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The Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas Inaugurates ‘Stain & Relics’ by Aaron Kent

The Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas Inaugurates ‘Stain & Relics’ by Aaron Kent

April 21st, 2026

By Rodriguez Collection Team

MIAMI, FL – On Friday, April 17, the Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA) hosted the official opening of “Stain & Relics,” a solo exhibition by artist Aaron Kent that explores the interstices of printmaking, ceramics, and sculpture. Organized in collaboration with Annex Art Platform, the exhibition offers a profound meditation on the materiality of time and the persistence of memory through physical residue.

The opening was attended by a notable assembly of the local artistic community and specialists in the field of ceramics. Of particular note was the presence of a significant group of art enthusiasts originally from the American Midwest now residing in South Florida, as well as close colleagues of the artist. The gathering facilitated a direct dialogue regarding Kent’s technical processes, as he is widely recognized for his ability to integrate traditionally isolated disciplines into a cohesive and deeply personal visual discourse.

The curatorial framework, informed by the essay “Remains, Trace, and Living Matter” published in the Cincinnati-based visual arts journal The Annex Updated, analyzes how Kent utilizes a “contamination” of processes to construct a hybrid poetics. Throughout the museum’s galleries, visitors observed works where bronze, silkscreen, and bone sculpture converge. Kent’s work eschews the pursuit of conventional technical perfection, opting instead for an empirical investigation of materials and their displacements, thereby validating error and imperfection as testimonial records of the human experience.

The conceptual background of the exhibition is intimately tied to the artist’s biography and his response to contexts of crisis and loss. From his involvement with the community during the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 90s to his exploration of ceramics as an affective bond following the passing of his mother, Kent articulates a narrative of fragility and resilience. The employment of techniques such as pit firing and the incorporation of skeletal structures function as a three-dimensional archive, documenting that which survives physical disappearance.

With the presentation of “Stain & Relics,” MoCAA reaffirms its mission to provide a platform for artistic languages of high emotional density and conceptual rigor. The exhibition will remain open to the public at our Kendall location until May 8, 2026, inviting the community to engage with a body of work that confronts the nature of the transitory and the ethics of the unfinished.

General Information:

Exhibition: Stain & Relics – Aaron Kent

Location: 12063 SW 131st Ave. Kendall. 33130, Miami, FL.

Closing Date: May 8, 2026.

Institution: Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA).

Evelyn Politzer

Evelyn Politzer
Evelyn Politzer

Evelyn Politzer

We are thrilled to welcome back a new artist to our roster: Evelyn Politzer. After attending law school in Uruguay, Politzer moved to the United States and pursued her passion for art. Politzer was the recipient of the Ellies Creator Award from Oolite Arts in 2020 and in 2021 became an MIU graduate with an MFA in Visual Arts. 

Her beginnings were in tapestry, weaving and knitting. Creating with wool was only natural in her native country, where the number of sheep far exceeds the number of inhabitants. Even though she creates through traditional methods like knitting, crochet and embroidery, the objects she makes are unconventional and seek to spark a conversation on subjects such as place, womanhood and the fragility of the natural environment. Working with natural fibers gives her a sense of comfort and belonging while she strives “to knit the impossible, and give voice to the voiceless.

Evelyn Politzer, originally from Uruguay, now lives and works in Miami, Florida. After attending law school in Montevideo, Uruguay and moving to the United States she pursued her passion for art. Politzer is a 2021 MFA candidate in Visual Arts from MIU.  Her beginnings were in tapestry weaving and knitting. Creating with wool was only natural in her native country, where the number of sheep far exceeds the number of inhabitants. Even though she creates through traditional methods like knitting, crochet and embroidery, the objects she makes are unconventional and seek to spark a conversation on subjects such as place, womanhood and the fragility of the natural environment. Working with natural fibers gives her a sense of comfort and belonging while she strives “to knit the impossible, and give voice to the voiceless.”

Artist Statement

I am a visual artist focused on conveying nature’s plea for interconnectedness through yarn, thread, and fabric. Using traditional textile methods like knitting, weaving, and embroidery, I mainly work with soft hand-dyed fibers to create unconventional pieces ranging from small two-dimensional tapestries to monumental sculptural forms.

In addition to the beauty and fragility of the natural environment, womanhood and motherhood are also recurring concepts of my work. I explore materials, texture and color to connect these ideas and bring them to life with my hands and heart.

