Herzog & de Meuron's Perez Art Museum in Miami
The building is like a Ceiba or a Banyan tree, where the columns become branches/roots that support the canopy and give shade underneath, in this way the Perez Museum becomes a tropical museum. In Jaques Herzog's words after a conversation with him in Miami, "it's about creating an architectonic language for the tropics that responds to to the climate and conditions of the place, not about creating air conditioned spaces which are like entering a refrigerator"... "We tried to create new architectonic typologies for the tropics, working with what would work in Miami's weather. It wouldn't work to import European or North American typologies to the building. You have to cook with local ingredients, if not, it would be like cooking fondue for dinner in the tropics"
up the stairs and into the building
Hew Locke's floating boats in the entrance space project gallery
the Americana exhibition presents an expanded notion of what art in the Americas is, and in doing so, redefines American art history through works in the collection. Using Miami as the axis from where to do this, the exhibition rewrites the history of art previously read as a linear history dominated by the European-AngloAmerican axis. PAMM's chief curator, Tobia Ostrander (who previously was at Tamayo and El Eco in Mexico) presents an expanded field of works from the American continent. Through the incorporation of works from Latin American and Caribbean origin, exhibited together with North American works, Americana creates new historical narratives through the juxtaposition of these works and histories, which today can no longer continue to be read as other or parallel histories, but need to be read as equal histories coexisting in same spatial temporalities.
Americana: Desiring Landscapes gallery
works by Mark Dion's The South Florida Wildlife Rescue Unit: Mobile Laboratory, together with Fernando Botero, Leandro Katz
Wilfredo Lam next to Ana Mendieta in the Americana: Sources of the Self gallery
up the stairs which also act as an open auditorium to the second floor
Ai Weiwei, According to What?, retrospective in the second floor
Ai Weiwei retrospective in the second floor
Americana: Progressive Forms Gallery
Paulo Pires, Helio Oiticica, Donald Judd, Joseph Albers
Torres Garcia next to Pablo Rasgado
Damian Ortega, Pablo Rasgado
Damian Ortega, Sam Durant, Eugenio Espinoza
Alexander Apostol, Robert Morris' portal, and Sarah Morris painting
Americana: Commodity Cultures gallery
Americana: Progressive Forms gallery
Gego, Ellsworth Kelly, Waldemar Cordeiro, Lygia Clark
Torres Garcia next to Pablo Rasgado
Damian Ortega, Pablo Rasgado
Damian Ortega, Sam Durant, Eugenio Espinoza
Alexander Apostol, Robert Morris' portal, and Sarah Morris painting
Americana: Commodity Cultures gallery
Jac Leirner next to Andy Warhol
Josephine Meckseper
Cildo Meireles, Insertion into Ideological Circuits
Nadin Ospina's stone carved Bart Simpson
Americana: Corporeal Violence gallery, Oscar Muñoz, Cortinas de Baño
Miguel Angel Rojas
Josephine Meckseper
Cildo Meireles, Insertion into Ideological Circuits
Nadin Ospina's stone carved Bart Simpson
Americana: Corporeal Violence gallery, Oscar Muñoz, Cortinas de Baño
Miguel Angel Rojas
Americana: Formalizing Craft gallery
PAMM's photography gallery
PAMM's paper gallery exhibiting A Human Document: Selections from the Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry
a retrospective exhibition of Cuban painter Amelia Peláez: The Craft of Modernity
PAMM's paper gallery exhibiting A Human Document: Selections from the Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry
a retrospective exhibition of Cuban painter Amelia Peláez: The Craft of Modernity
PAMM's Project Gallery with Yael Bartana's Inferno video on the construction of the third Temple of Solomon (Templo de Salmão) in São Paulo by a Brazilian Neo-Pentecostal Church, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God
PAMM's website
and read more on PAMM at Dezeen
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