For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
Graphic Novel: Cinematographers of the printed page, graphic novel artists integrate the literary and the visual to produce works with broad popular appeal. Sponsored by the Florida Center for the Literary Arts and scheduled in conjunction with this year's Miami Book Fair International, the artists exhibiting in "Graphic Novel" are published by Pantheon. Art Spiegelman, publisher of RAW magazine, a forum for sophisticated sequential comic art, pulled out all the stops in his purgative work on holocaust survival, Maus. Charles Burns's Big Baby series is a black-and-white retro-noir pastiche mimicking early newspaper engraving techniques. Inkjet prints and original ink drawings are on view by artists such as Iranian Marjane Satrapi, who chronicles her experiences as a guileless student abroad in Europe in Persepolis. The deadpan anomie of Ben Katchor's low-self-esteem everyman Julius Knipl entertains at street level, while the sheer virtuosic draftsmanship and page design of Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan transports readers to an eternal and mythical Chicago. -- Michelle Weinberg Through November 14. Centre Gallery, Miami-Dade Community College, Wolfson Campus, Bldg. 1, 300 NE Second Ave., Room 1365, Miami. 305-237-3696.
House and Garden: A Dip in the Deep End of Domesticity: Chad Abel, an artist and photographer with a taste for parody, revulsion, and the grotesque, works with surfaces, paint and glaze, reassembled plastic toys, and makeshift furniture to set up bizarre sculptures. He is also a good painter. Interact with his troupe of the misshapen: hopping duck-feet dildos, shit-mound figures on the floor comically attending a talking-dog sermon. The bulbous cocoons from which these creatures would surface literally take over the gallery, their colorful tentacles reaching ceiling and walls. It's an inventive display of pulp and biting cultural satire. Abel's paintings are less overt, conveying a more intricate vision. Some are very busy in a psychedelic kind of way. Others (my favorites) are more laid-back, radiating a lingering though not objectionable graphic-processed aftertaste. -- Alfredo Triff Through October 25. OBJEX Artspace, 203 NW 36th St., Miami. 305-573-4400.
Jewels on Paper: An exhibition of 60 works from some 26 Cuban masters, among them Esteban Chartrand, Wifredo Lam, Amelia Peláez, Carlos Enríquez, Nicolás Guillén, and Tomás Sánchez. Víctor Manuel pieces from the Fifties are unsurpassable renditions of the Cuban mulata's face -- beautiful, sincere, smart, and not anything like the received stereotypes. Carlos Enríquez's little gouache Las Comadritas is a masterpiece. I also loved Antonio Gattorno's works from the Forties, Raúl Milián's 1954 Flower, and Tomás Sánchez's esperpentos from the early Seventies. -- Alfredo Triff Through October 23. Cernuda Arte, 3155 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Coral Gables. 305-461-1050, www.cernudaarte.com.
Let's go!: Ada Ruilova's video Countdowns supposedly builds upon post-apocalyptic films of the Seventies and Eighties. Two different videos play side-by-side on adjacent walls, forming a 90-degree angle. The imagery evokes a sort of countdown using disconnected characters amid barren urban landscapes. I found the work fast and repetitive. -- Alfredo Triff Through November 1 (open Friday, Saturday, and by appointment). The Moore Space, second floor, 4040 NE Second Ave., Miami. 305-438-1163.