Friday, March 31, 2023

Noel Morera Cruz is a Cuban painter

 


Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

Noel Morera Cruz is a Cuban painter, illustrator, engraver, gold and silversmith, ceramicist, and set designer. He was born in Matanzas, Cuba, in 1962. Morera studied at Havana San Alejandro Academy of Fine Arts from 1973 to 1979 and also attended a course on serigraphy at the René Portocarrero Workshop in Havana, Cuba. He has participated in solo and collective exhibitions in Canada, Cuba, Ecuador, England, Italy, Mexico, Spain, and Turkey. Morera currently resides in Miami.

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Nelson Domínguez Cedeño

Nelson Domínguez Cedeño

 

Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

Nelson Domínguez Cedeño

Nelson Domínguez is a Cuban painter, draftsman, illustrator, sculptor, engraver, and ceramicist. He was born in Santiago de Cuba on September 23, 1947. Domínguez studied at the San Alejandro Academy of Plastic Arts in Havana and at the Higher Institute of Art in Havana, where he has been a professor and head of the Department of Painting. He is considered one of the masters of contemporary Cuban art. He has been part of the jury in various national and international competitions and is the National Prize of Plastic Arts of Cuba.


Monday, March 27, 2023

Maykel Linares is a Cuban draughtsman and painter





Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

Maykel Linares

Maykel Linares is a Cuban draughtsman and painter. He was born in Villa Clara, Cuba, in 1979. Linares graduate from the Fine Arts School Oscar Fernández Morera, in Trinidad, Cuba, in 2000. He specialized in painting and drawing. Linares‘s work has been shown in Finland, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Russia, Singapore, and Spain. His artwork has been featured in the Magazines ArtonCuba and Noticias de Arte Cubano, as well as many others. Linares’ work is in the collections of Pilar Citoler and the Fundacion Caja Sol in Spain. He lives and works between Havana, Cuba, and Madrid, Spain.


 

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Luis Enrique Silvestre Guerra - Zapata Gallery


 Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

Luis Enrique Silvestre Guerra is a contemporary Cuban artist, born in 1966 in Havana but raised in Hershey, Matanzas. At 16, he moved back to Havana to continue his studies. He had briefly attended the San Alejandro National Academy of Fine Arts in Havana, Cuba, and the Higher Institute of Industrial Design (ISDI) before he landed a job as Graphic Designer at the prestigious Bohemia Magazine. A series of gouache over carton drawings that earned him a Mention at the 1988 Salón de la Ciudad de Havana and an invitation to join the prestigious Higher Institute of Arts (ISA), where he was mentored by artists such as Flavio Garciandía, Eduardo Ponjuán, and Osvaldo Sanchez, exponents of the 80’s Generation movement. Silvestre decided to leave Cuba and move to Brasil in 1999. He now lives and works in the creative Vila Madalena neighborhood in São Paulo. He had individual shows at the National Museum of Fine Arts (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), the Cultural Center Laurinda Santos Lobo (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), and group shows at the Cuenca Biennial (Ecuador), the Wilfredo Lam Center (Havana, Cuba), Berini Gallery (Barcelona, Spain), and the Latin American Art Pavillion at the Red Dot Fair in Miami.

Saturday, March 25, 2023

Duvier del Dago - Zapata Gallery


 

Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

Duvier del Dago is a Cuban . visual artist He graduated from the Provincial School of Arts in Trinidad (1995) and the Superior Institute of Art (ISA) in Havana (2001). He was a member of DUPP Gallery, a project directed by René Francisco Rodríguez. He has participated in two editions of the Havana Biennial: in 2006, with his project Bungalow, and in 2000, with One, Two, Three, Testing… —this installation was awarded the 2000 UNESCO Prize for the Promotion of the Arts. He lives and works in Havana and has developed his work in installation art and drawing. From 2001 to 2011, del Dago worked as a professor at the Higher Institute of Art (ISA). He has been the recipient of several grants and art residences such as Atelier Calder, Cité International des Arts, and Le Pavillon, in France; Fountainhead and Vermont Studio Center, in the USA; Museum of Contemporary Art of Castille and Leon, MUSAC, in Spain, and Batiscafo, London. His works can be found in the Collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art Kunstlaboratorium, Vestfossen, Oslo, Norway; the Collection of the National Park of Ordesa and Monte Perdido, Aragon, Spain; the Jumex Collection, Mexico City, Mexico; the Collection of the Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico; the Farber Collection, New York, USA; the Solita Cohen de Mishaan Collection, Colombia / USA; the Darius Anderson private collection, California, USA; the Pizzuti private collection, USA; the Ana María Olabuenaga Chemestri Collection, Mexico City, Mexico, the Alfredo Chedraui private collection, Mexico City, Mexico; the Collection of Gilbert Brownstone, France / Cuba; the Zoe and Nabil Debs private collection, Beirut, Lebanon.

