venero and the Venero Family; The Miami Herald; and the Members & Friends of the Frost Art Museum.
10975 SW 17th St. Miami, FL 33199 | 305.348.2890 | frost.fiu.edu
OSWALDO
VIGAS Anthological 1943-2013
São Paulo April 2nd July 3rd 2016
Traveling exhibition Lima | Santiago de Chile | Bogotá | São Paulo
www.oswaldovigas.com
INDEX
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10
Pulse of the City by Vanessa Garcia Miami’s Seasons, Measured in Art
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18
Made in Miami by Adriana Herrera Myths that Surround the Cuban Art Market
Miami Art Circuits
Sandra Ramos, From the series Migraciones II, 1994, Oil on suitcase. Courtesy of Jorge M. Pérez and The Related Group.
Publisher’ Note by Liana Pérez
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Maps Maps Maps
Private Collections
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45
Visual Art Museums
Art Directory
LATINAMERICAN CONTEMPORARY & MODERN ART
Jesús Rafael Soto Relation noire, bleue et argentee, 1965 Wood and metal 41 7/10 × 41 7/10 × 14 1/5 in. (106 × 106 × 36 cm)
3072 SW 38th Avenue, Miami, FL 33146. USA +1 (305) 774 7740 gallery@durbansegnini.com durbansegnini.com
Vol. 14 - No. 62 Miami, February 2016
Fouder & Publisher Liana PĂŠrez liana@artcircuits.com
Next issue
Rose Gold 2016 Deadline October 21, 2016
Editorial Advisors Francisco Canestri Cecilia Fajardo-Hill Mitchell Kaplan Mali Parkerson Juan Pablo Sobrevilla Hilda Welcker
Contributing Writers
2016/17
Vanessa Garcia Adriana Herrera
Art Director
Miguel Manrique manrique.miguel@gmail.com
Price: The guide is available for free at art galleries, museums, hotels and various prestigious sites through South Florida while supplies last.
Art Circuits Miami Guide & Maps
Mailing Address: 1172 S. Dixie Hwy. # 541 Coral Gables, Fl. 33146 United States To Advertise: artcircuits.com advertise@artcircuits.com or call 305 661 0511
(ISSN 1546-0290) is published twice a year: The Annual Directory (Winter) and Miami Art Season (Autumn). The publisher has made every effort to maintain the accuracy of information in Art Circuits and accepts no responsibility for errors, changes or omissions. No part of this publication may be reproduce in any form without the permission in writing from the publisher. Art Circuits and Art Circuits logo are service marks owned by Art Circuits Guide & Maps Corp and violations of these rights will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
FREE! ART CIRCUITS NOW ON YOUR MOBILE DEVICE! Download available for iPhone and Android Your guide to unlocking Miami’s art world on the go!
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
EXPERIENCE MIAMI IN A WHOLE NEW WAY! An urban setting on the threshold of the tropical Americas, and on the dynamic edge between the Everglades, Florida Reef and Gulf Stream.
I
n this issue Vanessa Garcia, novelist, playwright and journalist delves into the Miami cultural scene month by month, giving reasons other than the annual art basel visit to come to Miami: Miami’s Seasons, Measured in Art. Pages 10 - 13.
Days ago I heard from Eldredge Bermingham, Frost Science Chief Science Officer that Miami is so special because it is “an urban setting on the threshold of the tropical Americas, and on the dynamic edge between the Everglades, Florida Reef and Gulf Stream”. The Science Frost will open this fall, but the “geographic place and the demographic diversity” always inspired Miami artists. One marvelous display is Miami International Airport Concourse D, where you walk on acres of bronze-studded terrazzo, a public art piece A Walk on the Beach by Michele Oka Doner. Don’t walk unnoticed. Today, when the Cuban cultural tourism takes leadership to buy Cuban art made in Cuba, is time to know about Cuban art made in Miami. Which Miami based Cuban artists could and should you collect. Art critic Adriana Herrera brings the lists of must-have artists given by 13 collectors, curators and gallerists in the Myths that Surround the Cuban Art Market. Pages 14 - 17. Also, the Cuban Museum, a museum dedicated to Cuban Diaspora will open this fall. With more art than before, 2016 arrives to Art Circuits as an efficient free app and with a brand new design for this annual Directory. Art Circuits is the arts’ billboard of Miami. The art galleries’ listings now include one image of their iconic artist to illustrate what kind of art you will find in them. Check art galleries per neighborhoods on pages 18 - 31. Locate the private collections and enjoy their open to the public periodical exhibitions and spot museums and art institutions on pages 32 - 44. Art Circuits is the local guide, made by locals, for locals and visitors. © Amalia Caputo
Enjoy!
liana@artcircuits.com Twitter:@artcircuits facebook.com/ArtCircuitsGuides
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David Hayes Sculpture
Quadrant, 2008. Painted, welded steel. 62 × 34 × 45 inches.
Current Florida Exhibition Lowe Art Museum; Coral Gables, Florida City of West Palm Beach, Florida; Northwood Gardens neighborhood Museum of Art–Deland; Deland, Florida Cummer Museum of Art; Jacksonville, Florida South Florida representation Valentina Garcia-Militana, VGM Fine Arts, 917 583-4983 Bianca Cutait, Arte Fundamental, 305 857-7026 Emmanoel Lavagnolli, Lavagnolli Art Gallery, 305 763-6765 www.davidhayes.com
PULSE OF THE CITY MIAMI’S SEASONS, MEASURED IN ART
Miami International Book Fair, Courtesy of Miami Dade College
EVERYBODY IN THE ART WORLD KNOWS THAT, IN DECEMBER, MIAMI IS THE PLACE TO BE.
The city hums with the international art market’s particular buzz, as its members cluster around the hive that is Art Basel Miami Beach.
But Miami’s artistic heart beats strong the other 11 months of the year too. Pulsing out culinary, literary, theatrical, and architectural bloodlines through winter, spring, summer, and fall. Miami’s cultural scene, in other words, is hot all year round. In January, while New York, London, and Paris freeze, Miami’s golden days shine bright with its world class collections and museums. The Margulies Collection, CIFO, PAMM, Girls’ Club, and the De la Cruz Collection, to highlight a few. 45,000 square feet of contemporary art, installation,
and photography (Margulies); Latin-American contemporary art in conversation with the global market (CIFO); a museum which is a work of art in and of itself, designed by Herzog & de Meuron (PAMM); the largest collection of contemporary art by women that’s open to the public (Girls’ Club); and a collection that’s moving the discussion of cross-disciplinary art forms to the next level (De la Cruz) – these are just a few of our favorite places to start the year off right. February is for foodies. Culinary big shots and sommeliers from around the world hit up South Beach and surrounding neighborhoods early in the month for the South Beach Food and Wine Festival. Here, food network celebs like Rachel Ray meet alongside local favorites like Zak the Baker and Michelle Bernstein. 2016’s calendar promises you can attend a Wine Spectator Seminar, or catch a tasting called Croquetas and Champagne in honor of the Cuban croquette, hosted by the French New York Chef JeanGeorges Vongerichten. Only in 12
By Vanessa Garcia
O,Miami Poetry Festival. Photo by Gesi Schilling
Miami does the sizzle send such international vibes around the town in a single week. And, the best part is that the stovetops keep singing way after the festival’s tents fold up, in restaurants like Cena by Michy.
of every month, will highlight the street’s history and “best of.” April is not, as T.S. Eliott suggested, “the cruelest month,” it is, instead, a month full of poetry. Verse springs eternal during O, Miami, a festival that lasts from April 1st through the 30th. “The goal of the O, Miami Poetry festival is for every single person in Miami-Dade County to encounter a poem during the month of April,” dictates the festival’s mission. In so doing, renowned poets like Kay Ryan and Richard Blanco; Anne Carson and Cambell McGrath descend upon Miami’s streets for events, readings, and pop-ups all around the city.
