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Art Basel Miami Beach Etc.
A Report From Miami
>>
By M. Brendon MacInnis

About Running an Art Fair
A Conversation with Alexis Hubsman >>

The M Interview

              


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Art Basel Miami Beach Etc.
A Report From Miami

By M. Brendon MacInnis

 

Now that the dust has settled, following the latest installment of Art Basel Miami Beach (ABMB) and the remarkable constellation of mini fairs it has inspired, two news items stand out as particularly significant: Ilana Vardy’s bold and gutsy reinvention of Art Miami, and the departure of Sam Keller from the Miami art scene. Keller, whom the previous Art Basel director, Lorenzo Rudolf, brought to Miami as his public relations assistant to help launch ABMB and who would serve as the Show’s director since 2000, is returning to his native Switzerland to take the reins of the museum, Foundation Beyeler. A committee of three directors comprised of Cay Sophie Rabinowitz, (artistic director) Annette Schönholzerbecome, (organization and finances) and Marc Spiegler (strategy and development) will lead the the next edition of ABMB.

While Keller’s departure was anticipated, the turn-around at Art Miami, under Vardy’s directorship, was a real coup. The city’s second largest fair, after ABMB, the show nevertheless seemed destined for extinction in recent years, largely because it took place the month following ABMB. Getting quality exhibitors to return to Miami after the world’s most famous art party had just come through town proved to be an untenable situation. Vardy’s new Art Miami takes place during “Art Basel Week” in the heart of Miami’s Wynwood Art District, an area teaming with art galleries, that was pioneered by Tony Goldman and his son, Joey, of Goldman Properties. Tony Goldman is the humanist visionair behind the renaisence of New York’s fashionable Soho and Miami Beach’s Art Deco District. Vardy’s retooling of Art Miami is more than a scene change, however, as she signed up roster of exhibitors that reads like a who’s who of the art world, and the show’s production pulled out all the stops.

Beyond ABMB and Art Miami, an armada of some twenty plus fairs, in all shapes and sizes, came to work and play in Miami during Art Basel Week. These ranged from Thierry Alet’s unassuming Pool Art, which features international artists showing their own art in hotel rooms on Miami Beache’s Ocean Drive, (Alet’s DIVA Miami did not take place this year); to the traditional hotel fairs, such as Red Dot and Flow; to the gigantic pavilion-like booth fairs (some of which evolved from hotels). Then there were special project’s such as Ethan Cohen’s — and fellow curators — ArtHaus, which hosted several RSVP events in a large private residence just off Lincoln Road, and the team effort of Ronald Feldman Fine Art, Joe Arnheim’s Pierogi and Hales Gallery (of London), held at a large converted office space in Wynwood. There was even art art fair on a boat, called SeaFair, which was organized by the art world power-house duo, the Lesters, who also founded Art Miami, (all those years ago...).

Also new this year, the Japanese fair, Geisai, made it’s debut in Wynwood, taking place next door to Helen Allen’s Pulse Miami. The hotel art fair, Aqua (named for the Aqua Hotel in which it is held) opened a booth fair in Wynwood called Aqua Wynwood, which ran concurrently, providing its own shuttle service between the two locations. The Brooklyn based gorilla art fair, Fountain, which started out as one of the satellite fairs in the orbit of New York’s The Armory Show, launched a Miami edition in Wynwood. The decidedly edgy art fair tapped into the local art scene, showing works by the painter Miguel Paredes and performance artist, Rachel Hoffman, among a cacophony like-minded artist/dealers. Aipad, (Association of International Art Photography Art Dealers) which has long been a fixture in New York’s art fair calendar also launched a Miami edition this year, with a tent booth fair in Wynwood, located next door to Stephen Cohen’s Photo Miami. The two tents were connected by a shared cafe restaurant.

Here is a full list (with contact information) of the rest of the fairs that took place during Art Basel Week, beginning with the booth fairs in Wynwood: Scope Miami www.scope-art.com; NADA www.newartdealers.org; Pulse Miami wwwpulse-art.com; Aqua Wynwood www.aquaartmiami.com; Geisai www.geisai.us; Aipad www.aipad.com; Photo Miami www.artfairsinc.com; Art Miami www.art-miami.com; Fountain www.fountainexhibit.com.

In Miami Beach, you have ABMB, at the Maimi Beach Convention Center, and nearby in a private residence, ArtHaus www.arthausmiami.info. The Lesters’ SeaFair boat was anchored in the harbor. Then, you have the art fairs in hotels: Red Dot www.reddotfair.com; Art Now Fair www.artnowfair.com; Flow Art Fair www.flowfair.com; Casa Décor www.casadecor-usa.com; Ink Miami inkartfair.com. Thierry Alet’s DiVA Miami, which took place last year in shipping containers on the beach, apparently could not get approval to use the beach this year. But Alet’s indefatigable Pool Art, whereby artists “pool” there own resources to present their work directly to visitors, took place at the Cavalier Hotel on Ocean Drive. As it turns out, this seemingly least likely of venues is where I saw work that inspired me enough to take out a piece of paper and write down the name, etc. Now if only I could find that piece of paper...

 


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About Running an Art Fair
A Conversation with Alexis Hubsman

The M Interview

 

Alexis Hubsman, founder of Scope-Art, Inc., talks about the nuts and bolts of running an art fair. An artist, who co-founded one of the early galleries in Chelsea, Rare Art, Hubsman started Scope in the late 1990s as an alternative art fair that took its cue from The Armory Show. In this conversation, we cover the practical matters involved in getting an art fair into orbit, as well as taking a frank look at some of the issues and personalities to be navigated while doing business in Miami’s super-charged art world.

