RFC-CAF-logo

95 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL 33127, U.S.A.


T: +1(305)573-6090     F: +1(305)573-6023     info@rfc.museum
bbs2


BBS-Cover
Catalog now available -- order now

Artists in the exhibition:

Ai Weiwei

John Baldessari
Frank Benson
Amy Bessone
Matthew Brannon
Maurizio Cattelan
Peter Coffin
George Condo
Aaron Curry
John Dogg
Marcel Duchamp
Gardar Eide Einarsson
Elmgreen & Dragset
Hans-Peter Feldmann
Urs Fischer
Dan Flavin
Robert Gober
Aneta Grzeszykowska
Wade Guyton
Guyton / Walker
Karl Haendel
Peter Halley
David Hammons
Mark Handforth
Keith Haring

 



Rachel Harrison

Richard Hawkins
Damien Hirst
Jenny Holzer
Jonathan Horowitz
Thomas Houseago
Rashid Johnson
William E. Jones
Deborah Kass
Mike Kelley
Jeff Koons
Barbara Kruger
Jim Lambie
Elad Lassry
Louise Lawler
Mark Leckey
Sherrie Levine
Li Zhanyang

Glenn Ligon
Robert Longo
Nate Lowman
Nathan Mabry
Kris Martin
Paul McCarthy
Allan McCollum

 



Adam McEwen
Takashi Murakami
Cady Noland

David Noonan
Richard Prince
Charles Ray
Jason Rhoades
Stephen G. Rhodes
Bert Rodriguez
Sterling Ruby
Thomas Ruff
David Salle
Steven Shearer
Cindy Sherman
Haim Steinbach
John Stezaker
Philip Taaffe
Hank Willis Thomas
Piotr Uklanski
Meyer Vaisman
Kelley Walker
Wang Ziwei
Andy Warhol
Christopher Wool
Zhang Huan

 



December 2, 2009 – August 27, 2010

Beg Borrow and Steal presents paintings, sculptures, photographs, videos and installations by seventy-four artists from the Rubell Family Collection/Contemporary Arts Foundation and occupies twenty-eight galleries at the 45,000 sq ft museum. It is accompanied by a large-format 272-page catalog.

In 2005 the Rubells had a series of conversations with artists Kelly Walker and Wade Guyton, who talked about the generosity of some artists in the nature of their work. Walker and Guyton described how artists like Cady Noland, Andy Warhol, Marcel Duchamp and Richard Prince opened doors for other artists like themselves to walk through. The Rubells had never heard that opinion expressed as honestly before. This show was borne out of those conversations, and its title comes from a quote attributed to Picasso: “Good artists borrow, great artists steal.” While the question of artistic influence may not be new, what artists choose to borrow or steal, and from whom, is distinct in that it becomes a reflection of their own time. Beg Borrow and Steal presents artists’ attempts to build on the legacies of their predecessors as they present their own new ideas. Art about art and “stolen” imagery has fueled many an artist’s production, and this exhibition contains numerous landmark examples by internationally renowned contemporary artists.

Rubell Family Statement: Our Process

Every show at the Rubell Family Collection is comprised entirely of work we own, and it is inevitably new acquisitions that provide the inspiration for these exhibits. The more recent work forces us to look at the rest of the collection in a new context, establishing new dialogues between artworks that we then make visible in the mounting of the exhibition. Usually, by the time we’ve traced a particular aesthetic, conceptual or social thread through to the late ‘60’s, where our collection begins, and beyond, we have gained a deeper understanding of the new work, its critical underpinnings, and its context in art history.

Today, something new is happening, and its meaning is not immediately evident to us. We know it has something to do with appropriation – of style, images, strategies, techniques, forms – in a way that is utterly different from the appropriation that preceded it: Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol, Sherrie Levine, Jeff Koons, Cady Noland, Richard Prince. Many of the newer group of artists deal with the multi-layered, explosively dense quality of the Internet and aspects of what has come to be known as Web 2.0 culture. We do not believe, however, that this new work simply reflects our current technological and social reality.

The most interesting contemporary art almost always engages with a future that is not yet known, and we believe this new work is dealing with that future. The same way Andy Warhol predicted our current culture of fame, artists today are working around something we are just beginning to understand. It has to do with information overload, time, the collapse of time, indistinct authorship, virtuality and intense individuality. In the future, there might be a simple explanation, but for the moment it is a glorious mess of things.

In this exhibition, we have 260 works by 74 artists of different generations. As collectors, we feel privileged to embrace that which is new or feels new and to put it into an art historical context we can identify. Critics, curators, scholars and time will bring form and a deeper understanding to this, but we are thrilled to be here now. Through 45 years of collecting, the present has always been our greatest inspiration.


