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City Guide

Miami: A Museum Lover's Guide

By Sotheby's Museum Network
Miami's art scene has flourished in recent years, with several high-profile collectors and museums exhibiting through the city. It gained a major boost to its worldwide renown when Art Basel launched its Miami Beach week in 2002.

T he arrival of Art Basel Miami Beach in 2002 put the city on the art world’s map. Locals, including the art patrons who have opened their collections to the public, would argue that it had much to offer even before then. Indeed, one of the reasons the Swiss fair chose Miami over cities such as Los Angeles was the presence of civic-minded patrons such as Mera and Don Rubell, Marty Margulies, Craig Robins and Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz, who were already showing their modern and contemporary collections to a wꦍider public.

Exterior of the Bass Museum. Photo courtesy of the Bass Museum.

Today the cultural renaissance of this party cityꦡ, nestled between the Florida Everglades and the Atlantic Ocean, is hard to ignore. In December 2013 the Pérez Art Museum Miami opened in Downtown Miami, with a new Herzog & de Meuron building near the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, with its striking Cesar Pelli-designed building. The Bass Museum in Miami Beach reopened in October 2017 with a $12m revamp of its 1930s home, already extended in 2001 by Arata Isozaki. It is now simply called The Bass to signal a greater emphasis on contemporary art.

View of Art Basel Miami Beach, 2017. © Art Basel.

In November 2017, entrepreneurs Ximena and Alan Faena, who are reviving a run-down area of mid-Miami Beach, opened the Faena 𒆙Forum, a multidisciplinary arts centre designed by Rem Koolhaas’s OMA. Plus in December 2017, the Institute of Contemporary Art reopened in a building designed by Madrid- based firm Aranguren + Gallegos Arquitectos. It has been funded by collectors Irma and Norman Braman, and is built on land in the Design District donated by property developer and collector Craig Robins.

As well as art, there is much for visitors to enjoy beyond the pleasures of South Beach and the Art Deco Historic District. The redevelopment of Downtown continues, while Wynwood and the Design🧜 District are must-see areas. Cool new hotels and bars have sprung up and a local foodie movement has emerged in a city already known as an exciting meeting point for American, Latin and Caribbean cultures.

Miami’s Must-See Museums

PAMM Dusk.JPG
View of Pérez Art Museum Miami. Photo by Robin Hill.

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM)

PAMM is one of Miami’s leading publicly-funded art💝 museums, focusing on 2ಌ0th and 21st century art— international work as well as art from the American Latino population, the African diaspora, Latin America and the Caribbean.

View of The Bass and Ugo Rondione's Miami Mountain (2016) from Collins Park. Photo: Zachary Balber, courtesy of The Bass, Miami Beach.

The Bass

Although founded with a collection of Old Master European paintings, textiles and sculpture donated in the 1960s by John and Johanna Bass, The Bass now focuses on international contemporary art.🔥 Arata Isozaki, architect of the museum’s first extension to its 1930s building (a former library) in 2001, has wo♕rked with architect David Gauld on the latest extension.

Exterior of The Wolfsonian. Photo courtesy of Acroterion.

The Wolfsonian

The Wolfsonian was founded by former🌄 dipl🐎omat and philanthropist Micky Wolfson. It has staged shows on everything from early 20th century kinetic sculptures to the aesthetics of the Trans-Siberian railroad, in an important Mediterranean Revival building.

Exterior of Faena Forum.

Faena Forum

One of the latest additions to the Miami art scene, the Faena Forum complex houses pop-up art exhi𝐆bitions, performances and cultural events.

Exterior of ICA Miami. Photo courtesy of ICA Miami.

Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (ICA)

After almost three years in a temporary space, the ICA re♕op🌺ened in December 2017 with its own folded-steel clad 37,500 sq ft building.

De La Cruz Collection.

De la Cruz Collection

Another addition to the Design District, Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz - who have been collecting contemporary art for 30 years - opened their collection to the public꧅ in this large, airy and minimal museum in 2🍌009.

Rubell Family Collection, Miami Florida
Exterior of the Rubell Family Collection. Photo courtesy of the Rubell Family Collection.

Rubell Family Collection

Two of Miami’s most important contemporary art collectors, Mera and Don Rubell, are also responsible for the transformation of the Wynwood Arts District, where the Rubell Family Collection can be found. Their exhibitions - such as the in♑fluential 🐻30 Americans, on the work of contemporary African Americans - frequently tour the US.

Margulies Collection. Photo courtesy of Jeanie Giebel.

