Miami Herald

MDC Museum of Art and Design is back with ‘THE BODY ELECTRIC’

- BY MARIALEXIA HERNANDEZ ArtburstMi­ami.com

Months before the pandemic that shut doors of institutio­ns throughout the region and around the world, Rina Carvajal was scouting projects for Miami Dade College’s Museum of Art and Design (MOAD).

The museum’s executive director and chief curator discovered “The Body Electric,” an exhibition by The Walker Art Center in Minneapoli­s that is a searing commentary on the way technology has evolved and continues to change our lives.

She planned to bring the exhibit to MOAD in November, but she’d had no idea back then that it would mark the museum’s reopening after nearly eight months of closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Honestly, all this virus situation that we have gone through with the pandemic has shown more than ever how dependent we are on technology,” Carvajal says about the theme of “The Body Electric,” which runs through May 30 at the museum’s space in downtown Miami’s Freedom Tower.

Though not organized chronologi­cally, the exhibition features influentia­l artists beginning from the late 1950s through the present day.

“There is certainly, you can say, a canon of artists engaging with new technologi­es with the screen and exploring issues surroundin­g the body and identity,” says Pavel Pyś, curator of visual arts at the Walker Art Center, who first organized the exhibit. “How have artists engaged with that space between the analog and the digital, the real and the virtual, the place of the world and the space of the screen?”

Pre-pandemic, “The Body Electric” was displayed in its original Minneapoli­s home and at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco. Bringing it to Miami for display in the times of COVID-19 created challenges and opportunit­ies. Both curators agreed that organizing the exhibition for Miami was more complex, robust and ambitious than it had been for previous venues.

Because of its subject matter, the exhibit was to be extremely interactiv­e – but how to make it touch-free now?

“We wanted to do it in a way that was user-friendly,” Carvajal says. “We didn’t want to put apps or QR codes that people have to put on a phone or download an app. I did a lot of research just to figure out how we are going to do this, and we found the solution that was technologi­cally easy for people, so people can enjoy the show.”

The solution: The team at

MOAD created extended labels for most of the exhibition to help people understand why these artists are in the show and why their works are important.

In order to support audience participat­ion without having touch points, organizers had to adapt the space and create immersive environmen­ts by investing in new technologi­es and working with some of the artists to adjust their masterpiec­es.

“The exhibition was full of single-channel videos that would [typically] be experience­d on headphones,” Pyś says.

Then there was the major installati­on by Trisha Baga, an incredibly immersive experience titled “Mollusca & The Pelvic Floor,” which required the use of 3-D glasses.

“There were many conversati­ons that we had among the curatorial team in terms of how we adjust the show … but also with some of the artists in terms of adjusting their work to be shown in a way that is safe, given that we are in this situation,” Pyś says.

As far as selecting the art, Pyś says he discussed Miami audiences with Carvajal and wanted to highlight a diversity of voices.

“We added works that we felt were necessary to see in Miami by artists who maybe hadn’t been seen much in this city,” he says. “So that was one of the key things. I wanted the exhibition to have a greater relevance to the community.”

With the large space inside

The Freedom Tower, organizers were able to add 27 artists, some of whom were Latin American, who had not been included in previous presentati­ons.

Additions for Miami included Marta Minujín, an Argentinia­n artist and pioneer of performanc­e art, video, and soft sculpture, and Venezuelan artist Claudio Perna, who explored conceptual­ism through collage and photograph­s, among other artists.

“I think it’s relevant to Miami

se there’s such a large ation from Latin America here that people will be sted in knowing what was ntribution of some of Latin can artists to this conversaCa­rvajal says. s a gigantic show. You have ars of history of artists acing with technology and ng the importance of techy in everyday life since the ion of television.” dom Tower, 600 Biscayne Blvd., second floor, downtown Miami

$12 for adults; $8 for seniors and military; $5 for students (ages 13-17) and college students (with valid ID); free for MOAD members, children 12 and younger, and MDC students, faculty and staff. Purchase tickets online or in person at The Freedom Tower.

Call 305237-7700, visit mdcmoad.org or email museum@mdc.edu. Call 305-237-7710 for accessibil­ity issues.

ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of theater, dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.

 ??  ?? A work from ‘The Body Electric.’
A work from ‘The Body Electric.’
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