• Logout
  • Member Center

Art Basel Miami Beach at 10: The Basel Effect on Miami

 

Art Basel Miami Beach opens its 10th fair to a city far more culturally aware than it was a decade ago. The Swiss-run fair amped up the volume on Miami’s art scene and has helped it grow.

ART WEEK MIAMI

Many private openings and events begin Monday; even if you aren’t on the lists, you’ll likely encounter increased traffic and full restaurants. The following are open to the public:

•  Wednesday: Design Miami/ opens to the public in a giant tent adjacent to the Miami Beach Convention Center, 19th street and Meridian Avenue. Tickets, $25; www.designmiami.com.

Many “satellite’’ art fairs open to the public, including Art Miami, Scope, Pulse, Art Asia, Red Dot and NADA. Ticket prices vary; find detailed information at MiamiHerald.com/artbasel.

•  T hursday: Art Basel Miami Beach opens to the public at noon at the Miami Beach Convention Center. A one-day ticket costs $40 ($23 for seniors and students); run of fair pass $85; evening ticket (valid from 4 p.m.) $28. www.artbasel.com.

IN WEDNESDAY’S MIAMI HERALD

•  Art Basel magazine and guide

MULTIMEDIA AT MiamiHerald.com/artbasel

•  Event listings, available via mobile

•  Beginning Tuesday: Live Twitter feed. Join the conversation at #artbasel.

•  Live webcam streams from the fairs: Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, noon- 2 p.m.

•  Throughout the week: Videos, photo galleries and reports

AT Miami.com

•  Parties and more

TWEET TWEET

•  Use the hashtag #artbasel and join the Twitter conversation


Special to the Miami Herald

During a recent opening at the Carol Jazzar gallery in El Portal, longtime holographer Mark Diamond used the headlights of his 1989 Caprice Classic station wagon to show a newbie artist his latest experiments with 3-D photography.

The artist, Alicia Apfel, is a lawyer by day. But Art Basel Miami Beach, with its yearly injection of art euphoria, has compelled her not only to collect art but also to get her hands dirty making it. A while back, Jazzar let Apfel use her space for an installation: a build-out of a living room with only traces of the person who might have just inhabited it.

“Mark came to see it and we got excited about the possibility of a collaboration,’’ Apfel said. “We think his three-dimensional photography might be able to capture the gist conceptually, and in terms of emotional content, of these rooms I’m interested in building.’’

The 10th edition of Art Basel, with its avalanche of blue chip art and its invasion by the who’s who of international art-world players, opens this week in a Miami that’s nobody’s uncultured cousin anymore.

From thriving art schools to the explosion of galleries and street art in Wynwood, from the expansion of local museums to the impassioned toiling of artists both unknown and on their way to the international stage — Art Basel’s presence over a decade has helped transform a town that was less known for high-minded cultural engagement than for the lowbrow if glam pursuits immortalized in MTV music videos.

“People forget there was a Miami art scene before Art Basel,’’ said Dennis Scholl, vice president of arts programs for the Knight Foundation. “That’s what drew the fair here. But there is no question Art Basel has had a profound influence. A rising tide lifts all boats. I think Art Basel has helped the visual arts, and the arts in general, fuse into the fabric of the community.’’

The fair brings with it enough collateral action to seize the town for a week, clog up traffic around the Beach and Miami’s urban core and make it nearly impossible to score a taxi or a reservation at the top restaurants. Involved in the arty tangle: more than a dozen satellite art fairs that pitch tents and take over hotels and warehouse spaces around the Beach and the mainland; just about all of South Florida’s museums and private collection spaces, which put on special shows; public art pieces and guerrilla art by locals and out-of-towners blanketing the town. It takes a master strategist to attend just a sampling of glam dinners, cocktail parties and after-hours soirees marketing goods that this year include Ferrari, Dom Perignon and headphones by Dr. Dre.

But when Basel first put down stakes here in 2002, there was no Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts. No Frank Gehry-designed home for the New World Symphony. No South Dade Performing Arts Center or Aventura Performing Art Center. No De La Cruz Contemporary Art Space. No starchitect-designed parking garages getting ink around the world, such as the Herzog & de Meuron structure on Lincoln Road and the one coming to the Collins Park area by the famed, London-based Zaha Hadid.

“The impact that Art Basel has had in Miami from the international perspective is tremendous,’’ said Juan Ignacio Vidarte, director of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, another town transformed by art and the presence of its Gehry-designed contemporary art museum.

dealsaver
The Miami Herald: Subscribe now!

Join the discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

We have introduced a new commenting system called Disqus for our articles. This allows readers the option of signing in using their Facebook, Twitter, Disqus or existing MiamiHerald.com username and password.

Having problems? Read more about the commenting system on MiamiHerald.com.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK
0 comments

  • Videos

  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category