Friday, March 24, 2023

Alexis Leyva Machado


Zapata Gallery
1333 Coral Way,  Miami, FL 33145
Tel: (305) 744-5143

 Alexis Leyva Machado

Alexis Leyva Machado, "Kcho," is a contemporary Cuban craftsman working in form and blended media. He was born in 1970 on Isla de la Juventud, Cuba. He graduated from the National School of Arts in Havana in 1990 and the Elementary Art School of Nueva Gerona, Isla de la Juventud, in 1986. Kcho has participated in a number of renowned international biennials, including Venice, Istanbul, Gwangju, Havana, Johannesburg, Sao Paulo, and Istanbul. His works are important for the assortments of the Public Gallery of Expressive arts in Havana, Cuba; the New York City Museum of Modern Art (MoMA); the Tempe, Arizona, Art Museum of Arizona State University; the Reina Sofia Museum of Art in Madrid, Spain; the Mallorca, Spain-based Pilar and Joan Miró Foundation; the Aachen, Germany-based Ludwig Forum for Internationale Kunst; the Netherlands' Van Reekum Museum in Apeldoorn; Montreal, Canada's Les Cent Jours d'Art Contemporain; the Turin, Italy-based Galleria Civica di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea; the Jerusalem, Israel-based Israel Museum; the South Korean Gwangju Biennale Foundation; the California-based Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Paris, France-based Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume; the Japan-based Gan Gallery in Tokyo; and Minneapolis, Minnesota's Walker Art Center. In 2001, he was awarded the Superior Institute of Art in Havana's Artistic Merit Diploma; the 2001 Biennial of the Caribbean Prize for the Cuban Exhibition at the Museo de Arte Moderno in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; the 1995 Gwangju Biennale, South Korea, Grand Prize; and the UNESCO Prize for the Advancement of the Arts

Thursday, March 23, 2023

https://www.artechouse.com/


 

ARTECHOUSE Miami
736 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach, FL 33139
miami@artechouse.com

An innovative leader in the field of digital and experiential art, ARTECHOUSE expands the possibilities of art and how we experience it through cutting edge technology-driven exhibitions and experiences.

MAGENTAVERSE MIAMI OPEN NOW
ARTECHOUSE and Pantone invite you to enter MAGENTAVERSE and experience the limitless sights, sounds, emotions, and inspirations of Viva Magenta, the Pantone Color of the Year 2023.

You will be able to investigate the connections that exist between technology and nature through this immersive experience, which combines the real and the virtual worlds. It offers an opportunity to reconnect with the earth and immerse ourselves in our creative energies, igniting our spirit and enhancing our well-being. It submerges us into an unexpected and exciting color universe.

The exhibit will also feature content and explorations of space and technology from Pantone partners NASA and Motorola. Embark on artistic exploration and feel the power of the hue as you traverse multiple immersive rooms with textures and interactions that showcase Viva Magenta in all of its forms.

The Pantone Color of the Year will be revealed for the fourth year in a row by ARTECHOUSE and Pantone, but this is the first time a dedicated exhibit will be open to the public.

The exhibit is part of the Submerge by ARTECHOUSE series, a new immersive storytelling concept that immerses viewers in the tales of people, places, brands, and organizations at the crossroads of science, art, and technology.


Wednesday, March 22, 2023

LUMAS

 



LUMAS

With LUMAS, you can get photo art for sale. The portfolio of fine art that LUMAS has carefully curated is filled to the brim with stunning original works of art. Our curators search the global art market for the most compelling works by established and new artists.

The home of exciting, affordable, and collectible fine art is AFFORDABLE FINE ART LUMAS. The LUMAS idea is as follows: reducing the cost of fine art by producing limited editions. On the LUMAS website and in any one of our numerous galleries in major cities around the world, you can find a whole world of contemporary art for sale, ranging from contemplative black-and-white artwork to upbeat color artwork.

Our collections contain a wide range of photographic art and art prints. LIMITED EDITION, MUSEUM-QUALITY ART Original paintings, drawings, digital artwork, and photographs are used to create our prints. Our work of art, whatever the medium, are then evolved as visual prints.

Landscape, portrait, abstract, and fine art photography are all included in our portfolio. Our prints stand out because of the subjects they cover. A LUMAS print could be a drawing or a painting that has been digitally edited by the artist as part of their artistic process.

The lithographic and other art techniques used to create LUMAS fine art prints, in addition to paintings and other techniques, are frequently combined to form mixed media artwork. There are many sculptural works of art in our collection, including small sculptures, art figurines, and wall-mountable sculptures.

ART TO STOP PEOPLE IN THEIR TRACKS No matter why you want to buy art, you can be sure that all of the pieces for sale at LUMAS have been carefully chosen for their ability to enhance a physical space and inspire the mind and spirit. If you want to improve the look of your home, look beyond a cheap print or wall decor: Your walls are like a blank canvas. Our artists' works cover a wide range of fine art styles, giving you a wide range of options to fully express your creativity!

