The invite was cryptic: "Everyone who should be there will be; we all will be."
Hipster catnip, no doubt.
One of the Art Basel Miami Beach 2010 events, "The Island" was a unique twist on the art gallery experience, scattering 17 art pieces in the sand, mangroves, and forest of Flagler Memorial Island.
The letters F-A-M-E, each bedazzled with light bulbs, sit strewn in the sand.
First sign of life/art: Five folks in flowing white garb carry pink poles. We found the artist himself on the shore. He says the poles must always touch, and always move either clockwise or counterclockwise. You can jump in the middle of the circle, as my friend does, and cause them to change direction. An unbroken but everchanging chain of energy...or something like that.
Pressing on, we find vinyls in the sand, televisions in the woods, and four ladies in tights, flanked by an amplifier, a DVD player, and a television. They dance, chant, and shriek in hellacious (and hilarous) style. Macbeth, anyone?
Sifting through some bushes, I come upon another art piece.
Full garbage bags. Large Sheets of Cardboard. Boxes, lanterns, and what looks like plastic wrap. It's Trash.
Now this is brilliant art. Except the trash isn't part of a piece--it's "the island's" staging area. Cheers to irony.
And through all this, I can't help but wonder...aren't we missing the point? "The Island" is cool because instead of white walls and air conditioning, it's a gallery made of sand and blue sky. But all anyone can look at is the "art."
Even when it unintentionally make a nice "tongue-in-cheek" art -- the staging area non-art piece comes to mind -- the real art isn't the shrieking witches or the vinyls in the sand. It's the sand. It's not the TV in the woods. It's the woods. It's the water. It's this ISLAND, people.
Blade Runner pops into my mind.
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Blade Runner pops into my mind.
@2010 Copyright. All Rights Reserved by Viewfromvirginiakey.com
On Facebook: join Friends of Virginia Key.