The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse

Collector Marty Margulies mixes a permanent display of works by John Chamberlain, Amar Kanwar, 168开奖官方开奖网站查询:Willem de Kooning, Olafur Eliasson, Michael Heizer, Donald Judd, Jannis Kounellis, Richard Serra and Tony Smith, with exhibitions drawn from his contemporary collection at the Warehouse.

Rendering of Norton Museum of Art. Photo courtesy of the Norton.

Norton Museum of Art

About an hour’s drive from Miami, 168开奖官方开奖网站查询:the Norton is Southern Florida’s most important museum of art, with collections spanning the historic to th🍰e contemporary. While still open to the public, it has undergone a major extension and renovation by Foster + Partners and will fully r꧅eopen on February 9th, 2019.

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Where to Eat

Kyu

A wood-fired Asian-inspired restaurant by Chef Michael Lewis, an alumnus of the London edition of Japanese restau🌺rant Zuma. This is a trendy place with a green ethos.

251 NW 25th St, Miami, FL 33127.

Alter

Alter is one of the hits of 🐭the emerging arts district of Wynwood (which is also home to the Rubell Family Collection). Chef Brad Kilgore, a James Beard 2017 Semifinalist, uses🥂 locally-sourced ingredients to create a super-stylish Floridian menu in a warehouse.

223 NW 23rd St, Miami, FL 33127.

El Mago de las Fritas

On♔e of the best places in Miami to get a ‘frita’ - a Cuban burger which devotees claim has more character than its American counterpart. The original owner, ‘the Magician’, is still at the head of this family-run business.

5828 SW 8th St, West Miami, FL 33144.

Where to Drink

The Anderson

A favourite with locals on Miami’s vibrant Upper Eas🦂tside, this 80s-inspired retro bar is a staple when it comes to exotic cocktails and vintage music.

709 NE 79th St, Miami, FL 33138.

Mac’s Club Deuce

Mac’s Club Deuce is Miami’s oldest bar. It’s a South Beach institution where the cast and crew of Miami Vice hung out, and still attracts a large, loyal and local
crowd.

222 14th Street, Miami Beach, FL 33139.

Where to Sleep

The Standard Spa Miami Beach

Away from the🐻 bustling waterfront of South Beach, the Standard Spa is located on Belle Isle. Famous for its spa facilities, it boasts a large swimming pool, hydrotherapy and mud treatments that guarantee a youthful, party crowd.

40 Island Ave, Miami Beach, FL 33139.

Mandarin Oriental, Miami

In a prime location on Brickell Key, the Mandarin Oriental has great views of South Beach and the city centre’s ๊skyline. It has an infinity pool, a large spa, access to its own beach and a well-regarded, high-end Peruvian-inspired restaurant.

500 Brickell Key Drive, Miami, FL 33131.

Casa Faena

The little sister of the lavish Faena Miami Beach (which has interiors by film director Baz Luhrmann), the Casa Faena is a Spanish-style inn built in 1928. With two bars, just 50 rooms and a lot of ar🍃t, this is a relaxed and cheery place to stay.

3500 Collins Ave, Miami Beach, FL 33140.

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Getting Around

Miami is generally not a foot-friendly city, and despite the existence of bicycle schemes (Miami Beach Decobike and Citibike) this is only an option for the more proficient cyclist. Bus services are patchy and payment complicat🐈ed unless you buy an Easy Card. Make your life easy: local taxis, Uber or Lyft are really the only viable option.

Sothe✱by's connects with three of Miami's leading culture experts to discuss their favorite destinations and insider tips for the contemporary art hub. For more on Miami, see the

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Miami: the Insiders' Guide

Perez Art Museum Miami

Franklin Sirmans, Director of the Pérez Art Museum Miami

"I go to the , our major performing arts centre, a lot. It’s just walking distance from the Pérez Art Museum Miami. I particularly look forward to the residencies. The company comes regularly🐎 because the Artistic Director, Robert Battle, is from Miami. has recently reopened with a new extension, so that’s ⛄a must-see, and the has just opened its permanent space in the Design District. has been putting on some great shows recently: it is a way of keeping in touch with the pulse of what’s happening on the ground here.

It is also worth checking out local galleries like Nina Johnson and . Anthony Spinello is a huge advocate for artists who are living and working in Miami. But it’s so gorgeous here in Miami in the autumn and winter, that it’s also a great time to be outdoors. The ideal is to hire a boat and go out on the water. If you can’t do that, we just revamped our restaurant at PAMM, it has an outdoor terrace with magnificent views of Biscayne Bay! The main thing is ﷽– don’t just stay around South Beach."

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