The Bass Announces Acquisition Of Major Contemporary Works To The Permanent Collection

Selections of the newly acquired work are now on view at Miami Beach’s contemporary art museum

 

The Bass is pleased to announce the acquisition of major contemporary works by living artists to the permanent collection. Significant work by Sanford Biggers, Mark Handforth, Karen Rifas, Mika Rottenberg, Pascale Marthine Tayou and Lawrence Weiner are the latest additions to the museum’s permanent collection and were made possible by the John and Johanna Bass Acquisition Fund, which was launched in 2016 to expand the museum’s international contemporary art collection. Spearheaded by Executive Director and Chief Curator Silvia Karman Cubiñá and Board President George Lindemann, the program aims to forge a strong connection between the collection and the museum’s changing exhibition program, which features established and mid-career international contemporary artists.

“Continuing to grow and expand our permanent collection is a vital part of our commitment to international contemporary art,” says Executive Director Cubiñá. “In particular, the Rifas, Rottenberg and Tayou acquisitions came out of integral dialogue with our robust exhibition program. The Bass is excited to deepen our connections with all three artists.”

The Bass is pleased to support living artists whose practice has a significant impact on the landscape of contemporary art. Sanford Biggers’ interactive piece Poteau Mitan transforms the traditional use of the mandala into a physical experience, while Lawrence’s Weiner’s iconic text-based works play with the relationship between language and object. Finally, Mika Rottenberg’s work pays homage to South Florida, transporting the state’s ubiquitous air conditioning units into a white box exhibition space. The Bass is also pleased to acquire works by significant Miami-based artists Mark Handforth and Karen Rifas.

 

FURTHER DETAILS ON THESE ACQUISITIONS:

SANFORD BIGGERS (b. 1970, United States)
Poteau Mitan, 2002
Rubber tiles, Formica, plywood, mirrors
120 x 120 in. (floor), 120 x 120 in. (ceiling)

An LA native working in NYC, Sanford Biggers creates artworks that integrate film, video, installation, sculpture, drawing, original music and performance. He intentionally complicates issues such as hip-hop, Buddhism, politics, identity and art history in order to offer new perspectives and associations for established symbols. Through a multi-disciplinary formal process and a syncretic creative approach, he makes works that are as aesthetically pleasing as they are conceptual.

In Poteau Mitan Biggers transforms his use of the mandala, sometimes defined as a doorway between heaven and earth, from a viewed surface into a physical experience, effectively allowing the viewer the sensation of being inside of the mandala. The title Poteau Mitan describes a column used in Yoruba and Voudun rituals. In these ceremonies, people dance around a central column that acts as a portal, which allows spirits to come in and inhabit the bodies of the dancers. Similar to dance floors Biggers has created for break-dancers, the floor of Poteau Mitan is a place for the viewer to enter, move around, and possibly be transported to a spiritual place.

MARK HANDFORTH (b. 1969, Hong Kong)
Silver Branch, 2016
Aluminum, lamppost
120 x 310 x 80 cm / 47 1/4 x 122 x 31 1/2 inches

Based in Miami since 1992, Mark Handforth is profoundly tied to the legacy of the 20th-century American avant-garde. He freely makes use of a formal vocabulary borrowed from ready-made, Minimalist or Pop Art, which he confronts with an iconography often derived from the urban environment.

His work has appeared in exhibitions internationally, including solo presentations and outdoor public sculptures at the Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Villa Croce, Genova, Italy (2016); Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (2011); Dallas Museum of Art (2007); Kunsthaus Zürich (2005); and the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2002).

KAREN RIFAS (b. 1942, United States)
Untitled, 2018
Vinyl and wood
Dimensions variable

Based in Miami for over 60 years, Karen Rifas’ artistic practice is rooted in an unwavering exploration of geometry and the possibilities of the straight line. Currently on view in her solo exhibition at The Bass, Untitled, 2018 is an installation of vinyl-covered wooden sculptures and a floor applique, site-specific in scale and pattern to the architecture of the gallery. Anchored by the square, Rifas’ turquoise, pink and orange floor vinyl becomes three-dimensional with the layering of two, L-shaped, horizontal sculptures of the same palette. Functioning as seating, from which to experience the totality of the exhibition, the sculptures can be manipulated and moved by the artist throughout the duration of the exhibition.

MIKA ROTTENBERG (b. 1978, Argentina)
AC Trio, 2015
Mixed media
Dimensions Variable

The exteriors of three window air conditioner units clustered together comprise AC Trio, a work with obvious relevance to South Florida residents as a predominant fixture on most buildings. Placed here on Miami Beach, the aged exteriors and audible hum suggest a daily, working-class and domestic necessity. Rottenberg creates an artificial ecosystem with the work, where drips of condensation land on heated pots and pans below, suggesting a certain precarity. Her interest in shifting states of matter is evidenced within AC Trio as the seductive “hiss” of the water hitting the hot pan signals the transition from liquid to vapor. Through a bizarre and artificial contraption, seemingly endless and pointless in its production, the work perhaps foregrounds shifting climatic conditions through the context of the installation’s location. The appliances specifically intended to mask and alleviate heat are set within the museum’s temperature-controlled environment and call attention to the increasingly visible symptoms of global climate change.

LAWRENCE WEINER (b. 1942, United States)
SHELLS USED TO BUILD ROADS POURED UPON SHELLS USED TO PAY THE WAY, AT THE LEVEL OF THE SEA, 2008
Language + the materials referred to
Dimensions variable

Lawrence Weiner’s texts have appeared in all sorts of places over the last five decades and although he sees himself as a sculptor rather than a conceptualist, he is among the trailblazers of the 1960s to present art as language. He defines his sculptural medium simply as ‘language + the material referred to’, in the sense that language is a material for construction. Accordingly, his first book Statements (1968) contains 24 typewritten descriptions of works, where only a few had been made, suggesting that a work’s existence requires a readership rather than a physical presence. Weiner’s Statement of Intent (1969) even more clearly identifies ‘universal availability’ as a guiding principle:

1. The artist may construct the piece.
2. The piece may be fabricated.
3. The piece need not be built.

Each being equal and consistent with the intent of the artist, the decision as to condition rests with the receiver upon the occasion of receivership.

While his works exist only as language and can be displayed in any form, he is closely involved in manifestations, detailing the size of the font, the surface texture and placement of the paint or vinyl letters and indeed often inventing new fonts. Texts appear on walls and windows of galleries and public spaces, as spoken word in audio recordings and video, printed books and posters, cast or carved objects, tattoos, graffiti, lyrics, online, ad infinitum.

PASCALE MARTHINE TAYOU (b. 1966, Cameroon)
Welcome Wall, 2015
LED signs
Dimensions variable

The site-specific work, commission by the museum, is composed of animated LED signs that read “welcome” in over 70 languages, broadcasting a message of profound inclusion from the lobby of the museum. Through the context of existing social, cultural and political structures, Tayou’s creations both mediate between cultures and question the frameworks in which they exist. His concern for the decolonization of histories and territories aligns with the international and transient nature of Miami Beach and the impact tourism continues to have in shaping the city. The work first went on view coinciding with Tayou’s solo exhibition, Beautiful, on view at The Bass from October 29, 2017 to May 21, 2018.

 

 


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