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Cultural Arts/miami
beach
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Miami Beach continues to achieve excellence
in the field of cultural arts with world-class organizations such
as the New World Symphony and the Bass Museum calling the Beach
their home. City officials have given special
consideration to cultural organizations that appeal to the broad
range of residents and visitors that frequent Miami Beach. |
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Bass Museum of Art
2121 Park Avenue
Miami Beach, FL
(305) 673-7530
www.bassmuseum.org |
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Designed in 1930 by Russell Pancoast, the architect grandson
of John A. Collins (as in Collins Avenue), the Art Deco
Bass Museum of
Art structure was originally
a library. Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, who has designed new spaces for the
Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, the Guggenheim Museum SoHo, and the
Brooklyn Museum of Art, has redesigned the Bass to provide more than three times
its original exhibition space. The new museum will include an outdoor sculpture
terrace, café and museum shop, and it will be equipped to exhibit both its
permanent collection of European and American paintings and sculptures, and
collections on loan. Before it closed for renovations, the Bass drew crowds for
its exhibit of the dark, brooding works of Maxim Kantor and of Liza Lou’s
meticulously hand-beaded sculptures, portraits, and installations. |
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Colony Theater
1040 Lincoln Rd.
Miami Beach, FL
(305) 674-1040 |
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The city-owned, 465-seat Colony Theater, originally built in
the 1930s (Art Deco, of course) by Paramount Pictures as a movie theater, is now
used to showcase live performances and film festivals. Eartha Kitt, Spalding
Gray, Sandra Bernhard, Lypsinka and Ru Paul have all graced its stage, as have
numerous local dance companies. The annual
South Beach Film Festival, and the Winter Shorts Film Festival are usually
held here, and the theater has recently opened that necessary if not sufficient
Lincoln Road staple, the outdoor café, which features coffee, desserts, liqueurs
and a full bar for those post-performance critical chats. |
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Fillmore Miami Beach
at the Jackie Gleason Theater
1700 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach, FL
(305)
673-7300 |
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The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater is Miami Beach’s premier theater
venue, housing performances of the Miami City Ballet, touring Broadway shows
such as Rent, Fame, Stomp and Les Misérables, and a host of international
singers and musicians.
Originally called the Miami Beach Auditorium when it was
built in 1950, in 1987 the theater was renamed in honor of Jackie Gleason, who
moved to Miami Beach in 1964 in search of a year-round golfing climate and
recorded his The Jackie Gleason Show from the Auditorium.
This season marks the 50th anniversary of the theater, whose
lobby will showcase images of the theater through the years.
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New World
Symphony
541 Lincoln Road
Miami Beach, FL
(305) 673-3330 |
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Since 1987, conductor and artistic director Michael Tilson
Thomas has been impressing South Florida audiences with the
New World Symphony,
housed in the historic Lincoln Theatre on Lincoln Road and Drexel Avenue. The
symphony is composed of 85 musicians who have passed a strenuous national
audition. Once chosen, they are part of a three-year fellowship program that has
had an impressive success rate: in 1999, 43 alumni went on to join professional
symphonies nationwide. |
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Wolfsonian Museum
1001 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach, FL
(305) 531-1001
www.wolfsonian.fiu.edu |
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Founded in 1986, the
Wolfsonian
Museum joined forces with Florida
International University in 1997, and specializes in art and design from
1885-1945. Curated by Cathy Leff, the museum owns over 70,000 objects d’art. As
part of the university, its aim is to educate by providing a way of glimpsing
history and tracing the evolution of North American and European culture and
technology. The Wolfsonian also publishes the annual Journal of Decorative and
Propaganda Arts—this year’s theme is Florida, with a collection of essays on
the history and culture of the state. The building itself, while easily bypassed
in the bustle of Washington Avenue, features an extraordinary interior and is
worth a rainy-day visit even if the particular collection on display does not
tempt. |
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