My practice has roots in my native land of Uruguay, a country where sheep outnumber human inhabitants, and where wool and other natural fibers continue to be an essential tool for people’s livelihood, especially women. The relationship between the fibers I work with and the place where I was born evokes the comfort of belonging, no matter where I am in the world.

Over the last several years, my art practice has evolved outside of the studio, allowing me to foster community and create a platform for others to share their textile art journey.

Together with two other local artists I created FAMA-Fiber Artists Miami Association- with the mission to educate and advance fiber arts as a contemporary art form.

Australian Aboriginal Artists

Australian Aboriginal Artists
Australian Aboriginal Artists

Australian Aboriginal Artists in Contemporary Perspective

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To approach Australian Aboriginal art from a contemporary curatorial perspective is to confront a fundamental misunderstanding embedded in Western art history: the assumption that abstraction is a modern invention. Long before the emergence of modernism, Aboriginal artists were already producing complex visual systems—maps, narratives, and cosmologies—encoded through pattern, repetition, and symbolic form.

At the core of this practice lies Country—not as landscape, but as a living, relational system that encompasses land, ancestry, law, and time. These works do not depict Country; they activate it.

Tjukurrpa: The Ontology of Image

Central to many Aboriginal traditions—particularly in the Western Desert—is the concept of Tjukurrpa (often translated as Dreaming). Yet this translation is insufficient. Tjukurrpa is not myth; it is a structure of reality, a system through which knowledge, law, and existence are organized.

In visual terms, this results in a language of signs:

  • concentric circles (sites, waterholes)
  • lines (paths, journeys, ancestral movements)
  • fields of dots (topography, energy, presence)

From a Western perspective, this may resemble abstraction. From within its own epistemology, it is precision.

From Papunya to the Global Stage

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The contemporary visibility of Aboriginal painting is closely tied to the Papunya movement of the early 1970s, where artists began translating ceremonial ground paintings into acrylic on canvas. This moment—often associated with the founding of Papunya Tula Artists—was not the beginning of the practice, but its material transformation.

Artists such as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri and Emily Kame Kngwarreye brought these visual systems into a global art context, where they were initially misread as formal abstraction rather than as carriers of knowledge.

Women, Fiber, and Expanded Practices

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While painting has dominated international attention, contemporary Aboriginal art extends far beyond the canvas. Women artists, in particular, have expanded the field through fiber practices, sculpture, and installation.

Collectives such as Tjanpi Desert Weavers exemplify this expansion, transforming traditional weaving into sculptural forms that engage with ecology, storytelling, and community. These works resist categorization as “craft,” instead asserting themselves within the discourse of contemporary art.

Misreading Abstraction

A critical issue persists: the Western tendency to interpret Aboriginal art through its own frameworks—Minimalism, abstraction, conceptual art—rather than recognizing its distinct ontology.

This misreading reduces:

  • knowledge to pattern
  • law to decoration
  • cosmology to style

From a curatorial standpoint, the challenge is to resist aesthetic appropriation and instead foreground:

  • authorship
  • cultural specificity
  • the relationship between image and knowledge

The Contemporary Condition

Today, Aboriginal artists operate within a dual context:

  • maintaining cultural continuity
  • engaging global contemporary discourse

Artists such as Rover Thomas and John Mawurndjul demonstrate how tradition is not static, but adaptive—capable of responding to political, environmental, and institutional pressures.

Conclusion: Beyond the Western Frame

Australian Aboriginal art is not simply an aesthetic category; it is a knowledge system made visible. Its power lies not in its formal beauty—though that is undeniable—but in its capacity to hold relationships: between people, land, time, and memory.

For the contemporary viewer, the task is not to decode it as one would a modern painting, but to approach it with a different question:

What does it mean for an image to carry law, history, and existence simultaneously?

In that question lies the true challenge—and the enduring relevance—of Aboriginal art in the global contemporary landscape.