 

Do you have a system in place to guarantee a turnover of new galleries each year?

You mean like the “Liste” fair in Basel, where they limit participation to three years?


Yes, something like that.

No, because that doesn’t work. Even the Liste is now having to pitch a tent to accommodate more galleries. We have a kind of hierarchy, which we built around price points that can be negotiated to bring everyone in. For example, we have the Breeder section, where we take a hard look at investing in young galleries, to bring them up through the ranks. For example, our normal price quote is from $6,000 to $12,000 for a booth, and it goes upwards. We have some that go up to $18,000 for a booth. They’re starting to get more expensive this year, as they get bigger.

 

The booths are getting bigger?

Yes. It’s a scale of square feet for dollars. For the Breeders, we offer a 150 square-foot booth, and the charge is $4000 and $5,000 depending on the situation. And there are occasions where grants are given that let some people in pretty cheap. It depends on if they are really interesting for us. It’s more often people you may not know, like for example a gallery called “White Trash” from Hamburg. I don’t know if you know them.

 

I haven’t been to Hamburg in a long time, but I remember there were these interesting pockets in the city where you had this radical edge.

Absolutely. A lot of interesting stuff going on, Germany sets precedents. But aside from all that, White Trash is an example where we gave them a space for $2,500 because they’re new, they’re young, they’re special.

 

What’s your relationship with museums?

We have great relationships with museums. In New York, we work with Guggenheim, The New Museum…


You mean in a fund raising role?

It’s all varied. In the Hamptons, we’re in a fund raising posture, whether it’s Guild Hall; Parrish; Watermill. We don’t just drop down our circus tent, and then do nothing for the community. We had to work on a permit application, and send them a list of the organizations that we have benefited in the past, and it’s like two pages. We benefit a lot of nonprofits, we’re really proud of that.

 

In the beginning, when you were starting Scope-Art, what was your model? Did you look at, for example, Peter Blau’s “Young Art Fair” in Basel?

No. It was The Armory Show, the Armory gets full hand credit. But they all do; I mean the idea that there can be an alternative fair. I can have a congenial relationship. A lot of people thought this would be a parasitic fair. I can appreciate that. I mean, there is an element of that being financially, realistically true. There’s no way we could’ve done this with nothing else going on.

 

How is your relationship with The Armory Show now?

It’s great. In fact, we’re the first fair they called out to when they switched their dates, to see if we would switch with them. They’re like our big brother.


I see.

So it’s been comfortable for us. It’s been, you know, it legitimizes them too. They have to deal with Art Basel coming down to Miami, and then you have Frieze in London…

 

How are things with Frieze?

Frieze has not been friendly. We kept trying to be near them, but then we saw no benefit to it.

 

How about Art Basel? I’ve heard they aren’t so open to other art fairs doing business in Miami.

Yeah, I mean, I can be specifically honest about that. You know, there’s one thing that’s said to you and there’s another thing that’s done behind your back. To be frank, you know Sam Keller had been very friendly early on. In fact, he was one of the reasons I got, with Rare, into the first Miami Basel fair. There was a friendship there, or at least a reasonable respect. And, but ultimately, I think, yeah, it steals a bit of thunder. You know, and at a certain point, if your collectors are not at your place, spending money, and they’re elsewhere, it can only be…


The pie is only so big.

It’s only so big. Although what’s interesting is that this year [last year], people thought there would be so many fairs, that there would be dropouts for a lot of them. But we did bigger sales than we’ve ever done. Pulse did very well, Aqua did very well. I mean everybody did very well. So it’s clear that there’s room for it. And I think, frankly, when you look at the thing — like Pulse, Scope and NADA being in Wynwood now — you start to get galleries of the same scale as Art Basel’s. Ultimately you get the emerging market.

 

Was there a turning point in your relationship with Sam?

Yes, he’s got a lot of control down there. I mean frankly, Lorenzo Rudolf is the guy that brain-stormed this whole thing, [Art Basel Miami Beach] and Sam has been lucky to be on the receiving end. He carried the ball down court.

 

Yeah, I know the history.

I mean, to be fair, Sam’s amazing for what he’s done; he’s added a jewel-like quality to the art fair mentality. It’s no longer just a few fairs, it’s really opened the door.

 

What’s an example of a moratorium?

Advertising. Where you can put up billboards. Where you can do another fair. In South Beach, for example, there’s a whole area, of plots of land, that are marked off as sort of no-fly zones for art fairs as well as advertising.

 

So, who would Sam talk with down there to get that done?

Well, I mean, I know the names, but it’s probably not appropriate for me to throw them out.


So that’s that. What’s next for Scope? How many Scopes are there now?

Right now we have four; I mean of the ones that are generating revenue, that are working. We have London, New York, Miami and the Hamptons.

 

Aren’t you doing something in Palm Beach?

We’re playing with the idea; there’s a few secondary markets we’re looking at. Palm Beach. L A. I don’t know if I should really call it secondary, but that’s what it is for us now. Then there’s Basel, St. Moritz and Monaco; these are part of the European push — Scope-Europe.

 

Monaco sounds interesting.

Yeah, well, you know, we learned a lesson from the Hamptons; people said we were crazy; why are you going there? They said nobody wants to look at art in the summer, that it’s all about antiques. We did a very modest first show last year, and it was very successful.

 

 

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