March beats to the sound of a conga drum, as Spring spreads across Miami, and we hit Calle Ocho. Miami’s Cuban artery (8th Street), particularly between SW 12th and 16th Avenues. Nicknamed Little Havana, you can buy a hand-rolled cigar, or listen to old men talk about days gone by as they conquer a game of dominos at Domino Park (corner of SW14th Street). Right across the street, the Tower Theater plays art house favorites, along with Englishlanguage films subtitled in Spanish, and vice versa. For the sweet tooth, try Azucar Ice Cream Company, whose flavors give you a map of Miami: Café con Leche (Cuban Coffee & Oreo); Noche Buena (Spiced Sugar Plum); and Abuela Maria (which among other things tastes like guava and cheese). A walking tour led by Dr. Paul George during Viernes Culturales (Cultural Fridays), the last Friday
In May head out to the Everglades before it gets too hot – South Florida’s own 1.5 million acre National Park. Known for its manatees, swamplands, and boat tours, the park also has its very own Artists in Residence in Everglades program, or AIRIE. Its mission is to use the cultural arts as a bridge to engage the public with our wilderness. Twice per year, AIRIE has an open house 13
Christina Pettersson, Furies of the Swamp. Courtesy of AIRIE
Courtesy of the De la Cruz Collection
14
PULSE OF THE CITY
at the AIRIELAB, the live/work space in the Park where fellows stay. These dates are announced on the Facebook page, Artists in Residence in Everglades. They also have a new twitter account: @airieverglades.
to Brooklyn and Paris, mixed in with Miami natives. Other residencies include Art Center South on Miami Beach, and the Deering Estate Residencies. October is when the season of the arts really kicks off. No better time to become an audience member, as Miami’s theatres lift the red velvet curtains and unveil the first production of their seasons. The Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts brings large scale Broadway productions to the city, alongside ballet, and opera. It also premieres new work through Zoetic Stage’s acclaimed black box productions at the Carnival Studio Theatre. Other theatres of note include Thinking Cap Theatre @ The Vanguard in Ft. Lauderdale known for its experimental, cuttingedge productions.
The summer months of June, July, and August are best for sitting by the water, and getting out into nature. While on the American Riviera, it’s easy to take-in Miami Beach’s Art Deco district, which, according to National Geographic is the first 20th century neighborhood to be on the National Registrar of Historic Places. Post-war design flourishes here, where pink meets a geometric style influenced by everything rom Art Nouveau to the Machine Age. For a change of rhythm on the mainland, there is also Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, named after horticulturist Dr. David Fairchild. These grounds are home to tropical plants from around the world from Madagascar to the Middle East. The mission is the conservation of these plants, but that’s not without its fun. Fairchild’s programming has held world-class art exhibitions like that of master glass sculptor Dale Chihuly. In July, the Garden comes alive with the International Mango Festival.
November is a page turner, as the month that hosts the Miami Book Fair. Everybody who is anybody in the world of letters and literature is here during the month of November, attending readings, panels, signings, and tent-fulls of amusement for readers of all ages. Salman Rushdie, Patti Smith, and new literary hot-shots like Marlon James make an appearance and share their newest works. Run by Mitchell Kaplan of Books & Books fame, the book fair has become a staple of the worldwide literary community.
In September, as the summer’s lazy days turn to work, take a look at Miami’s artist’s residencies and open studios, which the city is lucky to have in abundance. Start at The Fountainhead Residencies north of Wynwood, in the up and coming Little River area, just north of Little Haiti. Here, you find artists from all over the world, from Mozambique
So whether your cultural leanings stride toward food, visual art, theatre, the natural world, literature, or inter-cultural relations, Miami is most definitely a place to be and see -- a peacock displaying its brilliant feathers year round. vgarcia43@yahoo.com 15
Cuban Art Made in Miami that will Endure Adriana Herrera
T
he title of Wendy Guerra’s novel Todos se van (Everyone Leaves), which refers to the incessant migration of Cubans from the island, can be contrasted by the phrase “Everyone goes to Cuba” (to buy art). This phenomenon was evident during the last Havana Biennial, held in the context of the reopening of relations with the United States.
extend the notion of the noble savage, to the noble revolutionary, to the noble artist, so that the best Cuban art is necessarily produced in the island, cloaked under an aura of a social exoticism and the unknown. Nonetheless, after the 90s, many renowned artists linked to Cuba started dividing their time between various world capitals, avoiding Miami, which, as curator Anelys Álvarez-Muñoz admits, has been stigmatized. In fact, the internationalization of Cuban art and its rising market value has been achieved, with some exceptions, from cities like New York, where artists respect their agreements with galleries. By contrast, in Miami, both collectors and artists want to respectively acquire or sell “art in their own living room,” like gallerist Ramón Cernuda states. However, the stereotype of Miami –the closest city to Havana - as “the cemetery for Cuban artists,” is changing. Álvarez-Muñoz says: “The Havana-Miami binomial, has been permeated by political discourse, affecting the perception of Cuban art. This perspective is gradually changing, and can thus bring the revalorization of artists that have been kept on the margins, not because they lack quality, but due to a sort of geographic determinism.”
Many paradoxes surround the perception and value of Cuban art. Among these paradoxes is the opposition -unacquainted with the quality of art that does not depend on the geographic- between the art of the island and the art of the Diaspora. This opposition is evidenced in the nature of various collections of Cuban art. There are also the foreign myths that seem to
16
Today, the crossings from one bank to the other are increased amid the new political climate, so that borders are diluted. In this context, Art Circuits, following its vocation for artistic coverage in Miami, surveyed various experts in the art world about the potential of
the city to offer Cuban art that will endure. We invited them to come up with a very short list of living artists, independent of their actual market value. The list does not include the modernist masters or the historical concrete artist that are already in the spotlight.
Clockwise. Left Top: Florencio Gelabert, The Displacement, 2015, drawing, mixd media on paper, 30 x 22 in. Courtesy of Aluna Art Foundation. Below: Sandra Ramos, From the series Migraciones II, 1994, Oil on suitcase. Courtesy of Jorge M. Pérez and The Related Group. Above right: Ernesto Oroza, Untitled (Habitat cell made out with euphorbia trigona shrubs and an aluminum door), 2012, C-Printed 16 x 24 in. Ed. 1/5. Courtesy of the artist. Below right: Gustavo Acosta, The Book of Hours, 2015. Mixed media on paper, 77.50 x 77.50 in. Courtesy of of Pan American Art Projects
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Francisco Arévalo. Gallerist and Art Consultant. “There are moments that mark the periods of art, periods when cities become artistically interesting. Havana is experiencing strong art tourism in the search for new names, while Miami is not the ideal place to be in at the moment. Of course, there are established names like Julio Larraz (b.1944), Jorge L. Varona (b.1955), Gustavo Acosta (b.1958), Miguel Padura (b.1957), and the younger intellectual artists like Gean Moreno (b.1957) and Ernesto Oroza (b.1968), who have complex relationships with the market. Unfortunately in Miami, the tradition of a collective support of the local artist within its galleries does not exist.” Ramón Cernuda. Cernuda Arte. Maintaining that his gallery sells more Cuban art than the auction houses, he argues that the commercial failure of many good Cuban artists is not related to their location. He names Dayron González (b.1982), based in Miami, Among the youngest artists represented by his gallery, he is the one who sales the most. Also named are the valued Larraz, and Tomás Sánchez (b.1948), and artists who deserve higher values like Baruj Salinas (b.1938), José Bedia (b.1959), Tomás Esson (b.1963), and Arturo Rodríguez (b.1956). Israel Molerio. Latin Art Core Gallery. He names Bedia, Ramón Alejandro (b.1943), Humberto Castro (b.1957), Padura, Pedro Vizcaino (b.1966), and César Santos (b.1982). He also includes José Ángel Vincench (b.1973), and Pedro de Oraá (b.1931), National Plastic Arts Award Cuba 2015, because they now divide their time between the island and Miami. Irina Pérez-Leyva. Curator for Pan American Art Projects. Apart from Larraz, Bedia, Humberto Castro, and Martínez-Cañas, she mentions Acosta, Carlos Estévez (b.1969), Rubén Torres Llorca (b.1957), Gory (b.1953), and Florencio Gelabert (b. 1961). Fredric Snitzer. Gallerist and Professor. He names Rafael Domenech (b.1989), youngest winner of the CINTAS Award, María Martínez-Cañas (b.1960), Enrique Martínez Celaya (b.1964), now based in L.A., Hernan Bas (b.1978), Mauricio González (b.1978), and Alexandre Arrechea (b.1960), now based in Miami part time, all represented by this gallery. Snitzer considers that “there are many, many others…César Trasobares (b. 1949), Esson, Oroza, Leyden Rodríguez-Casanova (b. 1973), and on and on and on.” Anelys Alvárez-Muñoz. Curator. The Related Group. “It wouldn’t be fair to put one generation above the other.” From the 80s, she mentions Torres Llorca, Bedia, and Novoa, stating that the so-called “Miami Generation” should also be revisited. From the 90s, Estévez; from those formed in Miami after relocating, Bas, and Teresita Fernández (b.1968); and from the recently established here, Domenech, Javier Castro, Sandra Ramos (b.1969), and Arrechea. The first three and the last two are part of the Related Group collection, along with Esson, Douglas Arguelles (b.1977), Kenia Arguiñao (b.1983), and Martínez Celaya. 18
Made in Miami Francine Birbragher. Curator. “ 7 or 70 artists?” She asked. There are several that are wonderful, far beyond the extra-artistic interests of the market: Besides Bedia, Torres Llorca, Novoa, MartínezCañas, Gelabert, and Vincench, she mentions Ana Albertina Delgado (b.1963). Willy Castellanos. Curator, Aluna Art Foundation. To the names of Torres Llorca, Bedia, Estévez, Oroza, Gelabert, Martínez-Cañas, Sandra Ramos, and Hamlet Lavastida (b.1983), he adds Gory, Ramón Lago, Maritza Molina, Fabián Peña (b.1976), Jorge Wellesley (b.1979), Pablo Cano (b.1961), and the collectives Guerra de la Paz, and Omni Zona Franca. He points out that the bad thing about so limited a list, is that it can deduct value from many other artists that are good as well. Tami Katz-Freiman. Curator. “There are MAN Y wonderful Cuban artists in Miami” she afirms mentioning artists such as Novoa, Wellesley, Argüellez Cruz, and Peña, adding the name of Elysa Batista (b.1989) – “to name just a few – and not to mention those who are very well known…”. Roc Laseca. Curator. He thinks that it is interesting to “discuss from which places (and not only geographical ones) the local fabric of artistic production in Miami is constructed.” He also mentions Arrechea, Oroza, Martínez Celaya, Rodríguez-Casanova, and Mauricio González. Dennys Matos. Curator and Art Critic. He names Néstor Arenas (b.1964), whose latest transition was from Miami to Havana. Also included are Torres Llorca, Gory, Arturo Cuenca, Vincench, Sandra Ramos, Vizcaino, Lavastida, Abel Barroso, and Ramón Williams. Gean Moreno. Curator and Artist. He also mentions Oroza and Glexis Novoa (b.1964), among others: Arturo Cuenca (b. 1955), Consuelo Castañeda (b.1958), Jorge Pantoja (b. 1963), Javier Castro (b. 1984), and Lavastida. Alfredo Triff. Art Critic. He proposes a list of “forgotten” masters, mentioned by others, like Ramón Williams and Pedro Vizcaíno (b.1968), as well as Liliam Cuenca (b.1944), Ahmed Gómez (b.1972), Rafael López Ramos (b.1962), and the photography of Liliam Domínguez (b.1976). Arturo and Liza Mosquera. Collectors. The commemorative exhibition of the 25th anniversary of their collection “Miami Based Artists: Better Alive than Dead Part II”, which inverts the title of a piece by Torres Llorca, includes previously mentioned artists and other names such as Pantoja, Delgado, and Williams, Angela Valella (b.1948), Leandro Soto (b.1956), Beatriz Monteavaro (b.1971), and Luis Gispert (b.1972), now based in New York.
