Tuesday, February 06, 2007

RIP: Miami Art Central


We are saddened to hear that Miami Art Central (MAC) on Red Road in South Miami is shuttering its doors. Barring a reversal by its wealthy benefactor, in a few months MAC will be gone.

In December, the Miami Herald reported on the impending alliance between MAC’s visual arts programming and the Miami Art Museum (and its ‘new’ planned bayfront home). We are doubtful.

MAC pushed into an empty space in Miami.

Art Basel whips into Miami and out of town like a dream you forget as soon as it is over: MAC provided endurance, bringing cutting edge visual artists to Miami from all over the world, even if most Miamians never grasped what they meant.

Ellen Fontanals-Cisneros poured millions into MAC without, apparently, taking into account the geography of Miami’s cultural landscape.

The few organizations that do cultivate connections, the Miami Light Project for instance, succeed in spite of Miami not because of it. In the visual arts, pioneers like the Snitzer Gallery stand out, precariously.

Proximity of the location to the University of Miami may have given MAC’s benefactor the idea that audiences would gather from the edges of Miami’s leading private university. But Miami does not cultivate its audiences for art: it builds coloseums.

MAC was the right project in the wrong place, proving that the urban landscape of Miami is as atomized as its culture.

It was right, because in its aspiration, MAC provided elegant resistance to the hit-and-run culture featured, for example, in the Sunday Style section of the New York Times: Romero Britto, “In Miami, Art Without Angst”, whose work “seems as ubiquitous in South Florida as pastel hotels and $15 mojitos”. We get it.

For the most part, our homegrown grand-poobahs celebrate Britto with the same gusto as building all-star monuments to culture, like the Performing Arts Center.

MAC occupies the former offices of an engineering company—Wolfberg Alvarez—that often perched in the midst of Miami-Dade County infrastructure projects that destroyed everything in the path of the real estate deal.

We are left with a city that seems never to be able to sink cultural connections deeper than the roots tethering our swaying banyan trees to the sandy earth.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not dead yet! Check out the list of signatories as of Wed a.m. to "An Open Letter to MAM," now on the new 'keep MAC alive!' blogsite at: www.keepMACalive.wordpress.com.

Anonymous said...

Is this what happens when you leave the development of culture up to the capitalists and not the citizens? What the rich give they can easily take away, what the people vote for only they can take from themselves. I've heard that her husband, was the original developer of 55 Merrick Park in Coral Gables
condo /residences/offices/retail and that he has been trying to develop all the real estate they own surrounding the main building. In fact I believe that the change of zoning on the surrounding properties went to a BCC vote but was postponed after neighborhood objections supported by Comm. Gimenez.

Also, guess who is running for mayor!

Anonymous said...

Who?

Anonymous said...

Your previous "anonymous" right on the money re MAC real estate woes. Can this be behind the demise?
Check out the Herald story from Sun. Nov. 19, "Museum's proposed plans opposed" and then "State to review Red Road project" following Thursday.

And, what's with the Herald? They run two stories on this, then their arts writer does an article couple of weeks ago on the MAC-MAM merger & nobody bothers to check what they've written previously?Geez ... talk about bush-league!!!

Anonymous said...

Dear Folks,

This afternoon, I attended a meeting of the Planning & Advisory Board of Miami-Dade County. First on the agenda, were folks from the Miami Art Museum and its related developers, Red Cloisters, Blue Cloisters, and EFT Holdings. They talked about theire planned development near the
museum and their plans for the museum. I feel they have been less than forthcoming about their plans.

Nothing was mentioned about the museum closing. What information do you have on this topic?

Also, do you have any information about the proposed development?

Geniusofdespair said...

I looked up two of the corporations you mentioned:
EFT Holdings in a defunct as of 9/15/06 corp. It is out of parkland FL
officer FRIEDLAND, ERIC

Blue Cloisters is:
PEREZ, SUZANNE
5960 SW 57 AVE
MIAMI FL 33143 D

MARTINEZ, JUAN PABLO
5960 SW 57 AVE
MIAMI FL 33143