Today, we take you to South Florida, for a conversation about public art with Swiss born artist Ugo Rondinone. Miami Mountain is the latest in his iconic Mountain series. The North American Badlands inspire the towering stack of five brightly colored neon stones that he designed to hold sway over the palm trees in Collins Park on Miami Beach. The Bass Museum of Art’s 2016 public art acquisition arrived in pieces. The boulders came from a quarry in Nevada, making their way to the beachfront park on flatbed trucks. A professional installation crew was ready and waiting. With industrial lifts and cranes, they erected the stone monument in a carefully calculated process that took just over 13 hours.
Cultural Complexity in Little Haiti
Curating Art in a Time of Global Change: IKT Norway
Art and Our Uncertain Future
Prospect 4 New Orleans—The Lotus In Spite of the Swamp
Art and the Rising Sea
Dara Friedman On The Theater of Your Mind
Studio Drift on Nature and Technology
Report from Miami Art Week 2017
Adam Nadel on the Endangered Everglades
Alba Triana on Experimenting with Sound and Light
Miami Art Week + Art Basel Preview 2017
Culture Making in Downtown Miami
Breakfast and the Beat with FreshArtINTL
Samson Young on Songs for Disaster Relief
Architecture with a Sense of Place
Lisa Reihana on Reversing the Colonial Gaze
Introducing Miami Film Festival Gems 2017
Sounds of Skulptur Projekte Münster 2017
Where Art Meets Cultural History
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