adrianaherrerat@gmail.com
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CORAL GABLES FL. 33134 - 33146 GALLERY NIGHT FIRST FRIDAY 6 p.m.- 10 p.m.
ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries
Jose Rosabal (detail)
169 Madeira Ave. 305 444 4493 info@virginiamiller.com virginiamiller.com Tues – Fri: 11 – 6 Sat. & eve. by appt. Museum-quality exhibitions and sales of International Contemporary and Modern Art for 41 years; emphasis on Latin American and Chinese works. .
Books & Books
265 Aragon Ave. 305 442 4408 booksandbooks.com Mon – Sun: 9 – 11 The neighborhood bookshop.
Canale Diaz Art Center
146 Madeira Ave. 786 615 2622 info@canalediaz.com | canalediaz.com Art Center focused on Latin American contemporary artists.
Reymond Romero (detail)
De Marquez Interiors Gallery
3160 Ponce de León Blvd. 786 464 9248 Mon – Fri: 10 - 5 demarquezinteriors@gmail.com demarquezinteriors.wordpress.com Representing: Renato Bergantín, Ignacio Burgos, Di Berg, Sid Daniels, Ali X Miranda, Alcides PérezToledo and Bebe Schmitt. Sid Daniel (detail)
Durban Segnini Gallery
3072 SW 38th Ave. Miami, Fl. 33146 305 774 7740 Mon – Fri: 10 – 6; Sat: by appt. gallery@durbansegnini.com durbansegnini.com Geometric Abstraction, Constructivism, and Kinetic Art. Carlos Cruz Diez (detail)
20 for current events visit www.artcircuits.com
ART CIRCUITS Jorge M. Sori Fine Art
2790 Ponce de León Blvd. - 305 567 3115 jorgesorifineart@aol.com jorgesorifineart.com Tue – Sat: 11 – 5:30 - Sat by appt. Contemporary Artists and Masters of Latin American Art. Wifredo Lam, Fernando Botero and Tomás Sánchez, among others. Tomás Sánchez (detail)
Ninoska Huerta
Private art dealer - 305 588 1231 By appointment ninoskahuerta@gmail.com ninoskahuertagallery.com Geometry, Abstraction and Optical Art
Jesús Rafael Soto
RDZ Fine Art
147 Giralda Ave. 305 720 5172 sales@rdzfineart.com rdzfineart.com Tue, Wed & Thurs: 1 – 5 Fri & Sat: 1 - 9 Representing Orestes Gaulhiac, Zach Sawan, Sandra Jones Campbell, among others. Orestes Gauhliac
Skinner, Inc.
130 Miracle Mile, Ste. # 220 305 503 4423 florida@skinner.com skinnerinc.com Auctioneers and Appraisers of Objects of Value.
Florine Stettheimer
Societá Dante Alighieri
300 Aragon Ave. Ste. # 100 305 529 6633 Mon – Sat: 10 – 6 www.dantemiami.org A cultural center where people can gather to share their love for Italy and for the beauty and traditions synonymous with that country. SDA Collection
The Americas Collection
4213 Ponce de León Blvd. 305 446 5578 info@americascollection.com americascollection.com Mon – Fri: 10:30 - 5:30, Sat: 12 - 5 Contemporary Latin American Art. Limited edition graphics, corporate consulting, art installation, transportation and framing. Ramiro Lacayo-Deshon
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LIT TLE HAVANA CALLE OCHO FL. 33135
Futurama Galleries
Franks Christopher (detail)
1637 SW 8th St. 305 407 1677 futurama1637.com Viernes Culturales: Last Friday 7 – 11 Little Havana Art Walk: 2nd Friday 7– 11 Studios: Annie M., Philip Avello, Joseph T. Woodward, Ninoska Pérez Castellón, Katey Penner, Delfi Art Gallery, Fredy Villamil, Santos E. Méndez, Raul Proenza, Franks Christopher, Viernes Culturales Gallery, and Minka’s Exhibit Space.
DOWNTOWN MIAMI FL. 33132 - 33130
Centro Cultural Español
1490 Biscayne Blvd. 305 448 9677 info@ccemiami.org / ccemiami.org Mon – Fri: 9 – 5 Contribute through culture and science, to social and human development in South Florida as well as to promote the exchange of cultural ideas, projects, and proposals among Spain, Latin America and USA.
NWSA New World School of the Arts New World Gallery25 NE 2nd. St. 305 237 3620 mcuesta@mdc.edu nwsa.mdc.edu Exhibition space dedicated to NWSA students, faculty and alumni.
22 for current events visit www.artcircuits.com
ART CIRCUITS
DESIGN DISTRICT FL. 33137
Bossa Gallery
4141 NE 2nd Ave. Ste. 107 305 603 8233 hello@bossagallery.com bossagallery.com Mon – Fri: 10 – 7; Sat: 10 – 6 Brazilian-focused fine art photography.
Flávia Junqueira (detail)
Maman Fine Art
3930 NE 2nd. Ave. Ste. 204 305 571 3522 daniel@mamanfineart.com mamanfineart.com Mon – Fri: 10 – 5; Sat. by appt. only Modern and Contemporary Art.
Raúl Loza (detail)
Markowicz Fine Art
110 NE 40th St. 305 308 6398 info@markowizczfineart.com markowiczfineart.com Mon – Sat:11 – 7; Sun:12 -6 Represents in USA Carole Feuerman, Alain Godon, Idan Zareski, Arno Elias, Kai, and Maurice Renoma. Showing also Contemporary masters as Warhol, Botero, and Manolo Valdés, among others.
Carole Feuerman (detail)
BRAD BIRD ROAD ART DISTRICT FL. 33155
Aimée Pérez Sculptor 4706 SW 75 Ave. 305 972 7766 Mon – Fri: 12 – 5; Sat: 10 – 2 aimeeperezsculptor@gmail.com aimee-ceramics.com by appt. only
Aimée Pérez
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WYNWOOD ARTS DISTRICT FL. 33127
Alejandra von Hartz Gallery
2630 NW 2nd Ave. 305 438 0220 info@alejandravonhartz.net alejandravonhartz.net Tues – Fri: 11 - 6; Sat: 12 – 5 Contemporary Art with a focus in Geometric Abstraction, Conceptual and Latin American Art in dialogue with global contemporary art. Alberto Lezaca (detail)
Art|Bastion
2085 NW 2nd Ave. Unit 104 305 509 8338 svaroli@artbastion.com artbastion.com International art agency and gallery representing artists from around the world
Ayumi Shibata (detail)
Art Nouveau Gallery
348 NW 29th St. 305 573 4661 info@artnouveaumiami.com artnouveau-gallery.com Mon - Fri: 11 – 5; Sat: by appt. only Latin American Geometric Abstraction.