Vernissage TV has created a video about our Beg Borrow and Steal exhibition opening -- Vernissage TV video review

December 8, 2009
BBS-video-tn

btn-bbs



 
30A-logo
December 3, 2008 - May 30, 2009

30 Americans will be presented at the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh
(March 20th, 2011 – September 4th, 2011)
and the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC
(October 1st, 2011 – January 8th, 2012).

30A-artists-group

Photo Credit: Kwaku Alston


Inside Our Process | Rubell Family

johnson_rashid-thenewnegro

We only show art we own. That is a founding principle of the Rubell Family Collection, a principle that gives us tremendous freedom and enormous constraints. When we set out to conceptualize a new exhibition, we know we will only get the depth and quality we seek if we already have a strong foundation of works by a core group of artists. Once the exhibition is determined, we then collect into it, buying works that we consider essential right up to the closing date for the catalogue, just one month before the opening of the show...

 

Artists in the exhibition

Nina Chanel Abney
John Bankston
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Mark Bradford
Iona Rozeal Brown
Nick Cave
Robert Colescott
Noah Davis
Leonardo Drew
Renée Green
David Hammons

Barkley L. Hendricks
Rashid Johnson
Glenn Ligon
Kalup Linzy
Kerry James Marshall
Rodney McMillian
Wangechi Mutu
William Pope.L
Gary Simmons
Xaviera Simmons

Lorna Simpson
Shinique Smith
Jeff Sonhouse
Henry Taylor
Hank Willis Thomas
Mickalene Thomas
Kara Walker
Carrie Mae Weems
Kehinde Wiley
Purvis Young




read-more artwork-images

30a_installations_g02-04

Educational tour in the Rubell Family Collection

Schools Museum Educator Linda Manguel
interacts with students

 

John Stezaker: Works from the Rubell Family Collection

JS_frontDecember 5, 2007 - November 28, 2008

This, John Stezaker’s first solo show in an American public institution, brings together 17 works that span 28 years of his production and illustrates the variable relation, over these many years, between ground image and insert image. Combing the aisles of flea markets, used-book stores, postcard vendors, etc., Stezaker’s anthropological search filters and selects images that often have a strong sense of déjà vu: Hollywood film stars of a bygone age, postcards of the top-of-the-pops of historical monuments, nature scenes and curiosities...


read-moreartwork-images
 
HB-logo

bas-the_burden

December 5, 2007 - November 28, 2008

Hernan Bas: Works from the Rubell Family Collection includes thirty-eight works in various media by the young Miami-based artist that were collected over the past ten years by the Rubell family. Born in 1978 and a graduate of New World School of the Arts in Miami, Bas has become one of South Florida’s most celebrated artists. His work, which incorporates romantic and classical imagery, finds inspiration in youth and Goth culture, fashion layouts, and books, among them the Hardy Boys series, as well as the work of Wilde, Huysmans, and other writers of the Aesthetic and Decadent period of literature reimagined from the perspective of a young gay artist. At the center of the exhibition is a specially commissioned, grand-scale video and sculpture installation, Ocean's Symphony, a sumptuous tribute to the myth of the mermaid.

 

Traveling History:
February 27 – May 24, 2009
Brooklyn Museum, Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing, 4th Floor
December 6, 2007 – May 30, 2008
Rubell Family Collection, Miami

 

read-moreartwork-images
 

Euro-Centric, Part 1: New European Art from the Rubell Family Collection

Euro-Centric, Part 1December 5, 2007 - November 28, 2008

How does an entire continent redefine itself? What is a European? How do present-day Europeans deal with the memory of two world wars? How does the inheritance of a colonial past impact the current generation? How do contemporary artists deal with the weight of their own cultural history? How do these artists define themselves through their desire to participate in a dialogue of NOW? Is there a contemporary European aesthetic? “Euro-Centric, Part 1” is the first of a series of exhibitions over the coming years that will attempt to address these questions.

This major exhibition will be presented in 16 of the 27 galleries that constitute the RFC exhibition space.

