<<<Street Festival Vendors
I decided to kill two birds with one stone by first stopping
at a street fair that was near the
Historic
Lyric Theatre which was the venue for
The Art of Conversation;
an event that was free to the public and featured live musical entertainment. I
reserved a spot but was too pooped to party after covering the
CONTEXT Miami
Art Show event. I arrived at my main destination at approximately
2:15
PM after catching the free
Metro
Mover Downtown after transferring from the
Metrorail. Fortunately I
did not have far to walk from the
Omni stop near
Biscayne Boulevard which
was only about a tenth of a mile from the
CONTEXT Art Miami pop up
display tents.
<<<Art Circuits Guide
I was immediately introduced to what was to come after walking
up on a very dark-looking exhibit featuring a dog. I then heading towards what
I believed was the main entrance to the exhibit but was given a slight run
around as I was told to go over here, then there, then here again before I ran
into a nice gentleman named Juan at the
Art Miami entrance who was
working the event and was nice enough to allow me to enter that pop up tent then
walk to the
CONTEXT area in a different section of that enormous tent.
^^^Butterfield Horse
<<<Black Forest
Once inside the
CONTEXT tent I was immediately
impressed by the atmosphere, art enthusiasts, and the greeter that furnish me
with a really slick
Art Circuits Guide that detailed all of the major
fairs taking place in
Miami by area. I then proceeded into the exhibit
and encountered my first
"stop here inkling" that featured what appeared
to be a bronze horse but turned out to be actually crafted with wood. The
artist is
Deborah Butterfield who was born and raised in
San Diego,
CA, and began creating sculptures in the form of horses in the
1970's
first from mud, clay, and sticks; then scrap metal and found steel, and today
bronze work cast from
"stray, downed pieces of wood." Her work was
presented by the
Zolla/Lieberman Gallery of
Chicago,
IL.
My next
stop here inkling came as a result of what I
interpreted as a mind trick piece that featured black and white spirals that
were somewhat reminiscent of one of my favorite
throw-back scary shows
The Twilight Zone
starring
Rod Serling. The
presenting gallery was
Espace Meyer Zafra of
Paris/New York which
has a track record dating back to
2000 and focuses on
Latin American
and
European artists who specialize in optical art, kinetics and
geometric abstraction. Next up was an exhibit that got my interest because it
featured my favorite color
Black in the form of a
forest. The presenter
was the
Galleria Alfredo Ginocchio of
Mexico City Mexico which
has been in business for
30 years and has displayed the works of
46
artists.
Eyeballs>>>
I could not help but stop at this next exhibit as I was drawn
to it by a set of eye balls curiously staring at me from a framed piece of art.
At first it appears to be one set of eye balls but they double as you draw
closer. I am not quite sure of just how this illusion has been accomplished but
suffice it to say that it is a stroke of genius. The presenter of this
whimsical work was Spoke Art of New York City. I am an Army
Veteran so this next exhibit was a no-brainer as it caught my attention
primarily because it features familiar folks in uniform ascending steps while
distracted by a pretty girl wearing a bathing suit. The presenter was SAY Art
Space based in Seoul South Korea (we did some training near there
back in the 1980's) and Los Angeles, CA; who provide space to
artists "regardless of their nationality, age, or genre."
This next exhibit caught my attention because I thought that I
was seeing things when it appeared to actually move. It features sunflowers in
the foreground and ships on the ocean in the background. If you stare at it for
a minute the flowers seem to move either by imagination or for real. I could
not figure out which theory was true but the title
"Moving Flowers"
suggests the latter. The presenter of this puzzling work was the
Blink
Group Fine Art Gallery located right here in
Miami and not
too far from this area off
Biscayne Boulevard. Their
"mission is to
ensure that every detail and every aspect of our artist and client relations is
perfect."
Click here to plan a group visit next year!