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Art Is Love, Love Is An Art by Anthony Liggins

 



1560 Lenox Ave Suite 102
Miami Beach, FL 33139
Email: anthonyligginsart@gmail.com
Phone: 305.397.8098/678.575.0589

Art Is Love, Love Is An Art by Anthony Liggins

A photographic journey with artist Anthony Liggins, Art Is Love, Love Is An Art captures the Liggins’ artwork, his collectors and influences that have inspired him throughout his career. Working primarily with acrylic paint, Liggins imparts his philosophies of interconnectedness and transcending socially constructed boundaries with his sweeping dream-like landscapes and bold but balanced brushstrokes. Liggins incorporates photography, antique wood printing blocks, chopsticks, yarn, and pressed dot patterns into his work to symbolize the impermanence of time, nourishment of the spirit, and the connections that are hidden but exist between us all. His work is informed by Eastern philosophies such as Zen and Wabi-sabi, his career as a fashion designer, influences of Latin Jazz, and his travels abroad.

I am a citizen and artist of the world. I may hang my hat in the southern United States, but my art is informed and revealed by the composition, colors and flavors of the world I live in. I like taking people on a journey, captured in a moment of time when their eyes connect with my artwork.

I am just a messenger, here to motivate and stimulate through technique, color and imagination. With that thought, if you look with an open mind, you will see the message that is up for interpretation.

Color moves people, and I try to convey that through my artwork as different color combinations set different vibes.

Art should always challenge the thought process in an uplifting yet peaceful manner. Sometimes it is the things that are not seen but felt that are the most important. This is what I’m striving for: the internal relationship that is established when the painting communicates to its audience.

My art has evolved over the years from bright geometric images into vivid abstractions. My latest bodies of work feature canvases drenched in colors of sunsets and moon glows, emitting dreamlike images.

Monday, March 20, 2023

Faena Art Project Room

 



Faena Art Project Room
3420 Collins Ave. 
Miami Beach, FL 33140 

HOURS: Thursday - Saturday 3pm - 8pm


The Faena Art Project Room serves as a space for experimental work and innovative ideas.

We call on artists to explore new facets of their practice and to create work that is participatory and performative artwork in which the public plays a part in order to foster new models for social interaction that transcend the traditional boundaries of art, science, philosophy, and social practice.

The Project Room commissions interdisciplinary artists who engage with the community through programming that is held throughout the exhibition and who interact with both our interior and exterior spaces in a way that is forward-thinking and pushes the envelope on what we consider art.

Faena Art is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that commissions, produces, and houses cross-disciplinary artistic experiences. A catalyst for innovative, site-specific, and immersive practices, Faena Art bridges the popular and the experimental making art accessible to all. Faena Art fosters new models for social interaction transcending the traditional boundaries of art, science, philosophy, and social practice.


Sunday, March 19, 2023

MDC Koubek Memorial Center

 


Connecting Florida: Miami and Julia Tuttle with Becky Roper Matkov

Wednesday, May 17, 2023
6:30–7:30 PM EDT

MDC Koubek Memorial Center
2705 SW 3rd Street, Miami

Acclaimed historic preservationist and author Becky Roper Matkov joins Kislak curator Dr. Carol Damian to share her research and new insights into the extraordinary life of prominent Miami pioneer Julia Tuttle.

When Julia Sturtevant Tuttle, a young wife and mother of two from Cleveland, visited her parents in remote South Florida in 1875, she fell in love with the clear blue waters of Biscayne Bay. She later purchased 640 acres at the mouth of the Miami River and returned as a widow to live there in 1891. Thanks to her convincing Henry Flagler to bring his railroad to the Miami River, and working relentlessly to build, promote, and nurture the community, in 1896 Miami was incorporated as a city. In her seven years of living on the banks of the Miami River, Julia Tuttle transformed a region.

Becky Roper Matkov, a director and past president of the Deering Estate Foundation, is a writer, acclaimed historic preservationist, and author of the award-winning documentary On This Land, the Charles Deering Estate. For 18 years she served as executive director of Dade Heritage Trust, leading fights to save the Freedom Tower, the Historic Miami City Cemetery, and the 2000-year-old Miami Circle. She has served as chairperson of the State Historic Preservation Advisory Council, as a trustee of the Florida Trust, and as president of the Junior League of Miami. For ten years she was the Florida Manager of the Elizabeth Ordway Dunn Foundation, working on environmental and preservation issues throughout the state.

Dr. Carol Damian is an art historian, former Professor of Art History in the School of Art and Art History at Florida International University, and former Director and Chief Curator of the Patricia and Phillip Frost Art Museum at FIU. She has contributed to numerous publications and lectures frequently on Latin American and Caribbean art, and the local art scene. She is currently Curator of the Kislak Center, part of the Miami Dade College Special Collections, housed at the Freedom Tower; and of the Chapel of La Merced Colonial Collection at Corpus Christi in Miami.




Saturday, March 18, 2023

Miami Eden Gallery

 




Eden Gallery
Address: The Setai Miami Beach Hotel.
2001 Collins Avenue, Corner of 21st Street, Miami Beach, FL
Opening Hours: Open 7 days a week. 9:00 AM – 9:00 PM


About Eden Gallery

Since its foundation in 1997 by Cathia Klimovsky, Eden Gallery has evolved into a global network of high-end art galleries representing a selection of international artists, each with a uniquely modern approach to creation. Collectively, Eden artists represent and promote contemporary optimism and a colorful view of life.

