Artist Nardiz Cooke Transforms Radiation Masks Into Works of Art
She adorns them with materials ranging from Swarovski crystals to colored kyanite, fish scales, mirrored glass, and naturally shed antlers.
She adorns them with materials ranging from Swarovski crystals to colored kyanite, fish scales, mirrored glass, and naturally shed antlers.
The Little Havana fair offers a counterpoint to the velvet-rope exclusivity that can dominate Miami Art Week.
The Locust Projects installation explores a historical nexus between Big Sugar and Big Tech’s dealings in the city.
The images have not been shown since the National Museum of African American History and Culture acquired them.
PBR has produced 60 million cans and cases featuring Peter Santa-Maria’s original designs.
Basel is just around the corner, and local institutions are staging some of their most exciting shows of the year.
The organization’s leadership appears bullish about its prospects in the digital realm.
This is the first time Rembrandt, Vermeer, and other Dutch Old Masters have been exhibited in South Florida.
In the rush to brand the neighborhood as an art destination, much of the payoff went to visiting muralists, while Miami’s own talent often got scraps.
José Carlos Diaz got his start showing art out of his apartment.
The massive, immersive art experience curated by Miami Art Society will take you through the looking glass
Miami-based artists The Miracle Ghost and Yoni Yonson’s playfully provocative work will be on display at the festival.
The reopening of the Freedom Tower, a trove of erotic art at the Museum of Sex, and more.
These global capitals share much more than you might expect from two cities worlds apart.
The event, part of the gallery’s Vinyl Tuesdays, asks guests to become active participants rather than passive scrollers.
The art scene is getting busier in the months leading up to Miami Art Week.
The mural depicting Jackie Robinson and Minnie Miñoso was defaced with a swastika and the n-word back in June.
The activation – which does involve some nudity, as its name suggests – returns to Miami for the first time since 2017.
Vega was one of 10 artists chosen for the “2025 Florida Prize in Contemporary Art” exhibition, spotlighting “the most progressive artists in the state.”
“Language and Image” aims to appraise the medium in a post-AI world.
The installation disappeared from a Miami Beach hotel last summer, but people still look for it.
For two weeks this month, the space will offer up to 50 percent off on 200-plus artworks by more than 50 artists.