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Sala de Despecho abrió una nueva sede en Brickell, Miami

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El reconocido concepto mexicano de restaurante bar dedicado a cantar, brindar y celebrar el despecho continúa su expansión en Estados Unidos con una nueva sede en el corazón de Miami.

El popular concepto mexicano Sala de Despecho, conocido por transformar el despecho en una experiencia de celebración, música y convivencia, abrió una nueva sede en Brickell.

Con presencia en distintos países y varias ciudades de Estados Unidos, incluyendo McAllen, Washington y Miami, Sala de Despecho continúa consolidándose como un espacio único donde la música, la comida y la cultura latina se combinan para crear una experiencia vibrante y memorable.

La nueva sede de Brickell representa la segunda ubicación de la marca en Miami, sumándose al éxito de su local en Wynwood y ampliando su presencia en una de las zonas más dinámicas y cosmopolitas de la ciudad.

Fiel a su esencia, Sala de Despecho propone un ambiente donde el público puede cantar, bailar, disfrutar de la gastronomía y brindar al ritmo de los grandes himnos del despecho que han marcado generaciones en la cultura latina.

El concepto invita a los visitantes a vivir el espíritu del “(des)ahogo de penas más mexicano”, ofreciendo una experiencia donde las emociones se transforman en celebración, acompañadas dea una propuesta gastronómica y de coctelería inspirada en la tradición mexicana.

Para celebrar esta nueva etapa, el espacio realizó un evento de apertura, donde invitados especiales y creadores de contenido conocieron de primera mano la propuesta renovada del lugar.

La fiesta contó con la presencia de numerosas personalidades del mundo del Entretenimiento y los medios de comunicación de la ciudad; presentadores como Carlos Adyan, de Telemundo, y Roxana García, de Univision. También estuvieron la Miss Cuba 2024, Marianela Ancheta, y otras modelos; además de la estilista Irma Martínez e influencers como Catalina Maya y Diana Espinosa March.

La nueva sede de Sala de Despecho invita a residentes y visitantes de Miami a descubrir un espacio pensado para compartir, cantar y celebrar la cultura latina en el corazón de Brickell.

Ubicación:
1250 S Miami Ave Ste 101
Miami, FL

Curatormagazine.com

Curatormagazine.com

Meaghan Ritchey’s long and wide-ranging conversation with Dr. Daniel A. Siedell, an art historian and curator living in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

At The Curator, we “seek to encourage, promote, and uncover artifacts of culture” by publishing reviews, critiques, poems, and personal stories. Tell us about your work as a museum curator (e.g. your many years of observing artists’ studio practice, organizing exhibitions, and managing an art museum collection).

I create space. As an art historian, I create historical space that allows the artists, curators, and critics in the past to come alive as human beings and restore the integrity of their work as responses to a particular historical moment. As an art critic, I create imaginative space for a work of art to be experienced through my sentences. And as a curator, I create a literal (exhibition) space for art to breathe in front of a viewer.

When people think of fine art activity in the US, the coasts come to mind—especially Los Angeles and New York. How did working in Nebraska for many years affect your curatorial philosophy?

I turned my somewhat marginalized location into an advantage. I was given the freedom at the Sheldon Museum of Art at the University of Nebraska to experiment, and so, I could offer artists the space to take risks, to explore aspects of their work that their dealer in New York or LA couldn’t allow them to take in their gallery shows. I knew I had a beautifully designed museum with well-proportioned exhibition spaces, and with a respected permanent collection of 19th and 20th century American art to serve as an historical context, I could give artists a lot to work with.

My contemporary art project spaces functioned like a back-room laboratory, allowing me to experiment, to explore approaches to work that I might not have been able to try on the coasts, where the pressure to conform is great because the sheer density of competitors. I didn’t have much funding to do these projects, but that also became an advantage, allowing me to fly under the radar screen of my director and board, and if I could raise a little extra money here and there, I could purchase even more freedom.

So what does all that mean for an artist’s relationship to a gallery/museum, respectively?

When the art world crashed in 2008, it revealed that artists have to take control of all of the decisions involving their work, that they cannot simply assume that a gallery or dealer can take care of all of the decisions made outside the studio while the artist only has to care about making their work. It’s the artist’s business to learn the business of art, to learn how art as an institutional practice (and sociological dynamic) works, and to think through every aspect of the life their work will have if it leaves the studio and goes out into the world. The decisions an artist makes outside the studio are just as important as those she makes inside.