With premiere gallery spaces, including locations in New York, London, Miami, Mykonos, Dubai and soon Las Vegas, the Eden Gallery Group operates at the forefront of modern, vibrant culture with an ethos of commitment to our community of artists, curators, and supporters. Held to the highest standards of curatorial excellence, we strive to create unforgettable exhibitions, events, and experiences designed to inspire and transform.

Eden Gallery is a contemporary fine art gallery located in major cities in the United States and Europe. With the belief that art is a universal language that bridges cultures and forms human connections, we strive to create unforgettable exhibitions and events that bring color and inspiration to life’s every moment.

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Art Miami, America’s foremost contemporary and modern art fair

 



Art Miami, America’s foremost contemporary and modern art fair, annually showcases the most significant artworks of the 20th and 21st centuries and is a “can’t miss” event for collectors, curators, museum professionals and art enthusiasts. Distinguished for its quality, depth, and diversity, Art Miami features investment quality paintings, drawings, design, sculpture, NFTs, video art, photography and prints from leading international galleries during Miami art week.


 CONTEXT Art Miami takes place alongside Art Miami in downtown Miami and features emerging and mid-career artists presented by leading contemporary galleries. In addition, CONTEXT annually showcases new works specifically crafted for the fair including curatorial projects, solo artists presentations and a series of special exhibitions.

Aqua Art Miami
One of the best boutique fairs for emerging art during Miami’s Art Week, Aqua Art Miami has consistently earned critical recognition for presenting young and established galleries with strong emerging and mid-career artists. Aqua’s unique environment – in a classic South Beach hotel - continues to solidify itself as a completely unique art fair, consistently staying true to its signature relaxed yet energetic vibe.




Sunday, March 12, 2023

LIK Fine Art Miami


LIK Fine Art Miami

  • 655 Lincoln Road
  • Miami Beach Florida 33139                                       
  • 786 235 9570

    Peter Lik has spent over 35 years pushing the boundaries of fine art. A self-taught pioneer in the field of landscape photography, he has become synonymous with pristine images of cascading waterfalls, ethereal mountain peaks and peaceful desert canyons.

    Perfectly positioned at Miami's outdoor Lincoln Road Mall, this inviting, fine art photography gallery from Peter Lik is right at home surrounded by premium boutiques and eateries. Lined with landscape visions selected from Peter’s extensive portfolio of works, this gallery is guaranteed to grab the soul of any viewer and send it instantly to the most beautiful places on Earth! Teak wood floors and charcoal tones at LIK Miami Beach Art Gallery truly allow the art to stand out at this haven amidst the Florida palms

    Each year, Art Basel Miami Beach shines a spotlight on the local, fine art community, known for harboring the most talented and successful creators of our day. Being able to grow within such an ambitious culture is a reality Peter Lik only once envisioned, and one that now lets him keep his masterful lens on the beautiful, rolling waves of the Atlantic Ocean.




                                                 

Friday, March 10, 2023

Miami Design Preservation League

 


What we fight for

An advocacy program attempts to influence public policy and public actions in a direction consistent with a group’s mission. MDPL’s advocacy program is guided by its advocates’ aim to act consistently with MDPL’s mission statement:
Miami Design Preservation League (MDPL) is a non-profit organization devoted to preserving, protecting, and promoting the cultural, social, economic, environmental and architectural integrity of the Miami Beach Architectural Historic District and all other areas of the City of Miami Beach where historic preservation is a concern.
The MDPL Advocacy Committee suggests these priorities for MDPL advocacy activities:
  • Preserve and protect the historical and architectural integrity of the Miami Beach Architectural District, both of its individual buildings and of the district as a whole;
  • Support the historic preservation process put in place by the City of Miami Beach and the City’s enforcement of the outcomes of that process in any area “where historic preservation is a concern.”
  • Propose and support changes in the City’s historic preservation process and land use policies when necessary to carry out and fulfill the mission statement;
  • Propose and support changes in Florida and national policy when necessary to carry out and fulfill the mission statement;
  • Preserve and protect historical, architectural, and environmental resources in other areas of Miami Beach, especially when designated as local historic districts by the City of Miami Beach, but including any area “where historic preservation is a concern.”
  • Act to support residents and property owners, in current and potential historic districts, when citizens act to preserve, protect and promote the historic, architectural, cultural, social, economic, and environmental integrity of any area “where historic preservation is a concern.”

    A Brief History of MDPL

    Compiled by Dennis W. Wilhelm, Chairman Barbara Baer Capitman Archives of MDPL

    August 1976

    The Miami Design Preservation League (MDPL) was formed through the efforts of Barbara Baer Capitman and her son John Capitman. The initial impetus was to find a project to honor the United States’ bicentennial; the Capitmans worked with designers Leonard Horowitz and Lillian Barber to identify a concentration of 1930s buildings in South Miami Beach that the group felt could be a historic district of 20th century architecture.

