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Throughout the 1990s, the post-Thanksgiving stretch was a sleepy time for tourism in South Florida. Enter Art Basel Miami Beach, which brought the country’s largest contemporary arts fair to the first week of December.

“I use the term ‘Basel effect’ quite often,’’ said Rolando Aedo, senior vice president of marketing at the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. “From a business perspective, the numbers are outstanding.”

Compared to results seen in 2002, the year of Art Basel’s debut, revenue from the average Miami-Dade hotel room grew 51 percent for the first 11 months of 2010, according to Smith Travel Research. For December, that increase surged to 79 percent.

For hotels in Miami Beach, the change is even more dramatic. During the first week of December, the average Beach hotel room rented for 141 percent more in 2010 than it did during the same time stretch in 2002, according to an analysis by the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau.

Countless levels of hype, hyperbole and cultured fawning surround the 10th anniversary of the Basel fair. A look at the numbers can ground some of that puffery, but they mostly illustrate nine years worth of expansion for the fair itself and the circuit of events that now largely define what’s known as “Art Basel.”

Consider:

•  Art Basel Miami Beach enjoys the world’s largest satellite “scene” — that is, the roster of art shows that have popped up during the same week as the main event. In true Miami style, the Basel satellite roster roared during the boom years, peaking at 25 in 2008. Art Miami, once the leading art fair in the area, found it couldn’t compete and moved from January to Basel week and now reports strong sales.

The recession thinned out the satellite ranks, but 16 are scheduled for this year — more than orbit any of the other major art fairs around the world.

“It just kept growing. It became a global cultural happening,’’ said Craig Robins, the main developer behind Miami’s Design District and majority owner of Design Miami, the lone satellite fair partly owned by Art Basel’s parent company.

Robins argues the satellite shows aren’t as important as the circuit of parties, museum exhibitions, gallery installations and private events that attract VIPs from around the world. NetJets, a Basel sponsor that sells private-jet usage, expects about 150 flights in and out of the Miami area this weekend — more than double the 70 flights Net Jets sold in 2002.

No official numbers track the Basel social scene. But Max Sklar, Miami Beach’s tourism director, said the Basel week has shaken off its recessionary slump and regained its status as the busiest stretch in the city for high-end catered events.

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Wednesday, 30 November 2011 04:00

Art Basel: When Brazil moved to Miami

If you think London gets overcrowded with art events during Frieze week, then go to Miami. When Art Basel Miami Beach launches its 10th edition tomorrow, it will be joined by at least 16 other art fairs. It is a week when art consumes the entire city. Collectors open up their private galleries, public museums open extravaganza exhibitions, and “pop-up” shows do just that in every available space.

And if you hate contemporary art, you won’t even be safe on the streets.

Eye-catching Op Art buses will be cruising about; circus troupes travelling in a fleet of painted minis could pull up and perform anywhere; on the exterior of Frank Gehry’s New World Center, a 7,000 square foot screen will constantly relay the latest arts film and videos; parks will be littered with outsize sculptures. In South Pointe Park, a 55-foot lighthouse made of stacked cylinders by German artist Tobias Rehberger will be unveiled. In the evenings, Miami will buzz to the sound of clinking champagne glasses, Cuban music, performances on the beaches, and the constant art-world chatter of what is hot and what is not.

There is one thing on which most parties are agreed. “Latin American art is hot,” Glenn D Lowry, New York’s Museum of Modern Art director, told the New York Times last month. “There is a strong argument,” he said, “that a number of artists from the region are among the most interesting artists working today.”

Of the Latin American countries, Brazil is making the biggest impression.

Catherine Petitgas, a London- based collector on Tate’s Latin American art acquisition committee, believes the new wave of interest is based on a reassessment of geometrical abstraction in the 1950s when Brazilian artists such as Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica created a distinctive artistic language as part of the Neo-Concrete Group.

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