Roberto Lombana
Ascaso Gallery
2441 NW 2nd Ave. 305 571 9410 / 305 571 9411 Tues - Sat: 10 – 6 Second Saturdays: 4:30 - 10 ascasogallery@gmail.com ascasogallery.com Continuous display of artwork by international artists of collector’s interest. Julio Larraz (detail)
Bakehouse Art Complex
561 NW 32nd. St. 305 576 2828 info@bacfl.org / bacfl.org Mon – Sun: 12 – 5 Opening Receptions 2nd. Fridays Admission: $ 5, free for members A not-for-profit incubator for artistic creativity, providing affordable studio and working spaces and community programming. 24 for current events visit www.artcircuits.com
ART CIRCUITS Curator’s Voice Art Projects
299 NW 25th St. - 786 357 0568 milabello@aol.com curatorsvoice.com Mon – Fri: 1 – 6; Sat: 6 - 10 Emergent voices and contemporary art from local and international art fields.
Rosario Bond
Daniel Azoulay Gallery
2750 NW 3rd. Ave. Ste. 11 305 576 1977 info@danielazoulaygallery.com danielazoulaygallery.com Mon – Fri: 10 – 6 Second Saturdays: 4:30 – 10 Contemporary art in all media from emerging and established artists and specifically focuses on mid-career photographers.
Daniel Azoulay
Diana Lowenstein Gallery 2043 N. Miami Ave. 305 576 1804 info@dianalowensteingallery.com dianalowensteingallery.com Tues– Fri: 10 – 5; Sat: 10:30 – 3 International contemporary art.
Loris Cecchini (detail)
Dina Mitrani Gallery
2620 NW 2nd Ave. 786 486 7248 dina@dinamitranigallery.com dinamitranigallery.com Tue – Fri: 1 – 5 & by appt. International Contemporary Photography.
Phillip Toledano (detail)
Gary Nader Art Centre 62 NE 27th St. 305 576 0256 art@garynader.com garynader.com Mon – Sat: 10 – 6 Modern, Contemporary and Latin American Art.
Fernando Botero
KaBe Contemporary
223 NW 26th St. 305 573 8142 info@kabecontemporary.com kabecontemporary.com Tue - Fri: 11– 5 & by appt. International Contemporary Art.
José Antonio Hernandez-Diez (detail)
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Lavagnolli Art Gallery
444 NW 28th St. 305 763 6765 emmanoel@lavagnolliartgallery.com lavagnolliartgallery.com Tues – Fri: 10:30 – 6 ; Sat: 12 – 6 Sun & Mon by appt. Innovative Contemporary Art. Luis Agulló
Macaya Gallery
145 NW 36th St. 786 577 0322 Patrick@macayagallery.com Macayagallery.com Mon: by appt.; Tues – Wed: 11 – 7; Thurs – Sun: 11 – 8 Contemporary art gallery that represents world renowned, mid career and emergent talent. Sudan (detail)
Merzbau Gallery
2301 N. Miami Ave. 786 534 7800 assistant@merzbaugallery.com merzbaugallery.com Mon – Fri: 10 – 5; Sat: by appt. Contemporary Art.
Eduardo Chillida (detail)
O. Ascanio Gallery
2600 NW 2nd Ave. 305 571 9036 info@oascaniogallery.com oascaniogallery.com Mon –Sat: 11 - 6 Geometric Abstraction and Kinetic art but extend beyond a single movement or tendency. Jorge Blanco
Sammer Gallery
125 NW 23rd St. 305 441 2005 info@sammergallery.us artnet. com/sammergallery.html Tues – Fri: 10 – 6 Modern & Contemporary Latin American Masters with focus on constructivism and concrete art. Virgilio Ramon Villalba (detail)
The Screening Room
2626 NW 2nd. Ave. 305 582 7191 rhonda@tsrmiami.com thescreeningroommiami.com Tue – Fri: 11 – 2 New Media exhibition and project space.
Wendy Wischer (detail)
26 for current events visit www.artcircuits.com
ART CIRCUITS University of Miami Art Gallery
2750 NW 3rd Ave. Suite 4. Wynwood Building - 305 284 3161 m.cardoso1@miami.edu as.miami.edu/art/ Wed., Thurs. & Fri: 10 - 6 Every 2nd. Sat : 4 – 10 & by appt. Exhibitions of University of Miami Students, Alumni and Faculty
Michael Zimmerer (detail)
Wynwood 28 | Art Gallery
97 NW 25th St. Ste. 102 786 230 4210 info@wynwood28.com wynwood28.com Representing mid-career artists new to US market but with extensive experience in their home countries. Florencia Aise (detail)
LITTLE RIVER FL. 33138
Dot Fiftyone Gallery
7275 NE 4th Avenue. Space 101 Rail 71 Complex 305 573 9994 dot@dotfiftyone.com dotfiftyone.com Mon – Fri: 11 – 7; Sat: 1 – 6 & by appt. New Location to be opened in Spring 2016 Marcos Castro (detail)
Mindy Solomon Gallery
8397 NE 2nd Ave. 786 953 6917 info@mindysolomon.com mindysolomon.com Tues – Sat: 11 – 5 Emergent and mid-career international contemporary art, and Miami-based creatives’ incubator: painting, sculpture, photography, video.
Linda López
Rimonim Art Gallery
7500 NE 4th Ct. Suite. 103 305 467 6101 info@rimonimartgallery.com rimonimartgallery.com Mon-Fri: noon – 5 & by appt. Representing american and International artists.
Maikel Dominguez (detail)
27
MIAMI BEACH FL. 33139
ArtCenter | South Florida
924 Lincoln Road 305 674 8278 Mon & Thu: 12 – 9; Fri & Sat: 11 – 10; Sun: 11 – 9 email@artcentersf.org / artcentersf.org Supports artists and advances the knowledge and practice of contemporary visual arts and culture in South Florida. Photo Silvia Ros
FIU – Miami Beach Urban Studios / MBUS
Jacek Kolasinski (detail)
420 Lincoln Road - 305 535 1464 cartafiu@gmail.com / mbus.fiu.edu Mon – Fri: 8:30 – 5:30. By appt. To build upon the vision of the College of Architecture + The Arts by utilizing the innovation, community engagement, and expertise to be at the forefront of teaching, research, and service in art, design, performance, and communication.
Williams McCall Gallery
110 Washington Ave. CU-3 786 359 4321 Tues - Sat: 11 – 7; Sun & Mon: by appt. gail@williamsmccallgallery.com williamsmccallgallery.com Contemporary Art
Madeliene Abling
BEYOND MIAMI FL. 33139
Ford Fine Art
260 NE 5th Ave. Delray Beach, Fl. 33483 561 900 7167 suzanne@fordfineart.com fordfineart.com Most Tues., Thurs. & Sat. & by appt. Latin American Masters & Contemporary Central American Art. Armando Morales (detail)
28 for current events visit www.artcircuits.com
ART CIRCUITS
PERFORMING ARTS FL. 33138
Miami City Ballet
2200 Liberty Ave. Miami Beach, Fl. 33139 Box Office: 305 929 7010 For tickets and more information: miamicityballet.org Florida’s Internationally Acclaimed 30th Anniversary Season One of America’s most beloved dance companies. April 13 - 17 MCB debuts at New York’s Lincoln Center
Rabbit
Miami Symphony Orchestra / MISO 318 NW 23rd St. Wynwood Arts District Box Office at 305 275 5666 info@themiso.org themiso.org Director and Conductor Eduardo Marturet
Eduardo Marturet
Preservation | Education Advocacy Galleries | Tours 190 SE 12th Terrace, Miami, FL 33131 | (305) 358-9572 | DadeHeritageTrust.org
Art Circuits Deluxe Ad-DHT.indd 1
1/20/16 9:29 PM
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Hernando S
Biltmore Way
Zamora Andalusia
Andalusia
Le Jeune Rd SW 42nd Ave
CORAL GABLES Madeira ART SPACE/VIRGINIA MILLER Valencia CANALE DIAZ ART CENTER Majorca Almeria FL. 33134 - 33146 Menores Navarre Sevilla Mendoza Ponce
Aurora St
Douglas Rd
Douglas RdDouglas Rd Douglas Rd
SW 37 Ct
SW 38 Ave
SW 38 Ct
SW 39 Ave
FL. 33135 W. Flager St.