    December 1976

    MDPL held its first large-scale public meeting, dubbed the “Design Forum.”

    May 6, 1977

    MDPL was incorporated by the State of Florida. Officers were: Barbara Baer Captiman, President; David Gell, Secretary; Jerry Peters, Treasurer; and Howard M. Neu, Vice President.

    September 1977

    Art Deco Number of Night and Day magazine highlights the goals and accomplishments of MDPL.

    October 13-19, 1978

    Art Deco Week organized by MDPL. The festival was held at and around the Cardozo Hotel on Ocean Drive. Barbara Capitman created the event as a showcase for the Art Deco section of Miami Beach hoping to attract both locals and tourists to the area which was comprised of an elderly population living on fixed income, many living at the poverty level. The next year the festival became an annual and was renamed Art Deco Weekend ®.

    December 12, 1978

    By-laws of MDPL were amended and submitted to State of Florida. Barbara Baer Capitman, David J. Gell and Carl Weinhardt, Jr. were authorized to execute the Articles as subscribers and Andres Fabergas and Michael Kinerk, president and secretary, respectively, were authorized to execute the declaration. Chairperson, Barbara Baer Capitman; President, Andres Fabregas; Vice President, Leonard Horowitz; Secretary, Michael D. Kinerk; Treasurer, Jose Madrazo; Board members besides officers: Jerald Goodman, Claire Major, Joy Moos, Karolyn Robinson, Sol Schreiber, Landon Thorne III, Carl J Weinhardt, Jr., Mitchell Wolfson, Jr.

    May 14, 1979

    The Miami Beach Architectural Historic District (popularly known as the “Art Deco District” and “Old Miami Beach”) was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was the nation’s first urban 20th century Historic District.

    July 1979

    Portfolio of the Art Deco Historic District was published by MDPL with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA.) Barbara Capitman, editor; Diane Camber, Assistant Editor; Bill Bucolo, Managing Editor; photographic essay by David Kaminsky; articles by Carl J. Weinhardt, Jr., Karalyn Robinson, Barbara Capitman and Andrew Capitman.

    September 1979

    The Art Deco District: Time Present Time Past, a magazine with articles on various aspects of Art Deco, was published by MDPL.

    March, 1980

    Andy Warhol, world-famous artist and one of the pioneering Art Deco collectors, called the MDPL office in March 1980 and asked if someone would show him the Art Deco buildings in Miami Beach. An appointment was made, Warhol arrived from New York and he was given a top to bottom tour led by MDPL founder, Barbara Baer Capitman and Diana Camber the Executive Director of MDPL, now Director of the Bass Museum of Art. This event was widely covered by the news media and gave our new historic district a stamp of approval from an art-world celebrity.

    April 1980

    The Boulevard Hotel, at 775 Dade Boulevard, was demolished.

    January 1981

    The Anderson-Notter-Finegold plan for the Miami Beach Architectural Historic District was completed (the plan was never adopted).

    January 7, 1981

    The New Yorker Hotel (Henry Hohauser, 1939), at 1611 Collins Avenue, was demolished. Despite sustained protests from preservationists, the hotel was destroyed by owners Abe Resnik, Dov Dunaesvsky, and Isaac Fryd. The hotel, which many consider to be Hohauser’s most successful design, awakened the community to the need to enact local legislation to protect properties listed on the National Register. The hotel’s façade was later used in the new logo of the Miami Design Preservation League; the New Yorker’s lot stood vacant for many years and is now occupied by the northern-most portion of the Loew’s convention center hotel.

    February 1981

    Adoption of the first Dade County Historic Preservation Ordinance, which required municipalities to adopt Historic Preservation Ordinances by July 1982.

    February 4, 1981

    City Commission adopted Resolution No. 81-16551 requesting exemption from County Historic Preservation ordinances.

    1981

    MDPL founders Barbara Baer Capitman and Leonard Horowitz took a cross-country trip to “discover” Art Deco architecture in major U.S. cities. The trip spurred the development of Art Deco societies in many of the cities, and Capitman began to be referred to as the “Johnny Appleseed of Art Deco.”

    1981-1982

    MDPL worked to protect historic buildings by encouraging local historic designation on the National Register District.

    April 2, 1982

    First meeting of Mayor’s Ad Hoc Committee to draft and review a Historic Preservation Ordinance for Miami Beach.

    June, 1982

    Miami Beach Art Deco District: Time Future was published by Community Action and Research under the auspices of MDPL. The booklet, edited by Paul A. Rothman and Barbara Capitman with graphic design by Woody Vondracek, summarized the Anderson Notter Finegold plan for the Art Deco Historic District and lobbied for its adoption by the City of Miami Beach.

    June 16, 1982

    The first Miami Beach Historic Preservation Ordinance, No. 82-2318, was adopted; it contained 100 percent owner consent provision.

    September 23, 1982

    The Dade County Historic Preservation Board found the Miami Beach Ordinance not in compliance with county requirements.

    October 20, 1982

    The City Commission appointed the first Historic Preservation Board.

