

February 27 – May 24, 2009 Brooklyn Museum, Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing, 4th Floor
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.
Hernan Bas: Works from the Rubell Family Collection was organized by Mark Coetzee, former Director of the Rubell Family Collection; the Brooklyn Museum presentation is coordinated by Charles Desmarais, Deputy Director for Art. The exhibition is made possible by the Martha A. and Robert S. Rubin Exhibition Fund.
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
 
Novemeber 8, 2008 - January 18, 2009 Palm Springs Art Museum
This exhibition, specifically organized for the Palm Springs Art Museum and personally curated by Mark Coetzee, Rubell Family Collection director, is the first of other future collaborations between the two museums involving a range of initiatives featuring exhibitions drawn from the rich holdings of the Rubell Family Collection.
The exhibition presents work Haring produced after his early mural and graffiti art. Included in the exhibition are 70 paintings, drawings and one sculpture spanning from works he created for his first gallery exhibition in 1982 to others made closer to his death in 1990 at the age of 31. The exhibition also includes 33 works by other artists who were important friends and artistic peers in Haring's life, such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Francesco Clemente, George Condo, Tseng Kwong Chi, and Andy Warhol. Contextualized by the art of his associates, Haring's colorful and playful, yet equally powerful, acidic work records the lively engagement of art and culture that represented a key aspect of the New York art scene of the 1980s.


December 1, 2004 - February 27, 2005
“Life After Death” positions the paintings and drawings in this exhibition in the afterlife—the afterlife of the German Democratic Republic (GDR or East Germany), of social realism, and of painting in general. Traces of the GDR inhabit the grim interiors and muddled social modernist architecture in these paintings. Social realism, once the dominant style behind the Iron Curtain, possesses the figures who rarely make eye contact, keeping their thoughts to themselves. Painting itself (its death is an unlikely event that art critics proclaim every ten years or so) crops up in the emphasis on craft. You can see it in the use of classical gestures, graphite scaling grids, forced perspective, and careful attention to color.
Artists in the exhibition:Tilo BaumgärtelTim EitelMartin KobeNeo RauchChristoph RuckhäberleDavid SchnellMatthias Weischer
Traveling History:
December 1, 2004 - February 27, 2005 Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL March 19, 2005 - March 31, 2006 MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA April 21 - June 19, 2006 SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, NM September 5 - October 29, 2006 American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, Washington, DC February 16 - June 3, 2007 Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA June 23 - September 30, 2007 Salt Lake Art Center, Salt Lake City, UT November 16, 2007 - February 3, 2008 Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO March 19 - May 18, 2008 Richard E. Peeler Art Center, DePauw University, Greencastle, IN
 
April 14 - July 15, 2007 Tampa Museum of Art
Eberhard Havekost’s work critiques the proverbial dialogue between painting and photography by establishing a visual language that hovers in the grey space between the two. What is at once apparent in the juxtaposition of these two seemingly disparate media in Havekost’s hands, is their mutual dependence, despite their differences.
Working from personal photographs and found images, Havekost presents iconography that is familiar to all urban and suburban dwellers: bland modernist structures, featureless landscapes, and images of actual and impending violence. The significance of his work lies not in its subject matter, however, but in its execution. With a ready supply of images, artists like Havekost are as concerned with what to paint as they are how to paint. Resembling the generalization of color and tonal output of an inkjet printer, or a CCTV camera scanning our activities, Havekost’s works succeed in blending photography and painting–once rival genres. His creations are original work, by hand, but by digital processes too.
The Rubell Family Collection aims to present the entire range of an artist’s oeuvre by collecting large bodies of work of a single artist. This exhibition here marks the first museum showing of German artist Eberhard Havekost in the United States. The works for this exhibition were drawn exclusively from the Rubell Family Collection in Miami, Florida.
Mark Coetzee
Traveling History
Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL December 1, 2004 - September 30, 2005
American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, Washington, DC September 6 - October 29, 2006
The Art Gallery at Florida Gulf Coast University, Fort Myers, FL February 22 - March 31, 2007
Tampa Museum of Art, Tampa, FL April 14 - July 15, 2007

