Solo Exhibitions: Aquí No Pasa Nada by Hermes Berrio and Fair Play by Katrina Majkut
The CAMP Gallery Presents Aquí No Pasa Nada by Hermes Berrio and Fair Play by Katrina Majkut
Exhibition Dates: September 5 – October 3, 2025
Opening Reception: Friday, September 5, 2025 | 6–9 PM
Location: The CAMP Gallery | 791–793 NE 125th St., North Miami, FL 33161
The Contemporary Art Modern Project (The CAMP Gallery) is proud to announce two new solo exhibitions opening on Friday, September 5, 2025: Aquí No Pasa Nada by Miami-based artist Hermes Berrio and Fair Play by New York-based artist Katrina Majkut.
In Aquí No Pasa Nada, Berrio presents a series of mixed-media paintings rooted in his exploration of the everyday and the seemingly mundane. Known for his ability to elevate ordinary moments into the sublime, Berrio highlights the overlooked beauty and vibrancy of daily life. With his layered compositions and striking details, the artist invites viewers to slow down and rediscover the awe hidden in the rhythm of contemporary urban living.
Running concurrently, Fair Play features Majkut’s series of bedazzled vintage baseball cards, where the artist uses embroidery to obscure the identities of celebrated athletes. By concealing the heroes’ images, Majkut re-centers the conversation on achievement rather than tradition or gender roles, effectively leveling the proverbial playing field. Her work challenges sports culture’s narratives while reframing iconic symbols into a dialogue on equality and recognition.
Together, Berrio and Majkut direct our attention to what is often missed amid the “noise” of everyday life—possibility, accomplishment, and the act of seeing beyond the obvious.
The exhibitions will be on view through October 3, 2025, with an opening reception on Friday, September 5, from 6–9 PM.
Gallery Hours & Contact:
The CAMP Gallery is open Tuesday–Saturday, from 11 AM to 5 PM. Private tours may be scheduled by emailing [email protected] or calling 786-953-8807. For press inquiries, additional images, or artist bios, please contact Communications Manager Amy at [email protected].
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Katrina Majkut (b.1982) is a Ukrainian American visual artist, curator, and writer dedicated to examining how social traditions shape civil rights, bodily autonomy, and representation. Pushing the boundaries of observational painting, she uniquely employs embroidery and craft materials as her primary medium—challenging the historical biases and social narratives embedded within them. Through her innovative practice, Majkut pioneers intersectional, fourth-wave feminist strategies, a methodology she calls Boomerang Intersectionalism.

Majkut’s work has been featured in major exhibitions, including the group show Get in the Game at SFMOMA, which will travel to Crystal Bridges Museum in 2025 and the Pérez Art Museum Miami in 2026. In 2024, she presented a solo exhibition at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art. Her broader exhibition history includes over 40 colleges and institutions, as well as Spring Break, Tyger Tyger Gallery, the Bronx Museum Biennial, Every Woman Biennial, Dorsky Museum, and the Museum of Craft and Design (San Francisco).
She has received fellowships from Wassaic Projects, Forge, and the Bronx Museum AIM program, and has participated in residencies at Elizabeth Murray/Collarworks, MASS MoCA, and Project for Empty Space. Majkut’s work is also part of significant private collections, including the 21C Museum and Dana Farber. She earned her MFA from SMFA at Tufts University.

Hermes Berrio (b. 1980, Colombia) is a Miami-based artist whose work reimagines the emotional landscapes of urban life, transforming canvases into vibrant spectacles and everyday objects into treasures. His stylized creations restructure ideas, redistribute meaning, and mutate concepts into unrecognizable yet captivating forms of perfection.
Berrio’s passion for art began in high school in Colombia, where he immersed himself in creative study both formally and independently. Seeking to expand his horizons, he moved to New York to study and embrace the city’s diverse culture, earning his BFA from New York University in 2005. Since then, his career has spanned group and solo exhibitions across the United States, Latin America, Europe, and Australia, alongside numerous public murals—including several prominent installations in Miami.

His work has been recognized with significant awards, including The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant (2018, 2022), The Ruth and Harold Chenven Foundation Grant (2019), the South Florida Cultural Consortium Grant (2023), and the Miami Individual Artist (MIA) Grant (2023, 2024). From 2019 to 2024, he was also a Fountainhead Studios resident artist. Constantly evolving, Berrio continues to push the boundaries of process and medium, challenging contemporary expectations with his prodigious and dynamic compositions.