    January 31, 1983

    The U.S. Department of the Interior found the Miami Beach Ordinance to be in compliance with National Register standards for local governments.

    April 20, 1983

    Ordinance No. 83-2367 amended Historic Preservation Ordinance No. 82-2318, changing owner consent from 100 percent to 51 percent required for designation.

    May 4-7, 1983

    The Art Deco District came to the attention of the art world as a result of “Surrounded Islands,” an installation by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude in which a series of 11 islands in Biscayne Bay were wrapped in pink fabric. During the installation, the artists established their “headquarters” in the Art Deco District.

    August 15, 1983

    Dade County and others filed a lawsuit to invalidate the Miami Beach Historic Preservation Ordinance.

    October 5, 1983

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 83-2388 designating the Old City Hall building as the city’s first Historic Preservation Site.

    February 1, 1984

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 84-2402 designating the 21st Street Community Center a Historic Preservation Site.

    April 4, 1984

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 84-2405 creating a Design Review Board.

    1984-1989

    The Art Deco District achieved worldwide recognition as a result of the hit television show Miami Vice, starring Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas. The show used the Art Deco District as a backdrop in many of the episodes.

    February 6, 1985

    The City Commission adopted the Ocean Drive plan containing recommendations for local Historic District designation.

    March 20, 1985

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 85-2470 eliminating the owner consent provision from Historic Preservation ordinances.

    October 16, 1985

    The City Commission adopted the Espanola Way plan containing a recommendation for local Historic District designation.

    1985

    Renowned fashion photographer Bruce Weber chose Miami Beach’s Breakwater Hotel for a photo shoot for an ad for Calvin Klein’s “Obsession,” spurring an onslaught of fashion photography shoots in the Art Deco District.

    July 23, 1986

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 86-2511 designating the Espanola Way District and the Ocean Drive/Collins Avenue District as Miami Beach’s first Historic Preservation districts. These ordinances were adopted after significant grassroots efforts by MDPL.

    1986

    “Our Drive…Ocean Drive” was a joint campaign by MDPL and its sister organization, the Miami Beach Development Corporation (MBDC), now renamed the Miami Beach Community Development Corporation (MBCDC). As a result, a $3 million bond package was approved to fund the widening of the sidewalk on the west side of Ocean Drive, allowing hotels to establish sidewalk cafes. On the east side of the street, a wide promenade was created along the wall separating Lummus Park from the beach.

    1986-1988

    MDPL campaigned for local designation of the entire National Register District and revisions to the zoning codes to make them more compatible with historic preservation.

    MDPL started the SOS (Save Our Senator) campaign to prevent demolition of the Senator Hotel. Although the hotel was demolished ( October 13, 1988 ), MDPL’s efforts delayed demolition for more than a year. The public outcry that MDPL created resulted in the City Commission passing a strengthened local preservation ordinance that could prevent demolition.

    1987

    The Biscaya Hotel (1925), at 650 West Avenue, was demolished. MDPL mounted an unsuccessful campaign to save the hotel, originally the Floridian Hotel and the last remaining example of the grand bayside hotels.

    May 6, 1987

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 87-2665 designating Altos del Mar a Historic Preservation District.

    January 1988

    The Poinciana Hotel (Albert Anis, 1939), at 1555 Collins Avenue, was demolished.

    February 3, 1988

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 88-2598, strengthening the demolition section of the Historic Preservation Ordinance.

    May 1988

    Miami Beach Art Deco Guide was published by MDPL. The guidebook, written by Keith Root with editorial assistance by Dr. Ernest Martin and Michael Kinerk, contained six self-guided walking tours of the Art Deco District.

    October 13th, 1988

    The Senator Hotel (L. Murray Dixon, 1939), at 1201 Collins Avenue, was demolished.

    June 1988

    Deco Delights: Preserving the Beauty and Joy of Miami Beach Architecture, written by MDPL founder Barbara Baer Capitman, was published by E.P. Dutton.

    June 1, 1988

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 88-2616 placing the Architectural District under Design Review jurisdiction.

    April 5, 1989

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 89-2637 designating the Venetian Causeway (1926) a Historic Preservation Site.

    September 7 & 21, 1989

    The City Commission nominated the Flamingo and Museum neighborhoods for Historic Preservation Districts designation. The Museum area was nominated as a local historic district or collection of historic sites depending on the findings of the Historic Preservation Board.

    March 29, 1990

    Barbara Baer Capitman died of congestive heart failure. Capitman was memorialized with obituaries in Time and Newsweek magazines as well as the Miami Herald, the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times and other newspapers.

    June 6, 1990

    The City Commission deferred consideration on the first reading of nine nominated historic preservation sites.

    June 20, 1990

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 90-2698 designating the Flamingo Park and Museum Historic Preservation Districts.

    January 1991

    MDPL organized and held the First World Congress on Art Deco ®, with the goal of promoting education of the value of preserving Art Deco’s heritage. Participants came from all over the world.

