Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Wolfson
Full Text:
Wolfsonian: Culture Comes To South Beach
w/cuts
By Judith B. Gura
MIAMI, FLA. -- Only a few years ago, the words "Miami Beach" and "culture"
might have seemed mutually exclusive. Not any longer. In addition to the
flashy hotels and restaurants that have made it an international vacation
playground, the much-maligned city now boasts cultural attractions that draw
local audiences as well as tourists.
By far the most interesting of these is The Wolfsonian, a unique decorative
arts museum just steps away from trendy South Beach. Its stylish locale may be
an unlikely one for a serious institution, but The Wolfsonian is definitely
that, with a provocative concept and a unique collection of fascinating
objects. Last year, the museum and its collections became part of Florida
International University, a young and aggressive, state-funded institution
with a focus on the creative arts. From all indications, it is the proverbial
match made in heaven.
In addition to pursuing a challenging exhibition schedule, the revived
institution, under new director Cathy Leff, has set new goals, which include
integrating the museum's facilities and staff into the university's
curriculum, and broadening its outreach into the community and the Miami
school system.
Meanwhile, "Designing Modernity: The Arts of Reform and Persuasion,
1885-1945," the groundbreaking inaugural exhibition mounted in 1995 with
selections from the museum's holdings, has traveled to Los Angeles, Seattle,
Pittsburgh, and Indianapolis. It will go on to Australia and New Zealand to
help build an international identity for The Wolfsonian, and the university.
The publication accompanying the exhibition, edited by associate director
Wendy Kaplan, has already been accepted as an important work of scholarship.
Housed in a converted 1927 warehouse on Washington Avenue, The Wolfsonian
began as the impulse of an unconventional collector. Shortly after World War
II, Mickey Wolfson, a Miami native and the compulsively-acquisitive scion of a
theater-empire family, focused his attention on the use of design to reflect
culture, politics and technology during the first part of the Twentieth
Century. It was an offbeat area that had not been explored by other museums or
collectors, and in some three decades of peripatetic travels and enthusiastic
buying, Wolfson assembled an idiosyncratic collection of more than 70,000
objects as well as an extraordinarily rich library.
Primarily from American and European sources, the collection includes
furniture, decorative art objects, industrial design, costumes, paintings,
sculpture and architectural models as well as works on paper, and concentrates
on the period from 1885 to 1945, documenting the cultural, political and
technological developments emerging in the half-century or so preceding World
War II.
After purchasing a warehouse to hold his acquisitions, Wolfson founded the
museum in 1986, and began the state-of-the-art renovation that culminated in
the opening to the public of The Wolfsonian, subtitled "The Museum of
Decorative and Propaganda Art," three years ago. Almost immediately, however
the institution was plagued by financial difficulties, resulting in abrupt
staff reductions and a summer-long closing. Its survival is due equally to
Wolfson's commitment and generosity, and to the vision of city and state
officials who helped it make the transition from a floundering upstart to a
stable institution with a promising future.
With trustee Charles Cowles acting as matchmaker, FIU was approached. An
affiliation was suggested that would relieve the museum of its unwieldy
operating costs while providing the university with an important resource for
its arts and humanities departments.
On December 16 of last year, Florida International University announced the
celebration of its 25th anniversary with the acquisition of The Wolfsonian,
which Wolfson donated lock, stock and barrel, including the library as well as
the collections. At an estimated value of $75 million, the gift was the
largest ever to a Florida state university and the fifth largest to a public
university nationwide. With a $2 million annual allocation from the State of
Florida, the organization's future is now secure.
The powers at FIU know a good thing when they see it, and have wisely not made
any changes to the museum's impressive facilities. A visit to its galleries is
as intellectually stimulating as it is visually rewarding -- indeed, Wolfson
has been quoted as saying, "This is not an art museum. It is a museum of
ideas."
