11 August 31 - september 6, 2023 miaminewtimes.com | browardpalmbeach.com New Times | Contents | Letters | news | night+Day | Culture | Cafe | MusiC | miaminewtimes.com MIAMI NEW TIMES | CONTENTS | LETTERS | RIPTIDE | METRO | NIGHT+DAY | STAGE | ART | FILM | CAFE | MUSIC | Debris Field Kerry Phillips invokes the storytelling power of junk at the Bass. BY SEAN LEVISMAN K erry Phillips has a serious stor- age problem. You would, too, if your life’s passion was collecting junk. Well, some people might call it junk, but for Phillips, the detritus of our modern consumer lives has an almost animis- tic quality, with everyday objects possessed of their spiritual essence. Throughout her ca- reer, an enduring fascination with the psychic value we assign to our personal effects has compelled the Miami-based artist to build formidable art instal- lations using copious amounts of found bric-a-brac. “People often ask me, ‘Where do you store all this crap?’” Phillips tells New Times. “Then their second question usu- ally is, ‘How do you make money? Like, do you sell this?’ The work I make isn’t necessarily commercially sellable, not like a painting that someone can buy and put on their wall. They’re usu- ally quite large installations that are space- prohibitive, so showing in museums and art spaces like that is where these things be- long. It’s kind of the only place where they can belong.” It’s fortunate for Miami then that Phillips’ latest work has a home at the Bass this sum- mer. Now on view through October 21, “Be- tween the Mundane and the Miraculous” is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition and, in her self-deprecating words, “confirmation that all the odd things I do make sense to other people.” It comprises a large-scale, site-specific sculptural installation made up of miscellaneous household goods, scav- enged knickknacks, and the esoteric con- tents of private junk drawers collected “by the truckload.” Phillips, who works out of a chic Design District studio today, credits her appreciation for the storytelling power of found objects on the grandmothers who helped raise her in ru- ral Texas. One had a penchant for collecting things, and the other was known to be a mas- terful yarn spinner. “I love found objects because I love the stories,” she says. “I’m fascinated by how we assign value and meaning to things that we use, keep, collect, discard, ignore, throw away, or become obsolete, no longer useful or practical. We place a high value on things that don’t necessarily have monetary value because of a memory, a story, or a connec- tion. It’s like this disposable object becomes imbued with value because of the time that it’s been kept.” “When you pick up and engage with an object, many times you can kind of get a sense of where it’s been just by the marks on it,” she adds. “It’s the well-worn stuffed bear that’s the child’s favorite, not the brand-new fancy one.” Of course, storytelling is a communal activity, not a solitary one, so “Between the Mundane and the Miraculous” incorporates found objects donated by the Miami community that are steeped in diverse personal histories and private narratives. In the month leading up to the exhibition’s opening, Phillips hosted an interactive “laboratory” welcoming locals from all backgrounds and walks of life to engage with her, the space, and materials, effectively becoming collaborators in the installation. “My working thesis or hypothesis is that in sharing our stories and making these connec- tions, we’re sharing our value and creating value in each other,” Phillips says. “That, then, can also create compassion and love.” “Kerry Phillips: Between the Mundane and the Miraculous.” On view through October 21, at the Bass, 2100 Collins Ave., Miami Beach; 305-673-7530; thebass.org. Admission is free with a suggested donation. Wednesday through Sunday noon to 5 p.m. [email protected] ▼ Culture Installation view of “Between the Mundane and the Miraculous” at the Bass Photo by World Red Eye/Courtesy the Bass, Miami Beach “I’M FASCINATED BY HOW WE ASSIGN VALUE AND MEANING TO THINGS THAT WE USE.”