Aurora St
Le Jeune Rd SW 42nd Ave
Segovia St
Douglas Rd
Salzedo St
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Salzedo St
Le Jeune Rd SW 42nd Ave
Ponce Circle Park
CALLE OCHO
Viscaya Camilo
Douglas Rd
Peacock Ave
DURBAN SEGNINI
LIT TLE HAVANA Cadima Romano Velarde Alesio Sarto Bird Road
Douglas Rd
JORGE M. SORI
Almeria Sarto Malaga Altara Ave
Le Jeune Rd SW 42nd Ave
SW 37 Ct
Galiano St
SW 38 Ave
SW 38 Ct
SW 39 Ave
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Salzedo St
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Galiano St
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Salzedo St
Salzedo St
LeJeune JeuneRd RdSW SW42nd 42ndAve Ave Le
Hernando St
Valencia Romano Catalonia
Dr ity Shipping Ave ers Camilo THEUAMERICAS niv Sevilla COLLECTION Santander San Lorenzo Ave DE MARQUEZ CERNUDA Aledo Palermo San Sebastian San Lorenzo Ave Cadima JORGE M. SORI Romano Catalonia Merrick Shops ve Alesio iz A y Ru Malaga Hw Dr y Sarto xie it Di CORAL GABLES Viscaya MUSEUM (See pageiv36) ers S. n U Camilo Santander Fluvia DE MARQUEZ CERNUDA Aledo San Sebastian Candia
Hernando St
Segovia St Segovia St
Galiano St
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Salzedo St
Le Jeune Rd SW 42nd Ave
Hernando St
Hernando St Hernando St
Santander W ay CORAL GABLES MUSEUMDE MARQUEZ CERNUDA BOOKS & BOOKS Minorca Zamora Aragon SOCIETA DANTE ALIGHIERI San Sebastian ART SPACE/VIRGINIA MILLER Madeira AlcazarMile Miracle Romano CENTER CANALE DIAZ ARTSKINNER Majorca Alhambra Sarto Andalusia M Andalusia Biltmore Way Navarre er Camilo ric RDZ Giralda kW Valencia ay Minorca CORAL GABLES MUSEUM BOOKS & BOOKS Aledo Aragon Almeria SOCIETA DANTE ALIGHIERI Alcazar Cadima Miracle Mile Sevilla Ponce SKINNER Alesio Alhambra Circle Palermo Park Andalusia M er Andalusia Viscaya ric Biltmore Way RDZ Giralda kW JORGE M. SORI ay Valencia Fluvia Catalonia CORAL GABLES MUSEUM BOOKS & BOOKS Aragon SOCIETA DANTE ALIGHIERI Malaga Candia Almeria Dr ty rsi Miracle Mile ive n U Velarde SKINNER Santander Sevilla Ponce DE MARQUEZ Circle CERNUDA Andalusia Bird Road Andalusia Palermo San Sebastian Park Biltmore Way Hernando St
Segovia St
SegoviaSegovia St St
Segovia St
Coral Gables Gallery Night, originally launched in 1980, Circle was the first event of its Minorca Zamora Palermo kind in South Florida and remains one of the most Park popular among collectors and Alcazar JORGE M. SORI MILLER and Cuban art, galleries ART SPACE/VIRGINIA art enthusiasts. Mostly showing Modern Latin American Madeira Catalonia CANALE DIAZ ART CENTER throughout Coral Gables are linked with complimentary trolleys from 6 to 10 every first Majorca Alhambra Malaga Menores Dr by fashionable restaurants with Friday of the month. A delight to visit, it is surrounded M ity s er r ric ive Navarre a variety of cuisines for all tastes. RDZ Giralda k Mendoza Un
SW 14th Ave SW 38 Ave
SW 38 Ct
SW 15th Ave
SW 16th Ave
Altara Ave FUTURAMA
SW 14th Ave
SW. St. SW. 4th 7th DURBAN St. ve SEGNINI iz A y Ru Hw xie ShippingDiAve . S THE SW AMERICAS 8th St COLLECTION SW. 5th St. DIDI MARCHI LATIN ART CORE GALLERY San Lorenzo Ave Merrick Shops
SW. 6th St. San Lorenzo Ave Merrick Shops
SW 37 Ct
SW 38 Ave
SW 38 Ct
SW 39 Ave
Aurora St
SW 17th Ave
SW 39 Ave SW 15th Ave
ve SW. 4th St. SW. 1st St. iz A DURBAN SEGNINI y Ru Hw xie Di . Shipping S Ave SW. 2nd St. Velarde THE AMERICAS COLLECTION SW. 5th St. San Lorenzo Ave SW. 3rd St. Bird Road SW. 6th St. San Lorenzo Ave
Candia Altara Ave
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SW. 7th St.
e Av
Peacock Ave SW 37 Ct
Ponce de Leon Blvd
San Lorenzo Ave W. Flager St.
SW 16th Ave Aurora St
Fluvia Merrick Shops
SW 17th Ave
SW 18th Ave
SW 18th Ave
Bird Road Viscaya
Ponce de Leon Blvd
Salzedo St
Viernes Culturales/Cultural Fridays takes place on the last Friday of each Fluvia Peacockmingle Ave DURBAN SEGNINI SW. 1st St. Aledo month in the heart of historic Little Havana, when the locals with Candia Altara Ave international visitors to stroll the exotic atmosphere of Calle Ocho, attend Cadima Shipping Ave 2nd St. THE SW. AMERICAS exhibitions at a wide selection Cuban art galleries and studios, and Velardeof primarily COLLECTION Alesio San Lorenzo Ave dine in the neighborhood’s celebrated restaurants. SW. 3rd St.
Peacock Ave
DOWNTOWN MIAMI FL. 33130 - 33132 Downtown Miami is a historic center that connects the ancient memories of the city to its flourishing cultural life. It houses the government offices, the Main Public Library, major museums, the Miami Dade College with its New World School of the Arts, the Performing Arts Center, prestigious art foundations and institutions as cifo and YoungArts, all linked by metromover and trolleys, the free public transportation. It’s a renaissance!
YOUNGARTS
NE Miami Ct
NE 16th St
NE 15th St
AI/MIU OF ART & DESIGN
CENTRO CULTURAL ESPAÑOL
NE 14th ST
Adrianne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts
N. Miami Avenue
NE 10th St
NE 1st Ave
NE 9th St
AA Arena
NE 8th St
NE 7th St
MOA+D / FREEDOM TOWER FT NE 6th St
NE 2nd Ave
NE 1st Ave
N. Miami Avenue
NE 4th St
NE 3rd St
NE 2nd St
MDC / NWSA
NE 1st St MAIN LIBRARY
HM HISTORYMIAMI
E. Flagler St
W. Flagler St
CIFO (See page 32)
PAMM (See page 44) MOA+D / Freedom Tower (See page 40)
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lvd yne B Bisca
NE 5th St
THE ARTISAN LOUNGE
Frost Science
Biscayne Blv d
NE 11th St
Museum Park
PAMM
NE 12th St
CIFO
Pérez Art Museum Miami
NE 13th St
WYNWOOD ARTS DISTRICT
FL. 33127 Wynwood Arts Districts is an evolving and dynamic hub for artists, galleries, retail shops, restaurants and cafés. It is home to world-renowned private collections and cultural spaces such as the Margulies Warehouse, the Rubell Family Collection and Mana Miami. Second Saturdays from 7-10 pm gathers art lovers and party-goers of all ages on the streets to visit galleries and artist studios.