How does your interaction with an artist evolve from your initial encounter with their work, to studio visit, and then to the realization of a museum exhibition?

My particular way of working with artists is deeply personal. I have to like the artists I work with—respect who they are as human beings, and how they approach their work as artists. There is also usually something about their work that pushes up against my approach to art that tests my understanding of artistic practice, and poses a question that I want to answer through their work. I also want to work with an artist who’s interested in my approach to their work, who believes that my approach enriches their practice. How we collaborate might take different forms: a publication, an acquisition, artist’s lecture, participation in a group or thematic show, or a solo project. I hope that years down the road the artist will consider our project to be somehow significant in her development, not only as an artist, but as a person.

You’ve spent a lot of time in artists’ studios. What have you observed? How are studio practices formative?

Although an artist is free do and make anything in the studio, she has a responsibility to do something. And that requires tremendous discipline and the willingness to ask the most fundamental questions. Each day she goes into the studio asking: “Who am I?”—”Who am I in relationship to this blank canvas, to the world outside the studio, to Nature, History, or a God who judges me?”  In addition, the artist has to ask another closely related question, “What kind of artist am I?” And often that entails discovering of what kind of artist they don’t want to be. As the artist leaves the studio at the end of each workday, she has answered those questions, whether she knows it or not, at least for that day. And most artists, I think, know it. They also know that they have to answer those same questions again, tomorrow.

Given the nature of their work, then, most artists I’ve worked with have developed a set of intentional practices and habits, spanning the profound to the mundane, the complex to the simple, that give a liturgical form to their work. These are very similar to the liturgies and spiritual disciplines of various religious traditions that include a sensitivity to their lived space, meticulous attention to their materials, certain postures, and, I might add, contemplation and meditation: a willingness to spend long hours just sitting in a chair looking at their work. Like the spiritual disciplines, these studio practices create the space to be active and passive, proactive and receptive. The artists I’ve worked with know that being an artist is much more than producing certain artifacts, it’s about becoming a certain kind of human being.

Before I got to know fine artists well, before I wanted to know how/why they made what they made, I encountered artwork like it just always “was”, or something. I didn’t consider how it was made (e.g. where it came from, the difficult spatial restrictions, material costs—all of these variables).  I had no empathy for the conceptual difficulty of setting out to make something that no one has ever made before! Once artistic practices and processes are understood, it opens up a type of appreciation. A curator can help with that.

I think that’s right. Being human means dealing with limitations. I think that the overly romantic idea that somehow creativity only takes place when you’re free of restrictions keeps a lot of good art from entering the world—or, perhaps, it actually prevents a lot of bad work from entering the world…What makes the existence of art in the world so remarkable is that it comes at great cost, sometimes through enormous challenges, but almost always through the slow drip of inconveniences, frustrations, and self-doubt.

This is why I am fascinated by what happens in the studio as the artist devotes her life to making artifacts that have no apparent use in the world, artifacts that are often ignored and misunderstood, especially in the church. Artists lean into that fear that every human being has—that the work we do doesn’t matter.

I’m attracted to artists who, on a daily basis, are making the commitment to be a particular kind of artist, in spite of the challenges and the limitations of their life situation—artists who have the faith to keep doing what they’re doing.  They don’t have it all worked out—doubting their sanity and the wisdom of their choices. But in faith, they go to the studio and work. In the process they’re strengthening my faith in art, offering me assurance, and serving as a means of grace to me as I struggle with the wisdom of devoting my life to looking at smelly pigments smeared on a scrap of canvas amidst all of the very difficult challenges and responsibilities in my life.

You sound like an artist.

My work as an art historian, curator, and critic is my studio practice. I’m working with artists because I’m searching for my own answers, trying to put some balm on my own wounds, find something to cling to that can clarify my relationship to God and the world. Artists often function as my spiritual directors, and they’re not even aware of it. Artists don’t make work to express what they already know about themselves and the world; they make work to explore what they don’t know. My work as a curator is similar.

Why did you write God in the Gallery?