    April 16, 1991

    First Lady Barbara Bush accepts a painting of the Carlyle Hotel on Ocean Drive at a presentation in the White House. Michael Kinerk, Dennis Wilhelm and artist Gustavo Novoa make the presentation on behalf of MDPL.

    December 5, 1991

    The Historic Preservation Board nominated all remaining areas within the Miami Beach Architectural Historic District for local historic designation.

    January 9, 1992

    The formation of a new preservation coalition, the National Coalition of Art Deco Societies (NCADS) was created during an MDPL-sponsored meeting of the presidents of Art Deco societies from around the country and preservation representatives from several cities. This coalition was later expanded to the International Coalition of Art Deco Societies.

    March 2, 1992

    The Sands Hotel (Roy F. France, 1939), at 1601 Collins Avenue, was demolished.

    May 18, 1992

    The Planning Board recommended that the Historic Preservation Board action be approved.

    June 1992

    The City Commission requested the Planning Board to hold another hearing on designating the balance of the Miami Beach Architectural Historic District as a local historic district. The reason for the request related to questions about the public notice.

    July 16, 1992

    The Historic Preservation Board nominated Beth Jacob Congregation at 311 Washington Avenue as a local Historic Site.

    July 23, 1992

    The Planning Board held an additional public hearing to recommend the historic preservation nomination to all remaining areas within the architectural district for local historic designation, actions continued to September 22, 1992.

    September 23, 1992

    The Planning Board recommended the nomination of all remaining areas within the architectural district for local historic designation.

    November 4, 1992

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 92-2821 expanding the Historic District to the entire mile-square Art Deco district, which protected from demolition the full area entered into the National Register of Historic Places.

    January 20, 1993

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 93-2832 designating Congregation Beth Jacob a Historic Preservation Site.

    June 3, 1993

    The Historic Preservation Board held a public hearing to consider Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace’s application for a certificate of appropriateness for demolition of the Revere Hotel (Herbert Mathes, 1950), a property that was listed as “contributing,” as opposed to “historic,” at the time the district was listed on the National Register. An order was issued granting Versace’s request after six months of vigorous protest by MDPL. The Revere Hotel was demolished to make way for Versace’s private garage and swimming pool. However, the issue focused awareness on the need to overhaul the City of Miami Beach’s Preservation Ordinance.

    January 1994

    Rediscovering Art Deco: A Nationwide Tour of Architectural Delights, written by MDPL founder Barbara Baer Capitman and MDPL charter members Michael D. Kinerk and Dennis W. Wilhelm, was published by Penguin Books USA Inc.

    May 1994

    City of Miami Beach Historic Preservation Ordinance was strengthened to protect both “contributing” and “historic” buildings within the National Register District.

    February 15, 1995

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 95-2977 designating the Miami Beach Woman’s Club a Historic Preservation Site.

    1996

    The Society of American Travel Writers (SATW) awarded MDPL the prestigious Phoenix Award in recognition of the role the League played in reviving tourism in Miami Beach through the use of historic preservation.

    Miami Beach Art Deco District Audio Tour is produced by MDPL. Dennis Wilhelm, executive producer; Christine Giles project manager. Committee: Jeff Donnelly, Matti Bower, Victor Diaz, Jr., Betty Gutierrez, Richard Hoberman, Michael Kinerk, Keith Root, Denis Russ, Lourdes Solera.

    February 20, 1996

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 96-3037 designating Ocean Beach a Historic Preservation District.

    September 25, 1996

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 96-3057 designating Harding Township/Altos del Mar a Historic Preservation District.

    November 1996

    Miami Beach’s 10th Street, between Washington Avenue and Ocean Drive, is renamed “Barbara Capitman Way” in a public ceremony

    July 16, 1997

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 97-3088 designating Sunset Island Bridges a Historic Preservation Site.

    1998

    MDPL successfully lobbied the City of Miami Beach to limit rooftop additions to one story on Lincoln Road.

    June 9, 1999

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 99-3186 designating Palm View a Historic Preservation District.

    October 20, 1999

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 99-3212 designating Dade Boulevard Fire Station a Historic Preservation Site.

    November 17, 1999

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 99-3217 designating the Bath Club a Historic Preservation Site.

    November 29, 1999

    President Bill Clinton signed an amendment to the Lanham Trademarking Act which ensures that hotels in national, state and local Historic Register Districts may maintain their historic names even if in “conflict” with an entity of the same name. This was a result of MDPL working in partnership with the Florida delegation to the House of Representatives, the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the City of Miami Beach.

    January 2000

    Barbara Baer Capitman is honored by the state’s “Great Floridians” program, with a commemorative plaque affixed to the Cardozo Hotel.

    The City of Miami Beach Historic Preservation Board (HPB) is given sole jurisdiction over new and additional construction in historic districts. Previously, this responsibility was shared by the HPB and the City of Miami Beach Design Review Board.

    January 2001

    Architects Henry Hohauser and L. Murray Dixon are honored as “Great Floridians” by the State of Florida.

    January 31, 2001

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 2001-3292 designating the Collins Waterfront a Historic Preservation District.