Wynwood Walls NW 2nd Ave NW 30th St Rubell Family Collection
School
NW 6th Ave
North Miami Ave
NW 32nd St
Eneida Masses Hartner Elementary
Robert E. Lee Park
NW 5th Ave
Jose de Diego Middle School
WW
NW 3rd Ave
BAKEHOUSE (BAC)
MACAYA
NW 1st Ave
NW 33rd St
R
NW 29th St
ART NOUVEAU
NW 28th St ESPACE-EXPRESSION UM DANIEL AZOULAY NW 27th St ALEJANDRA VON HARTZ DINA MITRANI THE SCREENING ROOM KA.BE O. ASCANIO MIAMI LIGHT PROJECT NW 26th St Wynwood Walls WW NW 25th St ASCASO CURATOR’S VOICE
O CINEMA
LAVAGNOLLI The Margullies Collection
MW
MW The Margulies Collection At The Warehouse [See page 34]
R Rubell Family Collection [See page 34]
GARY NADER
WYNWOOD28
Wynwood Art Walk 2nd Saturday 7 p.m .- 10 p.m
NW 24th St NW 24th St NW 23rd St
SAMMER NW 23rd St
MERZBAU
NW 2nd Ave
NW 22nd St
NW 21st St DIANA LOWENSTEIN ART BASTION NW 20th St
DESIGN DISTRICT FL. 33137
NE 40th St
Miami Ct
LOCUST PROJECT NE 38th St
MARKOWICZ
DASH
MAMAN
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Biscayne Blvd
Institute of Contemporary Art ICA
NE 1s t
NE 41th St
Ct
Haitian Heritage Museum HH de la Cruz Collection dlC Contemporary Art Space BOSSA
NE 2nd Ave
N Miami Ave
NE 1st Ave
The Design District is a creative neighborhood and shopping destination that rivals the most upscale, luxury centers worldwide. In addition to being home to the de la Cruz Collection and the ICA/Institute of Contemporary Art, the District is brimming with fashion, furniture design, art galleries and restaurants. Notable site-specific performances and art happenings fill a year-long calendar of special events.
dlC de la Cruz Collection Contemporary Art Space (see page 32) ICA
Institute of Contemporary Art (see page 40)
LITTLE RIVER
Biscayne Blvd.
NE 82nd St.
er Riv tle Lit
N Miami Ave.
NE 2nd Ave.
FL. 33138 MINDY SOLOMON Little River/Little Haiti is Miami’s newest, hip area that has attracted many former St. NE 84th VERSACEVERSACEVERSACE Wynwood galleries and artist spaces. Already home to cultural spaces such as the JENIELIFT NE 83rd St. Fountainhead Studios, Ironside and Little Haiti Cultural Center, this enclave on the NE 82nd Terrace north site continues to change the landscape of Miami’s international allure.
N Miami Ave.
NE 2nd Ave.
NE 83rd St. NE 82nd Terrace
NE 82nd St.
RIMONIM NE 75th St.
NE 73rd St. NE 79th St.
DOT FIFTYONE
N Miami Ave.
e. Av 4th NE
SPINELLO PROJECTS
NE 71st St. NE 70th St.
NE 4th Ct
NE 2nd Ave.
NE 73rd St.
DOT FIFTYONE
NE 71st St.
NE 70th St. NE63rd St.
NE62nd St.
LAUNDROMAT
NE 69th St.
NE 4th Ct
GALLERY DIET
NE 2nd Ave.
N Miami Ave.
NE64th St.
e. Av 4th NE
SPINELLO PROJECTS
Biscayne Blvd.
RIMONIM NE 75th St.
NW 75th St. NE 69th St. THE FOUNTAINHEAD STUDIOS
NE 60th St. LITTLE HAITI CULTURAL CENTER NE 59th Terrace
Biscayne Blvd.
NW Miami Ct
er Riv tle Lit
NW 75th St. THE FOUNTAINHEAD STUDIOS
NW Miami Ct
Biscayne Blvd.
NE 79th St. MINDY SOLOMON VERSACEVERSACEVERSACE JENIELIFT
NE 84th St.
NE 59th St.
NE64th St. GALLERY DIET
NE63rd St.
MIAMI BEACH NE62nd St.
FL. 33139
21s t St
NE 60th St.
Par k Av e
CENTER CULTURALand LITTLE HAITI Miami Beach hosts Art Basel Miami Beach every December this important art fair NE 59th Terrace LAUNDROMAT reinforced our worldwide image as a cultural tourist destination. Major museums, a NE 59th St. beautiful Botanical Garden, the New World Symphony, the magnificent art-deco Holocaust by an interesting ArtCenter / South Florida, district and luxurious hotels are seasoned Memorial r the Miami Beach Urban Studios - FIU in Lincoln Road Mall andnteattractive art galleries d. Blv Ce de n that bring appealing contemporary art works to the visitors. a D 19th St io 19th St
t
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m
ia
M
BASS ART MUSEUM
The Fillmore At The Jackie Gleason Theater
17th St
17th St
Washington Ave.
Meridian Ave.
Jefferson Ave.
Michigan Ave.
18th St
Convention Center Dr.
n ve
n Co
New World Center Lincoln Ln
ARTCENTER/SOUTH FLORIDA Lincoln Rd
16th St
33
FIU-MBUS
ART DECO MUSEUM THE WOLFSONIAN WILLIAMS MCCALL
PRIVATE COLLECTIONS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC CIFO / Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation Downtown Miami 1018 N Miami Ave. Miami, Fl. 33136 305 455 3380 info@cifo.org cifo.org Hours: Thurs., Fri: 12 – 6 pm; Sat. & Sun: 10 am – 4 pm Admission: Free Installation view of Gustavo Pérez Monzón: Tramas. Photo David Almeida.
Through May 1, 2016 Gustavo Pérez Monzón. Tramas Curated by Elsa Vega and René Francisco Rodriguez September and October Grants & Commissions Exhibitions Closed from May to September, and in November. See map on page 29
de la Cruz Collection Contemporary Art Space Design District 23 NE 41st St. Miami, Fl. 33137 305 576 6112 info@delacruzcollection.org delacruzcollection.org Hours: Tues. – Sat: 10 am – 4 pm Admission: Free
2016 Exhibition You’ve Got to Know the Rules… ...to Break Them from the de la Cruz Collection Selection of works associated with defining 21st century practice. Tauba Auerbach, Untitled (Fold), 2010, Acrylic on canvas/wooden stretcher. 74 X 57 in.
dlC See map on page 30
Girls’ Club / Contemporary Art by Women Francie Bishop Good & David Horvitz Collection
117 NE 2nd St. Fort Lauderdale, Fl. 33301 954 828 9151 info@girlsclubcollection.org girlsclubcollection.org Hours: Wed – Fri: 1 – 5 Admission: Free
Through June 25, 2016 Self Proliferation Curated by Micaela Giovannotti.
Nikki S. Lee, Layers, Prague 1, 2007.
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DIRECTORY
roberto Matta, Repondre du Limite
roberto Fabelo, Viaje Fantastico
tHe-Merger, Sex Machine
Manuel Mendive, Aguas de Rio
Exhibiting works by Mario Carre単o /Carlos enriquez/ roberto Fabelo/CarMen Herrera/ WiFredo laM/ viCtor Manuel/ roberto Matta/ Manuel Mendive/ Pedro Pablo oliva/ Cundo berMudez/Carlos quintana/ Mariano rodriguez/ toMas sanCHez/ tHe Merger/ gabriel sanCHez toledo
LAtIn AMERICAn ARt
ModERn And ContEMPoRARy
Miami, FL | PH: 305-827-4804 | www.LEPrivateArtCollection.com Info@LEPrivateArtCollection.com | Artnet.com/LEPrivateArtCollection 35
PRIVATE COLLECTIONS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC the margulies collection at the WAREhOUSE Wynwood Arts District
591 NW 27th St. Miami, Fl. 33127 305 576 1051 mcollection@bellsouth.net margulieswarehouse.com Hours: Wed – Sat: 11 - 4 Admission: $10 donation to the Lotus House Women’s Shelter; Students Free / $ 5 Anselm Kiefer, Die Erdzeitalter, 2014, Two gouache and charcoal works on photographic paper and canvas and one sculpture. Dimensions Variable.
The Collection will re-open to the public in October 2016. See map on page 30
Through April 30, 2016 New Exhibitions: Anselm Kiefer Paintings, Sculptures, Installation Susan Philipsz Inmersive Sound Installation New works: Meuser, Liat Yossifor, Lawrence Carol, Mark Handforth, Lydia Gifford, Alec Soth and Pascale Marthine Tayou.
Rubell Family Collection Contemporary Arts Foundation
Wynwood Arts District 95 NW 29th St. Miami, Fl. 33127 305 573 6090 info@rfc.museum rfc.museum Hours: Wed. – Sat. 10 - 6 Jun – Nov: by appointment only Admission: $10 / students $5
Through May 28 No Man’s Land: Women Artists from the Rubell Family Collection
Mai-Thu Perret, Apocalypse Ballet (Pink Ring), 2006, Steel, wire, papier-maché, emulsion paint, varnish, gouache, wig, fluorescent tube and dress, 82 x 53 x 39 3/8 in.
