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A Bigger Maurice Payne (2008), by David Hockney. (Photo by Katie Deits)

A Bigger Maurice Payne (2008), by David Hockney. (Photo by Katie Deits)

From established artists to newbies, Art Basel is a place where one can see the innovators of contemporary art, and the annual Miami Beach version of this European art stalwart gets under way formally tonight.

But the action associated with the festival started up at the beginning of the week, and on Wednesday afternoon, VIPs were lined up at the Miami Beach Convention Center for their first look at the show itself. At 6 p.m., other vernissage visitors were welcomed into the massive center, where more than 250 leading galleries from North America, Europe, Latin American, Asia and Africa are exhibiting works by more than 2,000 artists.

Log Cabin (2009), by Leandro Erlich, outside view. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Log Cabin (2009), by Leandro Erlich, outside view. (Photo by Katie Deits)

One of the distinctive features of Art Basel is that it has many offsite exhibits, such as Art Positions, which features cutting-edge projects by 23 young galleries at a display in Collins Park; Art Projects, in outdoor public spaces near the convention center; and The Oceanfront, which offers conversations with prominent art-world figures during the day, and at night, concerts, performances, videos and film.

In the main hall, you can see work by established artists moving into new technology, as evidenced in the large, inkjet-printed computer drawings by British artist David Hockney.

Also, there was a clever standing sculpture called Log Cabin, created this year by Leandro Erlich, in which two plasma screens are encased on either side of walls simulating a log cabin. The video screen on one side of the cabin played a snowy forest scene; the other showed a cozy living room with a fireplace.

Plataforma I (2009), by Juan Genoves. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Plataforma I (2009), by Juan Genoves. (Photo by Katie Deits)

In the Marlborough Gallery, Juan Genoves’ brightly colored acrylic paintings caused a stir as his globs of paint looked like tiny figures moving across space from an aerial perspective. Meanwhile, the Galeria Horrach Moya featured sculptures by Jorge Mayet, such as Me desprendo de ti (I let go of you) (2009), a tree, expertly constructed of papier-maché, electric cable, textile and acrylics from the branches to its roots, suspended almost invisibly from the ceiling.

Me desprendo de ti (2009), by Jorge Mayet. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Me desprendo de ti (2009), by Jorge Mayet. (Photo by Katie Deits)

At the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery (New York), a terrifying 7-foot-tall bald-head ceramic sculpture called Crazy Nuke (1986), crafted by Robert Arneson, seemly screamed for attention.

Crazy Nuke (1986), by Robert Arneson. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Crazy Nuke (1986), by Robert Arneson. (Photo by Katie Deits)

All of Miami’s museums, such as the Miami Art Museum and Museum of Contemporary Art, are featuring special exhibitions and events. The major private collections are open for viewing, too, including the Margulies Collection, the Rubell Family Collection and several others.

The entire Miami area has an air of excitement, as satellite art fairs, gallery openings and events abound in both Miami Beach and Miami. Last night, after Art Basel closed, people walked over to the nearby Lincoln Road pedestrian mall for dinner, drinks, shopping, and more art openings.

Stella Octangula, by Santiago Rubino. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Stella Octangula, by Santiago Rubino. (Photo by Katie Deits)

At 800 Lincoln Road, street artists and their art groupies overflowed onto the sidewalk outside of The Art Center South Florida, which was exhibiting their group show Blueprint for Space, containing work by internationally known contemporary street artists (also known as graffiti artists), such as Dolla and Santiago Rubino. The street artists are also staging Primary Flight, a series of original site-specific street-level mural installations spread at locations throughout the Wynwood Arts District.

David Z in his studio at the Art Center South Florida (Photo by Katie Deits)

David Z in his studio at the Art Center South Florida (Photo by Katie Deits)

Upstairs at The Art Center South Florida, David Zalben, an artist known as David Z, has a corner studio displaying his quirky, humorous and sometimes erotic work. David Z’s wire sculptures bob and jiggle, simulating human situations and relationships. His classically representational paintings are created on a grid in which he uses old Altoid cans as his canvas.

Art Basel runs through Sunday. One-day tickets are $35 and students and seniors are $20. Multi-day tickets are also available. Hours are noon through 8 p.m. today through Saturday, and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday.

Scapegoat, Bruised Egos and Stolen Steelo, by Dolla. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Scapegoat, Bruised Egos and Stolen Steelo, by Dolla. (Photo by Katie Deits)

Comments (3)add comment

bosha stone said:

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Katie, Sorry we missed you yesterday, would liked to have lunched together.Thought the show was terrifically interesting and inventive! Alot of BLK on Blw and WHT on WHT, loved IT!Guess this is what CHANGE is!
See you back @ LCA.
Bosha Stone
 
December 04, 2009
Votes: +0

rose shaw said:

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Hi Katie and art lovers everywhere; I had the experience of Basel this year again, and have to say I am kind of sad about the dispondant air of some of the work. I am tired of the skulls, the morbid refrains of sex and torture.
I need beauty again. The piece that resonated with me even days later is the huge bronze orchid.
And the fashion ''Bots" I know, it is simplistic, but it was a beautifully orchestrated piece that so many could love and appeciate. It was ZEN.the Bass museum was also great- I was amazed and intrigued by their whole collection of Medieval and new modern.
The peace is what I am looking for right now. I love Basel and the open idea of the works but the idea of art for the commentary on what is miserable is not appealing right now. Think of the Vietnam war- what did we gravitate to?
D_I_S_C _O so we need beauty now. p.s the Gloria Estaphan restaurant was fine for eats. same with the Beacon hotel
3 star anyway!
over and out- Rose
 
December 04, 2009
Votes: +0

Jere Miles said:

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I am fortunate to live with three David Z's grid paintings....... and eighteen of his wire sculptures. He is the most prolific artist in our home. His wires delight everyone who comes here. We (obviously) love his creative genius.
 
December 05, 2009
Votes: +1

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