June 2 - September 2, 2007 Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, Israel
"Memorials of Identity" features nine new media works by seven international artists dealing with issues of identity and quotidian reality. In these works, the artists individually explore memories, personal legacies and aspects of their backgrounds in an effort to express the political and historical realities of their countries. This juxtaposing of past and present helps them, and us, to define identity and meaning.
Artists in the exhibition:
William Kentridge Sigalit Landau Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba Sven Påhlsson Anri Sala Fiona Tan Artur Žmijewski
Traveling History
The Art Gallery at Florida Gulf Coast University, Fort Myers, FL February 3 - March 5, 2004
Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL March 10 - May 30, 2004 December 1, 2004 - March 6, 2005
The Corcoran Gallery of Art / College of Art + Design, Washington, DC April 25, 2005
Museo De Arte De Puerto Rico, Santurce, Puerto Rico May 24 - June 11, 2006
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, NC August 1 - September 25, 2006
Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, Israel June 2 - September 2, 2007
Hernan Bas: Works from the Rubell Family CollectionBrooklyn Museum200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York 11238-6052 February 27, 2009 - May 24, 2009 Against All Odds: Keith Haring in the Rubell Family CollectionPalm Springs Art Museum101 Museum Drive, Palm Springs, CA 92262 November 8, 2008 - January 18, 2009 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionRichard E. Peeler Art Center, DePauw UniversityDePauw University, 10 West Hanna Street, Greencastle, IN 46135 March 19 - May 18, 2008 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionKemper Museum of Contemporary Art4420 Warwick Boulevard, Kansas City, Missouri 64111 November 16, 2007 - Februrary 10, 2008 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionSalt Lake Art Center20 South West Temple, Salt Lake City, UT 84101 June 23 - September 30, 2007 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionHaifa Museum of Art26 Shabbetai Levi Street, Haifa, Israel, 31451 June 2 - September 2, 2007 Eberhard Havekost 1996-2006: Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionTampa Museum of Art600 N. Ashley Drive, Tampa, FL 33602 April 14 - July 15, 2007 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionTampa Museum of Art600 N. Ashley Drive, Tampa, FL 33602 April 14 - July 15, 2007 Eberhard Havekost 1996-2006: Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionThe Art Gallery at Florida Gulf Coast University10501 FGCU Boulevard, S., Fort Myers, FL 33965 Februrary 22 - March 31, 2007 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionFrye Art Museum704 Terry Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104 Februrary 16 - June 3, 2007 Eberhard Havekost 1996-2006: Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionKatzen Arts Center Museum, American University4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20016 September 6 - October 29, 2006 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionKatzen Arts Center Museum, American University4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20016 September 6 - October 29, 2006 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionNasher Museum of Art at Duke University2001 Campus Drive, Durham, NC 27701 August 1 - September 25, 2006 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionMuseo de Arte de Puerto Rico299 De Diego Avenue, Santurce, Puerto Rico 00940 May 24 - June 11, 2006 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionSite Santa Fe1606 Paseo De Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501 April 21 - June 19, 2006 Life After Death: New Leipzig Paintings from the Rubell Family CollectionMaSS MoCA87 Marshall Street, North Adams, MA 02147 March 19, 2005 - March 31, 2006 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionThe Corcoran Gallery of Art / College of Art and Design500 17th Street, NW Washington, DC 20006 April 25, 2005 Memorials of Identity: New Media from the Rubell Family CollectionThe Art Gallery at Florida Gulf Coast University10501 FGCU Boulevard, S., Fort Myers, FL 33965 January 3 - March 5, 2004 Selections from the Rubell Family CollectionHerbert F. Johnson Museum of ArtCornell University Ithaca, NY 14853-4001 January 23 - March 14, 1999 Selections from the Rubell Family CollectionUniversity of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum4202 E Fowler avenue CAM 101 Tampa, FL 33620-7360 May 26 - July 24, 1999
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