The current exhibitions, "Pioneers of Modern Graphic Design," and "Public
Works," both organized by curator Marianne Lamonaca, use the museum's own
comprehensive holdings to examine particular types of design as expressions of
political concepts.
"Pioneers of Modern Graphic Design" includes a wide range of exhibits
illustrating the development of graphic design from the latter Nineteenth
through the mid-Twentieth Century. With the advent of technology that brought
color and sophistication to printed materials, mass-produced graphics evolved
from "visual litter" into important documents of popular culture. The exhibit
includes ephemera, such as postcards and stationery, as well as posters, books
and magazine illustrations. It shows the role played by graphic design in such
avant-garde movements as the Futurists in Italy, the Constructivists in Russia
and the Bauhaus in Germany. These works promoted the aesthetics of Modernism
to an audience well beyond the ivory-tower walls of the groups that conceived
it.
"Public Works," presented in collaboration with The Drawing Center of New York
City, examines the history and the significance of public art in the United
States. It draws on the museum's holdings of Works Progress
Administration/Federal Art Project materials, which are among the most
extensive in the country, and shows more than 60 works reflecting the most
important themes of these New Deal projects.
They include studies for some of the extraordinary murals commissioned for
federal and state buildings during the Depression, both as employment for
struggling artists and as a way to enhance everyday life with art that was
accessible to all.
Many such pieces were subsequently painted over, or destroyed along with the
sites that housed them. They are now recognized not only as important realist
works in themselves, but also as historic documents of our society.
Counterpointing the period works is a contemporary mural in realist style by
artist Nicole Eisenman, created as part of an ongoing collaborative program in
public art sponsored with the Miami Arts Project and The Drawing Center.
In May, the museum will open "Drawing the Future: Design Drawings for the 1939
World's Fair," an exhibition based on a touring show from the Museum of the
City of New York, supplementing the illustrations with objects from The
Wolfsonian's own extensive collection of World's Fair materials and objects.
And an exhibition on the British Arts and Crafts Movement is on the agenda for
Fall.
In addition to the changing exhibitions, The Wolfsonian maintains an ongoing
exhibit of some 300 objects from its permanent collection. Entitled "Art and
Design in the Machine Age," it reflects the themes of design reform,
propaganda, advertising, labor, transportation and the world's fairs,
providing a tantalizing taste of the museum's considerable treasures.
Free of financial pressures, The Wolfsonian is also pursuing its activities on
several other fronts. It continues to produce The Journal of Decorative and
Propaganda Arts, the widely-praised annual (since 1986) publication of The
Wolfson Foundation of Decorative and Propaganda Arts. The brand-new issue,
just published, focuses appropriately on the state of Florida, as a case-study
in the art of self-promotion, and was guest-edited by architectural critic
Beth Dunlop. Issues of the journal are $25 each, plus $5 shipping and
handling, and may be ordered from The Wolfsonian, 1001 Washington Avenue,
Miami Beach, Fla. 33139 by mail, or fax 305/531-2133.
A fellowship program initiated in 1993 awards six scholars from the United
States and abroad expense-paid grants for study at the museum on subjects
related to the institution's period of specialization. A comprehensive program
of lectures, performances, films and symposia accompany and complement the
exhibitions, and innovative school programs and family activities are helping
make the institution a more important part of the surrounding community.
According to Cathy Leff, The Wolfsonian will expand next year onto the
Internet, and expects to become a broad-based cultural resource with
visibility well beyond its city, state and national borders. Meanwhile, behind
the scenes, Mickey Wolfson, named to Florida International University's board
of trustees, continues eagerly seeking more treasures to add to the museum's
already rich collections.
Altogether, a visit to The Wolfsonian is well worth a detour from the Florida
sunshine or the attractions of South Beach. For those who have previously
disdained Miami, it's one reason to reconsider. When other museums are
mounting extravagant displays to compete with amusement parks, the idea of one
that seeks to challenge the mind while pleasing the senses is very appealing,
and increasingly rare.