The Collection will re-open to the public the first week of December 2016 See map on page 30
VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
Bass Museum of Art Closed for renovation. Reopening is expected in Fall 2016 bassmuseum.org New satellite space Bass X at the Miami Beach Library: 227 22nd St. 1st Floor, Miami Beach Mon – Tues: 12 – 8 Wed- Sun.: 10 – 6 Admission : Free
Robert Steele, Corrugated Curves VI, corrugated cardboard. Collection of Jane Gershon Weitzman
On View through May 31 Sylvie Fleury: Eternity Now January 24 – February 28 Jéremy Gobé. Freedom Leading Wool February 23 Athi-Patra Ruga. World Premiere Performance March 8 – April 10 Art & Sole: Fantasy Shoes from the Stuart Weitzman Collection April 26 – May 22 Emmet Moore June 7 – July 10 John Salvest 36
DIRECTORY
RAMĂ“N CHIRINOS ninoskahuerta.com | ninoskahuerta@gmail.com | Ph: 305 5881231
Wifredo Lam, Gallo del Caribe, 1972, oil on canvas, 20 x 27 in.
1646 SW 8th St. Miami, FL 33135
+1 305 989 9085 37
www.latinartcore.com
VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
Boca Raton Museum of Art 501 Plaza Real Boca Raton, Fl.33432 561 392 2500 bocamuseum.org Hours: Tues, Wed, & Fri: 10 – 5 / Thurs: 10 – 8 Sat & Sun: noon – 5 Admission: $12/$10 / Children & Students: Free Arnold Newman, Igor Stravinsky, composer and conductor, New York, 1946, Gelatin silver print
Through May 1 Warhol on Vinyl: The Record Covers, 1949 – 1987 Bob Colacello: In and Out with Andy Warhol Prints from the Collection of Marc Bell February 13 – April 10 John Raimondi. Drawing to Sculpture April 21 – July 3 Arnold Newman. Master Class July 17 – September 25 All Florida Invitational October 18, 2016 – January 22, 2017 RPM: Rhonda Mitrani, Patricia Gutierrez and Marina Font.
Coral Gables Museum 285 Aragon Ave. Coral Gables, Fl. 33134 305 603 8067 coralgablesmuseum.org Tue, Wed & Fri: 12 - 6 Sat: 11 - 5; Sun: 12 - 5
Intersection of Ponce de Leon Blvd. and Miracle Mile, 1952
CM
(See map page 28)
Through February 28 The Natural World Along Tamiami Trail: Photographs by Clyde Butcher Through May 22 Trailblazers: The Perilous Story of the Tamiami Trail February 4 – March 13 Florida Watercolor Society Traveling Show Curated by Morten Solberg March 3 – May 29 Miracle Mile: The Evolution of a Street
Cuban Museum | Museo Cubano The Museum of the Cuban Diáspora 1200 Coral Way Miami, FL 33145 305 667 9007 cubanmuseum.org Main Gallery on the first floor of the Cuban Museum.
CM
(See map page 21)
Inauguration: Fall 2016 In Distant Landscapes / En horizontes distantes Curators: Ileana Fuentes & Jesús Rosado South Florida Cuban-American Artists in Museum Collections Bending the Grid. Luis Cruz Azaceta: Dictators, Terrorism, War and Exiles Curator: Dr. Alejandro Anreus. Organized by Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, N.J.
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JEWISH MUSEUM OF FLORIDA-FIU Discovery and Recovery: Preserving Iraqi Jewish Heritage On View Through March 6, 2016 This exhibition was created by the National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC, with generous support from the U.S. Department of State. Local exhibition sponsors: Congregation Beth Jacob, Kenneth and Barbara Bloom, Elliot Stone and Bonnie Sockel-Stone, Isabel Bernfeld Anderson, and Nancy Pastroff. More information is available at www.ija.archives.gov.
Tik (Torah case) from Baghdad,19th-20th centuries.
A Song 1948, Psalm 126:5 Those who plant in tears will harvest in joy.
Mark Podwal: All This Has Come Upon Us… On View Through March 17, 2016
Exhibition sponsors include Funding Arts Network, Robert Arthur Segall Foundation, Dr. Paul Drucker, Burton Young, Kenneth and Barbara Bloom, Elliot Stone and Bonnie Sockel-Stone, Isabel Bernfeld Anderson, and Anonymous Donor.
UPCOMING: Cinema Judaica: The Epic Cycle (1947-71) February 29 – October 30, 2016 Susan Miller: Testament in Stone March 28 – October 16, 2016
Complete list of exhibitions and events at: www.jewishmuseum.com
301 Washington Ave, Miami Beach, FL 33139 www.jewishmuseum.com 305.672.5044 The Museum is supported by individual contributions, foundations, memberships and grants from the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture, the Miami-Dade County Tourist Development Council, the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners and the City of Miami Beach, Cultural Affairs Program, Cultural Arts Council.
39
VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden 10901 Old Cutler Rd. Coral Gables, Fl. 33156 305 667 1651 fairchildgarden.org Hours: Mon – Sun: 9:30 – 4:30 Admission: $25/$18/$12 Free: Children <5 Clyde Butcher, Shell Key, photograph.
February 13 – April 30 Clyde Butcher. Preserving Eden Through April 30 Orchid Odyssey Rainforest Exhibit March 10, 6 -9 p.m. Fairchild Lecture Series: Clyde Butcher March 11 - 13 International Orchid Festival April 9 - 10 Spring Garden Festival: July 9 - 10 November 11 - 13 International Mango Festival: 76th Annual Ramble & Fall Garden Festival
Frost Art Museum / FIU FIU Campus 10975 SW 17th St. Miami, Fl. 33199 305 348 2890 thefrost.fiu.edu Hours: Tue – Sat: 10 – 5 Sun: 12 – 5 Admission: Free
Roman Mosaic from Lod, Israel (detail), Roman, c. 300 CE, excavated at Lod (Lydda), Israel, stone tesserae, Photographs © Israel Antiquities Authority.
Through February 28 Carola Bravo: Blurred Borders Ramón Espantaleón: The Temptation Through April 17 The Art of Video Games: Smithsonian American Art Museum Exhibition Through February 28 First Folio! The Book that Gave Us Shakespeare February 10 - May 15 Predators and Prey: A Roman Mosaic from Lod, Israel
HistoryMiami 101 West Flagler St. Miami, Fl. 33130 305 375 1492 e.info@historymiami.org historymiami.org Hours: Tues – Sat: 10 – 5, Sun: 12 - 5 Admission: $8 / $7/ $5 Free Every 2nd. Sat : 1 - 4
Frank Sinatra. Courtesy: Ken Veeder@Capital Photo Archives
March 4 - June 5 Sinatra: An American Icon April 15 - August 14 Newsman: The Photojournalism of Tim Chapman July 29, 2016 - January 15, 2017 Beyond the Game September 24, 2016 - January 17, 2017 Alfred Browning Parker (100th Anniversary) Ongoing: History and Ourselves Tropical Dreams Whitman Family Gallery 40
DIRECTORY
41
VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami / ICA Design District The Moore Building 4040 NE 2nd Ave. Miami, Fl. 33137 305 901 5272 icamiami.org Hours: Tues – Sun: 11 - 7 Admission: Free
John Miller, Glad Hand, 1993, Mixed Media, 70 7/8 x 23 5/8 x 13 3/4 in.
Lowe Art Museum
February 18 - June 5 John Miller: I Stand, I Fall June 3 – September 18 Laura Lima July 8 –September 18 Renaud Jerez Susan Te Kahurangi King Ida Applebroog ICA
(See map page 30)
UM Campus 1301 Stanford Dr. Coral Gables, Fl. 33146 305 284 3535 lowemuseum.org Hours: Tues – Sat: 10 – 4; Sun: 12 – 4 Admission: $10 / $5 Free: UM students
Stirrup Spout Bottle, 1100-800 BCE, pottery and cinnabar, 10 5⁄8 x 6 5⁄8 x 8 5⁄8 in. (27 x 16.8 x 21.9 cm). Cupisnique, North Coast, Peru.
Through July 31 David Hayes: Small Sculpture and Guache Studies February 12 – July 2 Kay Pacha: Reciprocity with the Natural World. Curated exhibition of ancient Andean art from the Lowe’s permanent collection. Through April 10 ArtLab: GER.MANIA! Student-curated exhibition supervised by Dr.Nathan Timpano Through July 17 From The Bass Museum of Art Dürer to Rubens: Northern European Art Ancient Egyptian Mummies
MOA+D MDC Museum of Art + Design Freedom Tower • 600 Biscayne Blvd. Miami, Fl. 33132 305 237 7700 mdcmoad.org Hours: Wed - Sun: Noon – 5 Admisssion: Free
Alex Katz, Ada with Sunglasses #2, 1969, Oil on Masonite. Miami Dade College Permanent Art Collection.