I wrote it as a theological reflection on my passion for modern & contemporary art. But instead of beginning where most Christian approaches to art do, in the seminar room or lecture hall, I began where I was living: neck deep in the art world—in artist’s studios, organizing exhibitions, and writing catalog essays. I live my life in the church as someone who devotes his life to modern art, and I live out my vocation as a curator in the art world as a Christian. I wanted to give voice to the richness and complexity of that experience, which I hoped would be an encouragement to other outliers like me.

What about your training permitted you to move freely in and out of what were seemingly dichotomous worlds? 

I fear that if I’d read H.R. Rookmaaker’s Modern Art and the Death of a Culture as an undergraduate I’d have been forced to either give up art or give up my faith, quite frankly. I’ve spent a lot of time on the campuses of Christian colleges and universities and I observe a tremendous need for art history and art criticism. Art students get theology and philosophy, but they need history—modern art history. Art is an historical concept before it is a philosophical one.

What’s the first step in addressing this? And separately, what can universities do to foster conversation between fine arts students and business students so that the folks can, at a young age, understand what it means to be patrons?

Modern art history has to be taught, and taught by someone who loves it—not uncritically, swallowing it feathers and all. But presented in a way that reveals that it’s the living tradition within which every artist works today and that God is at work in and through it.

In addition to art history, Christian listeners can be developed by putting students in front of works of art—not just those in art museums, but those works that their fellow students are making. Christians move too quickly from the particular to the abstract, from the specific work of art they encounter to theological and philosophical categories like “Beauty” that, in reality, do violence to the integrity of the work of art and the artist who made it.

Most Christians who claim to like art like the theological and philosophical categories—they like art in “theory.” They are much less able to express their love of art in and through particular artifacts. But art doesn’t exist as an abstract category. It exists as this painting and that sculpture; this drawing and that performance. And I think this has relevance not just for art, but also as a means to help the church do what the church does, glorify God and love their neighbor.

Moreover, that nursing or business student who is comfortable standing in front of a work of art, not only gains insight into and empathy for the challenges of making art but might also become more inclined to go to art museums and see the humanity in those works that hang on the wall, or sit on pedestals, or move on the screen before them, and be changed in the process.

History & Mission

Founded in 2008 by Alissa Wilkinson through Makoto Fujimura’s International Arts Movement, The Curator showcased that organization’s commitment to the intersection of arts and faith. As founding editor Alissa Wilkinson put it, The Curator was designed to be

aggressively omnivorous, which would merrily ignore the established periodical wisdom of “timeliness” and simply go after culture in an exuberant, wide-ranging celebration of the best things humans make and do.

Over the years, though five editors have come and gone, though The Curator has sometimes slowed its publication schedule, and sometimes ceased outright, the mission has remained the same: to celebrate the best things humans make and do.

Contact Us
Questions? Comments? Ideas? Send an email to [email protected].

You can become a fan of The Curator on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Curator Interview Questions

Top 5 curator interview questions with detailed tips for both hiring managers and candidates.

Curators collect, catalog, and display art and artifacts for museums and other organizations. Successful candidates will be creative, organized, and focused. Avoid those who lack time management or communication skills.

Interview Questions for Curators

1. What do you like about our current displays? What improvements would you make?

Shows preparedness and creativity.

2. Explain how you negotiate a loan or purchase terms. What planning goes into that process?

Demonstrates negotiation skills.

3. Describe your experience with researching pieces and maintaining catalogues.

Shows thoroughness and organization skills.

4. When planning a display, what tasks do you handle? What do you delegate? How do you facilitate teamwork?

Demonstrates management skills and job expectations.

5. How would you promote our events and exhibitions? Use examples from your most successful event to support your answer.

Shows marketing skills.

Biennale Wynwood

Biennale Wynwood
Biennale Wynwood

Biennale Wynwood es un evento creado por un equipo de gente comprometida con el arte, que en su primera edición reúne a artistas de excelente trayectoria internacional de 25 países, con el propósito de resaltar la diversidad cultural que caracteriza a la ciudad de Miami.

Es un espacio extraordinario para apreciar y adquirir obras de alto nivel internacional en el que artistas y visitantes tendrán la oportunidad de relacionarse con coleccionistas y amantes del arte, con Arquitectos y Diseñadores de Miami, y con el Cuerpo Diplomático y Político de la ciudad. 

