CECILY BROWN B. 1969
UNTITLED
monoprint on paper
119.5 by 93cm.; 47 by 36 5/8 in.
Executed in 2005.
You've got to dig to dig it, you dig?
Thomas Struth
Paradise 2
signed on a label affixed to the reverse
cibachrome print
image: 177 by 226cm.; 69 3/4 by 89in.
sheet: 183 by 231cm.; 72 by 91in.
Executed in 1998, this work is number 4 from an edition of 10.LITERATURE
Ingo Hartman & Hans Rudolf Reust, Thomas Struth: New Pictures from Paradise, Munich
2002, no. 7301, illustration of another example in colour
Uta Grosenick, Ahead of the 21st Century: The Pisces Collection, Cologne 2002, pp. 168-169, no.
130, illustration of another example in colour
Lygia Clark
0.0
industrial paint on wood
41 by 82cm.; 16 1/8 by 32 1/4 in.
Executed in 1957-1982.AUTHENTICATION
This work is registered in the archives of The World of Lygia Clark Cultural Association under
number 544 and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.
CATALOGUE NOTE
Lygia Clark was one of the most innovative Latin American artists of the 20th Century. She
transformed the practice of geometric abstraction through a profound belief in the importance of
interaction between an artwork and “participant”.
Clark initially explored the Modernist traditions that infiltrated Brazilian culture in the 1940s, and
looked toward geometric abstractions and the interplay of colour and line in the construction of
pictorial space. These initial investigations soon developed into bolder, more dynamic
compositions. The artist’s pivotal role in the Rio de Janeiro-based Neo-Concrete movement in the
late 1950s was imperative to her artistic development. The group challenged rationalist
Constructivism and promoted a subjective, more organic approach to art. The use of new
materials was greatly encouraged, as was the importance of invention and creativity.
Conceived in 1957 and realised in 1982, Superfície Modulada No. 2 is a beautifully serene
example from this incredibly important transitional period. Clark’s use of industrial paint on wood
together with her method of penetrating the picture surface with linear divisions, underscores her
interest in physical versus pictorial space. By fracturing the surface of the painting with fine
recessed lines, Clark creates something tangible, almost three-dimensional, thus disallowing a
planar reading of the surface. The absence of a frame or visible support allows the artwork into
real space within which the viewer can exist. Lygia Clark would endeavour throughout her career
to create a more direct relationship between the body and the object itself. With Superfície
Modulada No. 2, Clark creates an alternative for the art object. With this early and seminal work,
we see the beginning of the artist’s conception of art as an immersive and subjective experience.
via sothebys

Thomas Struth
Geldern 1954 – lives in Düsseldorf and Berlin
SAO FRANCISCO DE XAVIER, BRAZIL
2001. C-Print, 2003.
46,3 x 59,2 cm (60,8 x 75,5 cm) (18 1/4 x 23 1/4 in. (23 7/8 x 29 3/4 in.))
Signed, dated (exposure and print), titled and numbered in pencil on the reverse.
From the edition of 40 + 12 A.P. numbered prints from the Portfolio II of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), ed. by the Serge Sorokko Gallery, San Francisco 2004.

Else Thalemann
Berlin 1901 – 1984 pen Lauterbach
LANTERN AT A FENCE
Circa 1930. Vintage. Gelatin silver print. Agfa-Brovira-paper.
17,1 x 12,1 cm (17,3 x 12,3 cm) (6 3/4 x 4 3/4 in. (6 3/4 x 4 7/8 in.))
On the reverse typewritten label with photographer- and title note as well as archive number.
Zoo Miami- Florida Exhibit Children’s Play Area and Zoo Entrance Plaza
Application Deadline: March 31, 2011
Budget: $1.2 million
Artists Mapping Miami – A Roundtable Discussion
Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at 7 pm
Vizcaya Museum and Gardens
3251 South Miami Avenue
Miami, FL 33129
Visitors are invited to explore the Main House with Ernesto Oroza’s map from 6 – 7 pm.
Miami is a city in constant flux, whose landscape is redefined every few years. In the context of Archetype Vizcaya, this roundtable invites several
artists to present and discuss with the public their current projects on Miami and its shifting geographies.
Participants include Kevin Arrow, Adler Guerrier, Nicolas Lobo, Gean Moreno, Ernesto Oroza, Dinorah de Jesús Rodriguez, Lara Stein Pardo and Cesar Trasobares. Moderator: Flamina Gennari-Santori, Vizcaya’s Deputy Director for Collections and Curatorial Affairs
Tickets $5; free for Members, Seniors and Students with ID.
Archetype Vizcaya explores what happens when things are taken from their original context and given new purpose and meaning. Ernesto Oroza has created a “map” that invites visitors to discover things generally unseen. Through a provisional gallery on plexiglass, he challenges us to question what is original or authentic. And, in a compilation of amateur videos from the Web, Oroza shows how Vizcaya is “used” or appropriated by its visitors.
Archetype Vizcaya is on view through May 29, 2011.
For more information, please call 305-860-8423 or 305-250-9133.
LAND invites you to view/download the island Ebook.
On December 3, 2010, LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) and OHWOW organized the island: a one-day, dusk ’til dawn exhibition during Art Basel Miami Beach. Seventeen artists created site-specific installations on Flagler Memorial Island located just a few minutes from the mainland in Biscayne Bay.
As the exhibition has now disappeared, ghostlike and mythical, into the Miami landscape, LAND invites you to view the island Ebook – a digital publication created by LAND to bring you back to the island.
via LAND.