A Day in the Life: Michael RushBy Ted Loos
Published: December 6, 2007
On-the-ground reports from Art Basel Miami Beach and the satellite fairs.
Still Growing Strong
ABMB 2007 will be bigger than ever. A report on everyone's favorite winter playground from Art+Auction.
When in Miami…
Culture+Travel recommends where to stay, what to see, where to play, what to eat. As director of the Rose Art Museum of Brandeis University, home to one of New England’s best contemporary collections, Michael Rush is much in demand at Art Basel Miami Beach, and he does much demanding. A specialist in video art and a former director of the Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art, Rush took a moment out of the madness to wearily reel off his schedule for Wednesday, December 5, his second day at the fair.
8:15 a.m. Eats a microwaved egg-and-cheese sandwich at a pastry shop with two curators who are working with him on “Broken Home,” an upcoming Rose exhibition that will re-create a 1997 Greene Naftali Gallery show in New York that featured work by Vito Acconci, Robert Gober, and others. 12:30 p.m. Bumps into Matthew Kozol, one of the Rose’s board members. “He was telling me about all his Mike Kelleys and Martin Kippenbergers, and I’ve never even been in his home! In Miami, people open up more. The first thing I’m doing back in Boston is paying him a visit.” 1 p.m. Takes a cell-phone call from a donor who has just donated a $1.5 million collection to the Rose but is staying anonymous. They work out the details of shipping the works to Brandeis. 1:30 p.m. Meets with a prospective board member for the Rose, a Boston-based collector the museum has been courting. “I hope we get him.”
3 p.m. Meets with Fergus McCaffrey, a New York dealer, about a conceptual photographer whose work he wants to buy. 6 p.m. “Drinks which may turn into dinner” with four curators from around the country at Talula at Collins and 23rd. 7:30 p.m. Attends the Whitney Museum/David Yurman party at the Sagamore Hotel. 11 p.m. Drinks at the Loews Miami Beach Hotel. “A couple of my board members are staying there. I suspect I’ll run into Jonathan Lee and his wife Barbara.”
2 a.m., Thursday, December 6 Bedtime at the Continental. Even though he only has one more day in Miami, Rush says, “It’s crazy—I’ve barely started looking at any art.” |
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