La primera edición de Biennale Wynwood se realizará del 2 al 5 de abril de 2020, en el Distrito de Arte de Wynwood 

Programación durante los días de exhibición:

  • Gala VIP de Inauguración de Biennale Wynwood, jueves 2 de abril de 7:00 a 10:00 pm.
  • Noche Diplomática, viernes 3 de abril de 7:00 a 10:00 pm
  • Encuentro con Asociación Interamericana de Diseñadores y Arquitectos, sábado 4 de abril de 7:00 a 10:00 pm
  • Charlas con personalidades del medio artístico y político en Miami, Domingo 5 de abril de 1:00 a 4:00 pm.

Abierto al público en el siguiente horario:  viernes 3 y sábado 4 de abril 10:00 am a 10:00 pm. y domingo 5 de abril 10:00 am a 6:00 pm.  

Dirección:  145 NW 36 Street, Miami Florida 33127 

Para más información, visita www.biennalewynwood.com.

 Síguenos en Instagram @biennalewynwood

Juliana Barrios presenta su nueva canción

Juliana Barrios presenta “La canción del Wassapp”
Juliana Barrios presenta “La canción del Wassapp”

Juliana Barrios presenta “La canción del Wassapp”


La intérprete y compositora colombiana, nominada al Latin Grammy, lanza el tema “La canción del Wassapp”. “Tiene un ritmo tropical con un toque urbano”, afirmó la artista sobre su flamante creación, que cuenta con humor una historia de amor frustrado. 

  • “La canción del Wassapp” ya está disponible en plataformas como Spotify y Apple, y cuenta con su correspondiente videoclip en Youtube.

Este es el tercer tema que Juliana da a conocer en los últimos meses: los otros fueron “Sin tu amor no sale el sol” y “Quiéreme”. “La canción del Wassapp” fue compuesta por Juliana, y producida por los prestigiosos músicos Fredy Camelo y Ahmed Barroso.
Juliana nació en Cali, Colombia. Es graduada de Berklee College of Music, de Boston. Radica en Miami. Enlace para escuchar la canción en Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/2QDGSYFZhxulqGS0odEPxj?si=lZqU6Xq0S6CSZ4pXlo9EmwEnlace para ver el videoclip de “La canción del Wassapp” en Youtube:  https://youtu.be/cgDTl639jWc

Juliana online: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/julianabarrios_music/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/juliana.barrios.54                                  
www.julianabarrios.com 
Ficha técnica de “La canción del Wassapp”: 
Letra y música by Juliana Barrios @julianabarrios_music
Producción musical: Fredy Camelo/Ahmed Barroso
Ingeniero de mezcla: Shafik PalisIngeniero de Master: Michael Fuller
Editora: Mangabiche Music LLC
Portada: Deviento & papel @devientoypapelVideo: Mangabiche Music LLC

at the Sandrell Rivers Theater

at the Sandrell Rivers Theater

Cultural Arts Partnership Program at the Sandrell Rivers Theater (CAP@SRT). Through a competitive process, this program allows new and upcoming artists and arts organizations to present their work at the Sandrell Rivers Theater. We are starting this season with 4 relevant projects:

  • MUSIC: “10,000 Strong Black Leadership Summit” by The Circle of Brotherhood; March 28, 2020, at 6 p.m. One evening of dynamic black leaders and Entrepreneurs from different industries. Together under one roof, one mind, one vision. To empower our community economically. Followed by a comedy show, music concert, and networking mix & mingle.
  • THEATER: “Unfold: The Pride Plays” (The Silver Tongues Stages) by Ricky J. Martinez; Apr 2 and 3, 2020, at 8 p.m. A collection of three Latino-centric, LGBTQ2 case studies realizing the complexities of our “identity decade.”
  • DANCE: “Boys Will Be Boys” by Randolph Tyrone Ward, Jr.; May 1, 2020, at 6:30 p.m., and May 3, 2020, at 1:30 p.m. Dance work that dissects and investigates the effects of toxic masculinity on American boyhood.
  • THEATER: “The Short and Short of It” by Bruce Karp; Sept. 11 and 12, 2020, at 8 p.m., and Sept. 13, 2020, at 3 p.m. Several short comedies and dramatic plays that will touch on many facets of human interaction, family dysfunction embracing LGBTQ, social, family, HIV, homelessness, kindness, and friendship themes, and even some Hip Hop.

Attached find our press release with additional details. I can also provide more info, photos and arrange interviews with any of the 2019-2020 awardees, if you’d like.

Do you think Art Miami Lifestyle may be interested in attending and covering any of these performances? There will be some great inspiring stories, as well as photo opportunities, that I know would be meaningful to our community.

I will follow up in a few days to see if you might want to attend. Thank you very much!

Rommel Arellan-Marinas │ Associate Artistic Director

Fantasy Theatre Factory at the Sandrell Rivers Theater

6103 NW 7th Ave, Miami, FL – 33127

Web: ftfshows.com

Phone: 305-284-8800 EXT 467

Cellphone: 786-715-1581

El cantante y compositor chileno MARIO GUERRERO se asoma al “CORAZONES ROTOS”

MARIO GUERRERO
MARIO GUERRERO

El cantante y compositor chileno MARIO GUERRERO se asoma al mercado internacional de la mano de FANNY LU, con quien grabó a dúo la canción “CORAZONES ROTOS” 

El tema fue escrito por Mario y por su colega Antony Albert, es leit motiv de la telenovela chilena del momento, “Edificio corona”, y el correspondiente videoclip ya supera el millón de views  

“El apoyo de una estrella como Fanny me genera muchas expectativas y el tema ya tiene buena repercusión en Chile, Perú y varios países centroamericanos”, comentó Guerrero, surgido del programa más exitoso de la televisión chilena en décadas recientes, “Rojo fama contra fama” “Fanny es fantástica y generosa”, sostuvo el joven. Entretanto, la intérprete de “No te pido flores” y “Tú no eres para mí” manifestó que Guerrero “escribe y canta bello” y que “Corazones rotos” es un tema que “tiene mucho de Colombia y también de Mario”. Sobre la letra apuntó que “siempre habrá nostalgia del amor que se acaba”. 

Fanny es una figura de nivel continental. Nació en Cali. Antes de triunfar como cantante fue actriz y modelo. Ha sido jurado en programas como “La Voz Colombia” y “La Voz Kids”. Guerrero es una estrella en su país; se presentó dos veces en el Festival de Viña del Mar; ha compartido escenario con Franco de Vita y el dúo Río Roma; y ha compuesto para Pedro Fernández y otras figuras 
Videoclip oficial. Mario con Fanny Lu, “Corazones rotos” :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAK19Zbcbuw

Mario Online:
Instagram @guerreromario
Facebook: @guerreromario
oficial Twitter: @guerreromario
www.marioguerrero.cl

Culture Shock Miami

About Culture Shock Miami

Culture Shock Miami, the audience development program of the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs, is designed to introduce the next generation of audience members to live arts and cultural experiences at the age when they are beginning to make their own entertainment decisions. Based on research that shows most people begin their appreciation for the arts at a young age, Culture Shock Miami is founded on the premise that when teens and young adults make the arts a regular entertainment choice, they are more likely to become full-price ticket buyers and subscribers in the future. Through our website teens and young adults (ages 13-22), can purchase $5 tickets to top music, theatre, and dance performances, as well as admission to museums, landmarks, and cultural destinations in and around Miami-Dade County. With the purchase of one $5 ticket for a 13-22 year old, a second $5 ticket can be purchased for someone of any age to accompany them.

Culture Shock Miami Presents, a series dedicated to presenting nationally and internationally renowned artists that appeal specifically to the 13-22 year old age range, was created in 2013 and presents more than a dozen performances each season to the public and through free school field trips. Culture Shock Miami Presents was recognized with a 2018 Achievement Award from the National Association of Counties (NACo).

Culture Shock Miami is made possible with the support of the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

Download the Culture Shock Miami infographic to learn more about the program’s reach. PDF iconculture_shock_miami_infographic.pdf

Staff

Christina Tassy-Beauvoir, Program Manager

Mary-Margaret Dale, Program Manager

Melanie Rodriguez, Program Coordinator

Contact Culture Shock Miami

[email protected]

(305) 375-1949

About Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs

The Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council develop cultural excellence, diversity, access and participation throughout Miami-Dade County by strategically creating and promoting equitable opportunities for artists and cultural organizations, and our residents and visitors who are their audiences. Through staff, board and programmatic resources, the Department, the Council and the Trust promote, coordinate and support Miami-Dade County’s more than 1,000 not-for-profit cultural organizations as well as thousands of resident artists through grants, technical assistance, public information and interactive community planning. The Department receives funding through the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners, The Children’s Trust, the National Endowment for the Arts, the State of Florida through the Florida Department of State, Florida Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Peacock Foundation, Inc. and The Jorge M. Pérez Family Foundation at The Miami Foundation. Other support and services are provided by TicketWeb for the Culture Shock Miami program, the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau, the South Florida Cultural Consortium and the Tourist Development Council.

News
Miami New Times calls The Real James Bond…Was Dominican, one of the top 15 things to do in Miami this weekend
Friday, February 25th, 2022
El Neuvo Herald-El verdadero James Bond… era dominicano by Jorge Herrera Monroy
Wednesday, February 23rd, 2022
Miami’s Community News: Culture Shock Miami Presents, ‘The Real James Bond… Was Dominican’
Tuesday, February 22nd, 2022
ARTBURST MIAMI: EL VERDADERO JAMES BOND ERA DOMINICANO By Jorge Herrera-Monroy
Wednesday, February 16th, 2022
Hiplet brings in a mix of ballet and hip-hop to South Florida – featured on DECO DRIVE
Wednesday, January 12th, 2022
Haitian Heritage Month Comes to Classrooms – The Miami Times
Wednesday, May 5th, 2021
Celebrate Haitian Heritage month with performance for students by Inez Barlatier
Tuesday, April 13th, 2021
Miami-Haitian, Inez Barlatier honors her heritage by sharing music, stories in virtual field trip this spring
Friday, March 19th, 2021
Ballet Hispánico participates in Miami-Dade Arts Education Collective virtual field trip program this Spring
Wednesday, February 17th, 2021
Miami-Dade Cultural Class Trips Go Online Amid Pandemic
Tuesday, January 5th, 2021
Miami Herald: Arts groups to showcase their work to Miami Dade students, teachers
Friday, December 4th, 2020
Four Miami-Dade Arts Organizations Partner to Form the Miami-Dade Arts Education Collective
Thursday, November 19th, 2020
Take Back Time short film by Courageous Creatives featured on NBC6
Wednesday, September 9th, 2020
Art Apart, Art Together: How a miami power couple in the arts world is spending their quarantine time
Monday, April 27th, 2020
Miami Today: Miami-Dade puts 60 free arts sites on display via web
Wednesday, April 1st, 2020
Culture Shock Miami Continues to Develop Young Audiences in Times of Social Distancing
Friday, March 27th, 2020
ArtBurst Miami: CULTURE SHOCK MIAMI: EXPERIENCE PERFORMANCES, MUSEUM TOURS AND ART EXHIBITS ONLINE
Friday, March 27th, 2020
Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs’ Culture Shock Miami launches Cultural Online Experiences
Thursday, March 26th, 2020
Sun Sentinel: Virtual and streaming experiences, from pilates and museum tours to magic and art classes
Thursday, March 26th, 2020
Miami Times profiles Turning 15: This adaptation tells the story of the power that young people possess.
Wednesday, February 5th, 2020
Culture Shock Miami Presents Jason Bishop, America’s Hottest Illusionist, Feb. 1st at the South Miami-Dade Cultural Arts Center
Wednesday, January 29th, 2020
ARTBURST MIAMI: SHANE KOYCZAN, “CREATIVE HURRICANE,” COMES TO MIAMI SEPT. 28
Thursday, September 26th, 2019
Due to preparations for Hurricane Dorian, some cultural organizations may modify their hours. Please verify hours with museums before planning a visit over Labor Day Weekend. Check miamidade.gov for storm updates.
Friday, August 30th, 2019
ArtBurst features Culture Shock Miami
Tuesday, August 27th, 2019
Culture Shock Miami Presents Announces 2019-2020 season
Tuesday, August 20th, 2019
IN TO AMERICA EMOTIONALLY TRACKS THE HISTORY OF IMMIGRANCE IN THE U.S.
Thursday, May 2nd, 2019
Culture Shock Miami featured in Nova Southeastern University’s The Current
Tuesday, February 5th, 2019
Culture Shock Miami Fosters The Next Generation Of Arts Patrons With The Launch Of Its 14Th Season Of Affordable Programming Directed To Younger Audiences
Monday, November 5th, 2018
Miami theater tickets for $5? Here’s how teens and young adults can score them

COURAGEOUS CREATIVES PROJECT

Secondary Colors, Orange, Green, Purple
Secondary Colors, Orange, Green, Purple

COURAGEOUS CREATIVES PROJECT

Courageous Creatives Take Back Time film image

Watch Take Back Time on our YouTube channel

 

ABOUT TAKE BACK TIME

Titled “Take Back Time” and coordinated to be part of National Arts in Education week, the film premiered virtually on Wednesday, September 16, 2020 and was followed by a panel discussion moderated by Natalie Schere, Executive Director, of PATH: Preserving, Archiving & Teaching Hiphop, Inc., featuring members of the Courageous Creatives cohort and leaders of Miami-Dade cultural organizations including:

  • AnaMaria Correa, PhD – Chief Community Engagement Officer, Miami City Ballet
  • Anthony Durden – Executive Member, Circle of Brotherhood
  • Beth Boone – Executive Director, Miami Light Project
  • Johann Zietsman – CEO & President, Adrienne Arsht Center
  • John Daversa – Chair of Studio Music & Jazz, Frost School of Music, University of Miami
  • Michael Spring – Senior Advisor, Miami-Dade County Office of the Mayor; Director, Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs
  • Rosie Gordon Wallace – Founder, President and Curator, Diaspora Vibe Cultural Arts Incubator
  • Terrance Cribbs-Lorrant – Director, Black Police Precinct and Courthouse Museum
  • Xavier Cortada – Professor, University of Miami; Artist-in-Residence, Pinecrest Gardens

View the recording of the live streamed event and the film Take Back Time on our YouTube channel 

“Take Back Time” was selected for the 2020 National Young Artists Summit! With the theme An Artistic Youth Revolution, the 2-day Summit, entirely designed and led by young people, showcased young artists 13 -24 years old from a range of artistic disciplines, to connect, create, and celebrate, in order to kick start a revolution. The National Young Artists Summit took place November 7-8.

ABOUT COURAGEOUS CREATIVES

Sponsored by Culture Shock Miami and led by Miami-based creative and educator, Miriam L. King,  Courageous Creatives launched during the summer of 2020 as a safe space for young artists between the ages of 16-22 to participate in complex discussions about social justice and to reimagine change through the arts and activism. This cohort of 24 socially-minded artists and future leaders, collaborated over the course of 5 weeks resulting in the creation of a short-film, charting a path of 526 ways to move towards an equitable and just society. The number 526 represents the final seconds of George Floyd’s life.

View the 526 Ways Charter

Take Back Time Trailer

To stay informed about Courageous Creatives and to be notified about future sessions, please sign up for our newsletter, and follow us on Instagram @cultureshockmia 

Photo of Miriam King seated


About Miriam King, Courageous Creatives Facilitator


Miriam ‘Mimi’ King is an education consultant and artist. She advocates for the arts, and holds space for others to create their own pathways to self-advocacy activism. Her entire professional career has been dedicated to literacy and arts education, self-advocacy and academic resource development for youth, educators, arts programs and institutions.

King facilitates healing through restorative justice programming that supports active listening, social experimentation, critical dialogue and thinking.  Miriam is a native of Miami, Florida and has deep ties to several of its communities, youth and their families. She is well loved and respected by her students, colleagues and peers, and known for her sharp wit, wisdom and sense of humor.

Learning is fun everyday with Ms. Mimi because she teaches us about life! Z.J., former student

Juliana Barrios presenta la canción “Quiéreme”

Juliana Barrios
Juliana Barrios

Una gran embajadora de la música colombiana da a conocer su nuevo material 

Juliana Barrios, graduada de Berklee College of Music y nominada al Grammy Latino, presenta la canción “Quiéreme” 

“Es una bachata influenciada por el cantautor que más admiro, Juan Luis Guerra, pero a mi estilo”, apunta la artista, una de las voces más hermosas del mundo hispano “Quiéreme” formará parte del nuevo disco de Juliana, que estará disponible a partir de mayo. 

Durante su carrera la intérprete ha mostrado un talento y una personalidad que la han llevado, además de cantar, a ser coach del reality “Popstars”; actriz en teatro y TV; y a componer para colegas como Carolina Laó, Sasha o Manny Manuel
*** Hacer click para ver “Quiéreme” en Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3w8Jcza7QU

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