FT
February 18 – September 25 75 Years of EFE Images: Wars, Triumphs, Disasters, People and Politics Through March 27 Steven and William Ladd: Mary Queen of the Universe April 20 – August 14 Richard Haas’ Miami March 23 – August 14 An Illustration of Oscar Wilde’s The Ballad of Reading Gaol. Paintings by symbolist painter Jean-Georges Cornélius April 20 – August 14 Sunkoo Yuh. Curated by Mindy Solomon Through August 28 Eduardo del Valle. Childhood Memories from the Other Side of the Water
(See map page 29)
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3160 PONCE DE LEON BLVD, CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 SHOWROOM | GALLERY | 786 464 9248 | 786 254 7434
DESIGN • ART • FURNITURE • ACCESORIES
Art by Ignacio Burgos, Madrid, Spain Gray Lacquered and Walnut Wood TV Cabinet De Marquez Line of Furniture made in Brazil
SHOWROOM & GALLERY
I N T ER I O RS A M BI E N T
DE MARQUEZ
DIRECTORY
VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
MOCA / Museum of Contemporary Art 770 NE 125th St. North Miami, Fl. 33161 305 893 6211 mymoca.org Hours: Tues - Fri: 11 – 5; Sat: 1 – 9; Sun: 11 – 5 Admission: $ 5 / $ 3, Free: children < 12
Carlos Salas, Into the Abyss, 2014, Mixed Media, 118 in. (300 cm diameter)
Through February 28 Carlos Salas. Latin America and the Global Imagination. Carlos Sandoval. Untitled (Limpieza). Project Gallery March 24 – May 29 Acta-Non-Verba: The Art of Marielle Plaisir Sculptural Installments. Live Performances.
NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale Nova Southeastern University 1 E. Las Olas Blvd. Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. 33301 954 525 5500 moafl.org Hours: Tues - Wed, Fri - Sat: 11 - 6 Thurs. 11 – 8; Sun 12 – 5 Admission: $10/ $7/ $5 Free: Children 5 & under
Ana Mendieta, Creek, 1974, Super 8 Film, color, silent.
February 7 – June 5 Bellissima: Italy and High Fashion (1945 – 1968) February 28 – July 3 Covered in Time and History: The Films of Ana Mendieta Through February 28 The Indestructible Lee Miller March 20 – October 2 Chuck Close. Photographs
Norton Museum of Art 1451 S. Olive Ave. West Palm Beach, Fl. 33401 561 832 5196 norton.org Hours: Tues – Sun: 11 – 5: Thurs. until 9 Admission: $12 / $5/ < 12: free
Georgia O’Keeffe, Red Flower, 1919, oil on canvas, 20 1/4 x 17 1/4 in.
Under Construction beginning Summer, the Museum will remain open
February 18 – May 15 Women Modernists in New York: O’Keeffe, Stettheimer, Torr and Zorach February 8 – May 3 The Triumph of Love: Beth Rudin DeWoody Collects March 19 – July 12 Imaging Eden: Photographers Discover the Everglades Through April 17 Vincent van Gogh: The Poplars at Saint Rémy, 1889 Edgar Degas. Portrait of Mlle. Hortense Valpiçon, c.1871 Through March 20 Tiny: Streetwise Revisited. Photographs by Mary Ellen Mark Through April 24, 2016 Njideka Akunyili Crosby: I Refuse to be Invisible
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DIRECTORY Discover 5,000 years of world culture at Miami’s most comprehensive art museum. FRANK STELLA (b. 1936, Malden, MA) Le Neveu de Rameau from the Diderot Series, 1974. Gift of Martin Z. Margulies, 85.0191.
1301 Stanford Drive, Coral Gables, FL 33146 305.284.3535 www.lowemuseum.org University of Miami: Lowe Art Museum - Ad 3.5 “ x 2.625” Yazi | 305.648.1267 chris@yazi.com www.yazi.com
Original exhibits, bike tours, Gallery Nights, kids’ camps, architectural walking tours and more! All at CGM! coralgablesmuseum.org 305-603-8067
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D ORA V ALDÉS-F AULI ART SERVICES
2655 LE JEUNE ROAD, SUITE 546 CORAL GABLES, FL 33134 305 779 4874 DORAVF@BELLSOUTH.NET WWW.DVFSERVICES.COM
A RT A P P R A I S A L S Insurance Estate Evaluation Charitable Donation Equitable Distribution Resale Value Damage Claim Liquidation
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VISUAL ART MUSEUMS
IN GREATER MIAMI & BEYOND
PAMM/Pérez Art Museum Miami 1103 Biscayne Blvd. Miami, Fl. 33132 305 375 3000 info@pamm.org pamm.org
Michele Oka Doner, How I Caught a Swallow in Mid-Air, ca. 1990. Cyanotype print.
(See map page 29) Hours: Mon - Tue: 10 - 6; Closed Wed.; Thurs:10 - 9; Fri - Sun: 10 - 6 Admission: $8 / $4 Free Every 2nd. Sat/Students & Children < 12
February 18 – November 13 Beatriz Santiago: A Universe of Fragile Mirrors March 24 – September 11 Michele Oka Doner: How I Caught a Swallow in Mid-Air April 22 – July 17 Doris Salcedo August 12 – October 23 Basquiat: The Unknown Notebooks Through April 24 Carlos Alfonzo: Clay Woks and Painted Ceramics Through March 6 Firelei Báez: Bloodlines Project Galleries: Matthew Ronay - 03/10 /16 – 01/15/17 Romare Bearden – 01/14/16 – 06/26/16 Cristobal León & Joaquin Cociña – 02/04/16 – 05/29/16 Sheela Gowda -12/01/15 – 08/21/16
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The Wolfsonian / FIU 1001 Washington Ave. Miami Beach, Fl. 33139 305 531 1001 wolfsonian.org
Brochure, Come to Cuba: the loveliest land that human eyes have ever seen, c. 1950. Conrado Walter Massaguer, illustrator. Cuban National Tourist Commission, publisher. Offset lithograph. 10 5/8 x 17 in.
Hours: Daily 12 – 6; Fri: 12 – 9; Closed Wed Admission: $7/ $5 Free: Children < 6
May 6 – August 21 Promising Paradise: Cuban Allure, American Seduction Through May 8 Margin of Error. Organized by Mathew Abess Through February 28 Philodendron: From Pan-Latin Exotic to American Modern Through May 31 An Artist on the Eastern Front: Felkis Topolski, 1941 Americans All: Race Relations in Depression-Era Mural Ongoing: Art and Design in the Modern Age: Selections from The Wolfsonian Collection
Vizcaya Museum & Gardens 3251 S. Miami Ave. Miami, Fl. 33129 305 250 9133 vizcaya.org
Leyden Rodriguez-Casanova, Rendering, a reference to the Casba that appears as either unfinished or deconstructed, depending on the viewer’s perspective. Small, exotic pavilion that was originally part of Vizcaya’s southern gardens - and is now on the grounds of the Archdiocese of Miami. Hours: Daily: 9:30 – 4:30 Admission: $18 / $12 / $6 /< 5: free
May 2016 - May 2017 Lost Spaces and Stories of Vizcaya Original Installations by: Duane Brant, Brookhart Jonquil, Amanda Keeley, Juraj Kojs, Mira Lehr and Yara Travieso, Lucinda Linderman, Kerry Phillips, Leyden RodriguezCasanova, David Rohn, Magnus Sigurdarson and Frances Trombly. Permanent Collection on View National Historic Landmark that preserves the Miami estate of agricultural industrialist James Deering. Built between 1914 and 1922, inspired by the stately homes of Europe, celebrating 100 Anniversary. 46
DIRECTORY
INTERNATIONAL CONTEMPORARY ART SINCE 1974
Divergent Illusions
Through April 2016 Michelle Concepci贸n, Carlos Garcia, Armando Morales, Mario P茅rez, Richard Taylor ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries
169 Madeira Avenue Coral Gables, Florida 33134 Tel: 305 444 4493 info@virginiamiller.com
virginiamiller.com
Armando Morales, Untitled, Gouache on Paper, 10 x 12 5/8 inches, 1989
Museum-quality exhibitions, purchase and resale of important works of art.
1654 SW 8th St., Miami FL 33135 +1 305 8770480 \ didi@didimarchi.com \ didimarchi.com 47
110 NE 40th street â&#x20AC;˘ Miami FL 33160 Tel: 305 308 6398 www.markowiczfineart.com
Le Siffleur by Idan Zareski Edition of 8 Bronze or Resin 89cm Height
Wynwood Walls, Mural by Miss Van
In my neighborhood, art is everywhere and inspires everything. You can find it on the walls and doors. You can buy it in the galleries. You can taste it at our hip restaurants, coffee shops, and local breweries. You can even admire it at a hair salon. I’m Mali, check out my Wynwood video guide and learn about other cool neighborhoods at ItSoMiami.com
WYNWOOD – IT’S SO MIAMI® ©Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau – The Official Destination Sales & Marketing Organization for Greater Miami and the Beaches.
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