Family Affair
"The Art of Collecting Art," Duke Magazine, July-August 1992
At the age of twenty-two, Jason
Rubell '91, then a fledgling collector of contemporary
art, was pondering postgraduation plans to work for
a large dealer or in a gallery. But, as he told Duke
Magazine in 1992, "I decided to jump right in
myself. I figured, whatever I needed to know, I would
learn on my own. What's the worst that could happen?"
Rubell was right. He learned quickly on his own. The
opening show of the Jason Rubell Gallery on Worth Avenue
in Palm Beach drew more than 300 people, garnered glowing
reviews, and put the savvy, fearless young collector
in the public eye. And while his success was no doubt
buoyed by the family name--Don and Mera Rubell, his
parents, had long been fixtures on the New York art
scene--it was Jason who lured the family to South Florida
and a seedy section of Miami's fashion district, the
new home of what soon became perhaps the most illustrious
mom-and-pop operation in the art world.
The Rubell Family Collection, which absorbed the Jason
Rubell Gallery, opened for business in 1996 at 95 Northwest
29th Street, a 40,000-square-foot warehouse formerly
used by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Confiscated
illegal narcotics were replaced by edgy works of art,
no less addictive for collectors like the Rubells,
whose outsized collection (more than 6,000 works in
all, from paintings and photographs to sculptures and
performance pieces) functions, as its curator Mark
Coetzee puts it, "with the nineteenth-century
tradition of a picture gallery." Exhibitions are
drawn exclusively from the permanent collection, only
2 percent of which is on display at any time. Artists
are sometimes invited to install their pieces themselves.
And viewers are encouraged to sit in the lounge and
to engage with the works as if they were in their own
homes.
Last March, The New York Times called the Rubells "pioneers" of "an
art frontier" in Miami, the "new locus for
serious collectors." And indeed, Jason Rubell
is first among them, continuing to acquire new works--and
new collectors; his wife, Michelle Simkins, with whom
he has two children, has joined in the pursuit.
"Collecting for the Rubells is a family affair;
everything is done by consensus," writes Coetzee,
in the introduction of Not Afraid, the Rubell Family
Collection catalogue, a 240-page "Who's Who" of
contemporary art that includes works by Andy Warhol,
Carl Andre, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Damien Hirst, Richard
Prince, Cindy Sherman, Thomas Struth, Mike Kelley,
and Louise Bourgeois. "By simply paging through
the installations," Coetzee writes, recalling
the warehouse's former holdings, "you will begin
to understand this family's addiction, their vice,
their inability to say 'No.' "
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