    May 14, 2001

    Historic neighborhoods are not only made up of significant and contributing buildings, but they include the people that inhabit them, the public places and green spaces they are surrounded by. Without careful and consistent review of all of these elements, a neighborhood fades away.”

    —Michael Kinerk, MDPL Chairman, 2001 State of the District Report

    June 6, 2001

    The City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 2001-3310 designating Pine Tree Drive a Historic Roadway.

    October 2001

    Opening of the Visitor Interpretive Center, Art Deco Museum, and Barbara Capitman Archives at 1001 Ocean Drive.

    November 2002

    Miami Beach commissioners vote to reduce building heights on the southernmost tip of Ocean Drive from 100 to 75 feet, after lobbying efforts by MDPL. MDPL had originally lobbied for a maximum height of just 35 feet for buildings south of Fifth Street.

    January 2003

    Travel Holiday Magazine selects MDPL’s guided walking tours as its “Editors Choice Award” for the Best Buys of 2003.

    February 2004

    The North Beach Resort Historic District is recognized by the City of Miami Beach Commission.

    March 2004

    The City of Miami Beach Mayor’s Blue Ribbon Committee presents a report on “Demolition by Neglect.”

    July 2004

    Under the leadership of board member Mitch Novick, MDPL initiated a campaign to save the Avery Smith House from demolition. The house at 900 Collins Avenue (also known as the “Coral Rock House”), was the home of early Miami Beach settler Avery Smith, who ran a casino (bathing pavilion) and ferry service on Miami Beach beginning in 1909. The structure, built in 1916 of native oolitic limestone, is one of the last remaining examples of the vernacular style.

    April 2005

    The City of Miami Beach Commission approves the Flamingo Waterway District.

    May 2005

    With encouragement from MDPL, The Florida Trust for Historic Preservation lists Avery Smith House (the Coral Rock House) as an “endangered site.”

    2005

    The City of Miami Beach City Commission passes the “Demolition by Neglect” ordinance.

    May 2006

    City of Miami Beach Commission passes additional Flamingo Historic District protections which lower height limits from four to three stories.

    June-July 2006

    MDPL co-sponsors, with the Wolfsonian-FIU, a week-long teacher training program called “Using Buildings To Tell Stories.” The program is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, as a part of its Landmarks of American History and Culture program.

    July 2006

    The Miami Beach City Commission passes an ordinance to require property owners seeking to use more than 30 percent of their lot space to renovate or build new structures to go before the review panel for approval. The ordinance, supported by MDPL, will make it harder to property owners to build oversized houses—sometimes called “McMansions”—on undersized lots.

    July 2007

    MDPL organizes a public protest in front of the Coral Rock House at 900 Collins Avenue in an effort to halt destruction.

    August 2007

    At VISIT FLORIDA’s Governor’s Conference on Tourism, Barbara Baer Capitman was honored as the first recipient of the VISIT FLORIDA Honor Roll award. Capitman was recognized for her work as a historic preservationist and founder of the Miami Design Preservation League, the Miami Beach Community Development Corporation, and the International Coalition of Art Deco Societies.

    January 2008

    Miami Beach commissioners unanimously approved an expansion of the Flamingo Park Historic District, westward to Alton Road between 8th to 14th Streets.

    June 2008

    Renovation work begins on the Art Deco Welcome Center at 1001 Ocean Drive, home of MDPL.

    July 2008

    The Official Art Deco Gift Shop moves to a temporary location at 1200 Ocean Drive, during renovations of the Art Deco Welcome Center.

    November 2008

    Monopoly: Miami and the Beaches Edition® is introduced, with Miami Design Preservation League as the nonprofit partner. MDPL also served in an advisory role as to the selection of board locations and the card options found within the game.

    December 2008

    Miami Design Preservation League moves into temporary office space in Miami Beach’s Historic City Hall, 1130 Washington Avenue, during renovation of the Art Deco Welcome Center.

    December 2008

    The Loews Miami Beach Resort donates $10,000 to the Miami Design Preservation League during the 10-year anniversary celebration of the hotel, to be used by MDPL to develop two new programs – an official Visitors Information Center and an Art Deco Interpretive Museum – as a part of the renovations of the Art Deco Welcome Center (MDPL headquarters) located on 10th Street and Ocean Drive.

    June 2010

    At their 2010 National Convention held in Miami Beach, the American Institute of Architects honors the Miami Design Preservation League with a rare AIA Presidential Citation.

    The citation reads: “Organized by Barbara Capitman and Leonard Horowitz and today the oldest Art Deco Society in the world, their inspired advocacy of enlightened preservation policies, their educational programs that heighten community awareness and pride, and their creation of a network of international partnerships have done more than preserve an irreplaceable cultural legacy for future generations; their success demonstrates that caring for our design heritage can be the engine of community revitalization and a resource for a more sustainable world.”


DANA DONATY Miami Beach Artist

Miami Art Scene™ 111 SW 3rd Street Miami, Florida 33130 Phone: (786)571-6112 DANA DONATY Miami Beach Artist Dana Donaty (b. Columbus, Ohio),...