Abie Loy Kemarre
Alison Munti Riley
Amanda Westley
Andrew Tjupurrula Highfold
Angelina Ngal Pwerle
Athena Nangala Granites
Belinda Golder Kngwarreye
Bella Kelly
Bernadine Johnson
Biddee Baadjo
Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri
Clarise Tunkin
Cowboy Louie Pwerle
Damien Marks
Yilpi Marks
David Downs
Debra Nangala McDonald
Debra Young Nakamarra
Dennis Nona
Djambu Barra Barra
Doris Gingingara
Dorothy Napangardi
Dulcie Long Pwerle
Edward Blitner
Elizabeth Kunoth Kngwarray
Esther Bruno Nangala
Fiona Omeenyo
Freddie Timms
Gabriella Possum Nungurrayi
Genevieve Kemarr Loy
George Hairbrush Tjungurrayi
George Tuckerbox
George Ward Tjungurrayi
Gloria Petyarre
Gracie Morton Pwerle
Jack Britten
Jack Dale Mengenen
Jackie Wirramanda
Janet Golder Kngwarreye
Janice Stanley
Jeannie Mills Pwerle
Jill Jack
Jimmy Pike
Judy Napangardi Martin
Katherine Marshall Nakamarra
Kudditji Kngwarreye
Kurun Warun
Lily Karadada
Lily Kelly Napangardi
Linda Syddick Napaltjarri
Long Jack Phillipus
Lorna Fencer Napurrula
Maisie Campbell Napaltjarri
Makinti Napanangka
Margaret Lewis Napangardi
Mary McLean
Maureen Hudson Nampijinpa
Michelle Butler Nakamarra
Michelle Cooper
Michelle Possum Nungurrayi
Minnie Pwerle
Mitjili Napurrula
Nada Rawlins
Nellie Marks Nakamarra
Ningura Napurrula
Paddy Bedford
Patrick Tjungurrayi
Penny K Lyons
Polly Ngale
Queenie McKenzie
Ronnie Tjampitjinpa
Rosella Namok
Rosemary Petyarre
Rosie Goodjie
Rover Thomas
Samantha Hobson
Sarrita King
Sonya Edney
Stumpy Brown
Tarisse King
Thomas Tjapaltjarri
Tjungkara Ken
Tommy Watson
Trevor Turbo Brown
Walala Tjapaltjarri
Walangkura Napanangka
Wentja Napaltjarri
Willie Kew
Yinarupa Gibson Nangala
Yondee Shane Hansen
Yukultji Napangati

Represented Artists

Ann Thomson

Arwin Hidayat

Bernard Ollis OAM

Carlos Barrios

David Hayes

Dylan Sarra

Franck Gohier

Idris Murphy

Jeff Makin

Jorge Mariño Brito

Kim Wilson

Margaret McIntosh

Matthew Cheyne

Min-Woo Bang

Mirra Whale

Peter Hudson

Sophie Cape

Steve Lopes

Susie Choi

Stockroom Artists

Mapping the Art Experience: How to Navigate Miami’s Gallery Ecosystem with Intention

Mapping the Art Experience: How to Navigate Miami’s Gallery Ecosystem with Intention

Miami is not a city to be “visited” in the conventional sense—it is a territory to be navigated. For the contemporary art viewer, collector, or curator, the challenge is not access, but selection, sequencing, and spatial awareness. In neighborhoods such as Wynwood, Allapattah, the Design District, Little Haiti, Little River, and Miami Shores, the density of exhibitions and weekly programming demands a strategic approach—one that transforms passive viewing into a curated experience of the city itself.

The Geography of Contemporary Art in Miami

Wynwood

Wynwood operates as an entry point—a highly visible, high-traffic cultural zone where galleries intersect with design, fashion, and urban branding. It is ideal for encountering a wide range of exhibitions in close proximity, though its saturation requires discernment. The experienced viewer learns to filter quickly.

Allapattah

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Allapattah represents a shift toward institutional gravity and scale. With major collections and expansive gallery spaces, this area demands slower engagement. Here, the viewer moves from browsing to immersion, often encountering museum-level exhibitions within an experimental framework.

Design District

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The Design District introduces a different layer: the intersection of art, design, and luxury culture. Anchored by institutions such as Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, this area blends museum-quality exhibitions with public art, architecture, and high-end commercial spaces. Here, the viewing experience expands beyond the gallery into an urban scenography, where art coexists with fashion, branding, and spatial design. It is a territory where aesthetics are not isolated, but integrated into a broader visual economy.

Little Haiti

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Little Haiti introduces a different rhythm—one rooted in community, diaspora, and cultural continuity. Exhibitions here often resist the neutrality of the white cube, embedding themselves within social and historical contexts. The viewer is invited not just to see, but to situate themselves.

Little River & Miami Shores

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These areas function as emerging nodes—less saturated, more experimental, often hosting hybrid spaces that blur the line between studio, gallery, and design environment. Here, discovery replaces expectation.