 

Artists in the exhibition:

John Armleder
Christian Boltanski
Andre Butzer
Maurizio Cattelan
Tony Cragg
Walter Dahn
Nathalie Djurberg
Marlene Dumas
Urs Fischer
Peter Fischli and David Weiss

 

Axel Geis
Thomas Helbig
Georg Herold
Andreas Hofer
Anselm Kiefer
Richard Long
Jonathan Meese
Bjarne Melgaard
Olivier Mosset
Mai-Thu Perret

 

Anselm Reyle
Anri Sala
Thomas Schütte
Rosemarie Trockel
Erik van Lieshout
Andro Wekua
Franz West
Thomas Zipp

 



btn-checklist artwork-images

 

Red Eye: L.A. Artists from the Rubell Family Collection

redeye-logo2

December 4, 2006 - May 31, 2007

For the first time in its history, the Rubell Family Collection (RFC) has dedicated its entire 45,000-square-foot museum space to a single exhibition. Red Eye: Los Angeles Artists from the Rubell Family Collection presents a cross section of the artwork produced in Los Angeles over the past 20 years by 36 L.A.-based artists – some iconic, some mid-career, some relatively new. When exhibited collectively the artworks created by this multi-generational group represent a substantial history, both of L.A.’s art scene and of RFC itself. Red Eye is scheduled to open December 4th, 2006.

 

Artists in the exhibition

Doug Aitken
John Baldessari
Frank Benson
Amy Bessone
Mark Bradford
Chris Burden
Brian Calvin
Aaron Curry
Brian Fahlstrom
Mark Grotjahn
Karl Haendel
Richard Hawkins

Evan Holloway
Violet Hopkins
Thomas Houseago
Mike Kelley
Barbara Kruger
Nathan Mabry
Paul McCarthy
Jason Meadows
Matthew Monahan
Kristen Morgin
Catherine Opie
Kaz Oshiro

Laura Owens
Raymond Pettibon
Charles Ray
Jason Rhoades
Ry Rocklen
Sterling Ruby
Lara Schnitger
Jim Shaw
Yutaka Sone
Catherine Sullivan
Ricky Swallow
Henry Taylor



read-moreartwork-images

 

Project Room: Andrea Lehmann

Lehmann-A_TNNovember 28, 2005 - May 28, 2006

The first exhibition of this young German artist in America. This show brings together dark and ominous paintings, nature scenes, gothic forests and very intimate spaces and fantasies.

 

 

Checklist & Images

 

Project Room: Francis Alÿs

Alys-TNNovember 28, 2005 - May 28, 2006

After assisting with the rebuilding of Mexico following the 1985 earthquake, Belgian artist Alys decided to stay on. In Re-enactments we see a projection diptych. On the left, actual footage of the artist purchasing a firearm and walking with it in full view through the streets of Mexico City. After what seems like an eternity, he gets arrested. On the right a re-enactment of the same action, only this time done with the assistance of the police.

 

 

Artwork Images

 

Franz Ackermann

Ackermann_TNNovember 28, 2005 - May 28, 2006

It is fitting that Ackermann created this site-specific installation in Miami, the ultimate American tourist town. His work is an amalgamation of a mental map, documenting his subjective feelings about the places he visits, as well as the objective reality of the cities' layouts and existences.

 

Checklist & Images

 

Project Room: Andro Wekua

November 28, 2005 - May 28, 2006

Wekua creates ominous works out of ceramic and wax, which create fictions that suggest and hint at something.
We feel a sense of a story told before, but never completed.

Wekua-Andro_Installation

 

Checklist & Artwork Images

 

Seriality

November 28, 2005 - May 28, 2006

Seriality-part-1_installation_1

Part I: Here we are confronted with monummental works by Gilbert and George, Kara Walker and Zhang Huan. Each of these pieces deals with identity and imposed categorizations in a sarcastic and irreverent way. Using and image of the self in a repetitive grid we become more familiar with the issues that haunt humanity. In the Center a large sculpture by Mark Handforth offers directions to nowhere, a wry political comment.

 

Seriality-part-2_installation_2Part II: A new generation of artists such as Wade Guyton, Nate Lowman and Kelly Walker have picked up on the generosity of ideas passed down by Andy Warhol. This exhibition brings together artists who deal with the idea of seriality and the possibilities of and references to mass printing techniques. Paul Chan, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Wade Guyton, Damien Hirst, Michael Jenkins, Jeff Koons, Nate Lowman, Cady Noland, Charles Ray, Guyton\Walker, Kelly Walker, Andy Warhol and Christopher Wool.

 


Artistis in the Exhibition:


Maurizio Cattelan
Paul Chan
Gilbert and George
Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Wade Guyton
Guyton \ Walker
Mark Handforth
Damien Hirst
Jeff Koons
Nate Lowman
Cady Noland
Damian Ortega
Charles Ray
Tseng Kwong Chi
Kara Walker
Kelly Walker
Andy Warhol
Christopher Wool
Zhang Huan

btn-checklist

 
More Articles...
Join Mailing List


Code:
Receive HTML?

Official Hotel: