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Ye must pay: Miami art space sues artist formerly known as Kanye West for overdue rent

Surface Area, an art and retail showroom in Miami’s Design District, says the embattled artist owes $145,813 for a month-long rental

Benjamin Sutton
26 October 2022
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Kanye West Courtesy David Shankbone, via Wikimedia Commons

Kanye West Courtesy David Shankbone, via Wikimedia Commons

Major brands including Adidas and Gap as well as the Creative Artists Agency have severed ties with Ye following a slew of antisemitic comments by the rapper, musician and designer formerly known as Kanye West. Now he faces another—albeit far less costly—business setback: he is being sued by the Miami-based art and design space Surface Area.

The gallery, retail space, “content studio and activation space”, located a block from the Institute of Contemporary Art in the heart of Miami’s Design District, claims in a lawsuit filed on 24 October in Florida’s Southern District Court that Ye rented the space for 25 days in January 2022 to use it as a recording studio, but failed to pay the resulting $145,813 invoice. That sum, according to court documents, includes a daily rental fee of $5,000 over 25 days, $813 for the purchase of four office chairs and $20,000 the Surface Area staff spent customising the space to Ye’s specifications and removing more than 20 works of art from the space.

"My client pulled off what was essentially an overnight transformation of its art studio into a recording studio for Ye and accompanying artists," says Jonathan Smulevich, a lawyer at the Miami firm Lowy and Cook, which is representing Surface Area’s parent company Surface Media—the publisher of the magazine Surface. "In doing so, no request was too big or too small—Ye asked, and they delivered—and my client incurred significant costs and expenses to deliver. My client is simply asking for the payment they were promised by Ye for their hard work in customising and renting this unique space to Ye. Hopefully, this matter can be resolved quickly without prolonged litigation. However, my client has made it clear that it will not bear the financial burden that belongs to Ye."

The law firm Brown Rudnick, which had previously represented Ye, is no longer working with him due to his refusal to apologise for his antisemitic comments. Non-defendants also named in the suit include rapper Pardison Fontaine, producer 88-Keys, Ye’s manager Steven Victor and former collaborator Laurence Chandler (with whom Ye very publicly severed ties in February).

The gallery lawsuit, coming at a moment when Ye’s own comments and behaviour have made him a pariah, is a stark reversal from his past dabblings in the Miami art scene, most notably when he premiered a biblical musical during Art Basel in Miami Beach in 2019. The previous year he was spotted perusing the fair.

LawsuitsKanye WestMiami
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