Artist: Edouard Duval-Carrié
Title:  Trapeze Contortionists
Site-specific installation, Española Way, 2022

The City of Miami Beach is pleased to announce the launch of Elevate Española, a dedicated art presentation site that will commission installations suspended above the historic Española Way corridor. Last year, art collective FriendsWithYou presented a hanging installation titled “Little Cloud Sky,” which consisted of eight inflatable cloud sculptures hanging above Española Way. The success of the installation led to further funding from the city to commission public artworks in the space, resulting in the naming of Elevate Española as a dedicated art installation site. Featuring two projects annually, Elevate Española will play an important role in bringing contemporary art to one of the most publicly visible areas of Miami Beach.

For its inaugural installation, Miami Beach resident and Haitian-born artist Edouard Duval-Carrié will debut an installation called “Trapeze Contortionists.”The work — which will incorporate the silhouettes of 15 figures of dancers, cut from lightweight aluminum — will be unveiled on Monday, Nov. 28 at 1 p.m., coinciding with the kick-off of Art Week Miami Beach. The project is generously funded by the Art in Public Places program of the City of Miami Beach.

“This uniquely vibrant installation will transform Española Way into the epicenter of culture and elevate our pedestrian thoroughfare to new heights,” expressed Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber.

Edouard Duval-Carrié’s work is reflective of his Haitian roots and his background as a historian of the African Diaspora. Especially unique to the South Beach area, Española Way evokes the walkable old European streets Duval-Carrié encountered when he lived in Paris. Specifically, this work for the inaugural Elevate Española installation took inspiration from a Senegalese contortionist troupe Duval-Carrié saw walk the highwire in a circus-like theater. Fifteen aluminum figures will hang above Española Way, the heavily trafficked pedestrian street between Washington and Collins Avenue, each grouped in their own colorway. Cut using a water-powered jet, the perforated sheets allow wind to pass through the multicolored figures in their various poses. The aluminum figures also evoke the more traditional paper or cloth flags and decorations often seen hanging in similar environs. The adjacent walls of Española Way will also be painted to resemble the fabric of circus tent walls, adorning the street with the aerialists of Duval-Carrié’s memory.

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