From Viewer to Curator: Planning Your Route

To navigate Miami effectively, one must adopt a curatorial mindset. The goal is not to see everything, but to construct a meaningful sequence of encounters.

Plan Your Route

Select the exhibitions that resonate with your interests and map them geographically. A well-designed route transforms the day into a coherent narrative rather than a series of disconnected visits.

Work with Proximity

Use spatial logic. For example:

  • Wynwood → Design District → Allapattah (efficient central route)
  • Little Haiti → Little River → Miami Shores (northern, more experimental route)

Balance Density and Depth

Alternate between high-density gallery clusters and singular, immersive exhibitions to avoid visual fatigue and maintain critical attention.

Allow for the Unexpected

Leave space for spontaneity. Some of the most meaningful encounters happen outside the plan—an unlisted show, a studio visit, a conversation.

The Social Dimension: Art as Shared Experience

Art in Miami is not only spatial, but social. Openings, talks, and informal gatherings are integral to the ecosystem.

Share the Route

A well-planned itinerary becomes cultural currency. Sharing it with peers extends the experience beyond the individual.

Build Networks Through Movement

Each stop is an opportunity to engage with artists, curators, and collectors—turning the route into a network of relationships.

Toward a Conscious Art Journey

To move through Miami’s art scene without intention is to risk superficiality. To plan a route is to claim authorship over your experience.

This approach transforms:

  • the city into a map of ideas
  • the visit into a curated sequence
  • the viewer into an active participant

In a city defined by abundance, clarity becomes the true form of sophistication.

ARTISTS

My Art Registry
My Art Registry

Starting with our Certificate of Authenticity & Hologram System in 2008, My Art Registry was founded in 2009 with the mission to support and empower artists worldwide.

Recognizing the need for a platform that could truly cater to the unique demands of the fine art community, in 2010 we also introduced our Excellence Program, setting the standards for quality and service.

At My Art Registry, we believe in the power of art to inspire and connect people.

Our history is a testament to our dedication to fostering a vibrant and supportive community for artists and art lovers alike. As we continue to grow, we remain committed to maintaining the highest standards of quality and service, ensuring that every artwork and artist receives the recognition they deserve.

ARTISTS

Denis O’Regan — United Kingdom
Jabari Fletcher — United States
Clive Booth — United Kingdom
Christian Popkes — Germany
Arina Daehnick — Germany
René Staud — Germany
Tomi Ungerer — Ireland
Sidnei Graudin — Brazil
Edo Rocha — Brazil
Pascal Chiasson — Canada
François Ventura — Switzerland
Rino Carraro — Italy
Hjalmar Thelen — Germany
Astrid Thie — Spain
Julia Anna Gospodarou — Greece
Martin Wieland — Austria
Romain Thiery — France
Nedolina Pavlova — Bulgaria
Hans Olsen — Denmark
Juan Carlos Manjarrés Jiménez — Mexico
Silvia Schmitt — Germany
Steve Giardini — United States
Ricardo S. Franco — Brazil
Justus Rehn — Germany
Stefano Orazzini — Italy
Dinah Kathleen Lloyd — United Kingdom
Henrik S. Nielsen — Denmark
Andrey M. Allage — Brazil
Urs Moll — Switzerland
Şuayip Yücel — Türkiye
Regiane Salvadori — Qatar
Daniel Sozak — Germany
Bernd Lange — Germany
Myriam Alcaraz — Spain
Tom Osman — United Kingdom
Stephane Gripari — United Kingdom
Keith Ellul — Malta
Tom Lee — United Kingdom
James Hall — Germany
Elisabeth Laplante — Germany
Thomas Driendl — Germany
Marvin Kuhn — Switzerland
Björn Wiedemann — Germany
SIMULACRA — China
Svitlana Glaser — Germany
Thomas Thijssen — Netherlands
Evan Hunt — United States
Raymond La Motte — Italy
Luis Afonso — Portugal
Policarpo Jose Ribeiro — Brazil
Manuel Villa — United States
Paolo Salmaso — Germany
Bastiaan (ooohhh.art) — Netherlands
Derek Ebner — United States
Matej Hribernik — Slovenia
Claude Charlebois — Canada
Roisin Cure — Germany
Dominique Fradin-Popp — France
Ilona Loubková — Germany
Leo Symon — Slovakia
Gaelle Brunet — France
Matt Squire — Germany
Dennis Ninmer — United States
Valda Bailey — Germany
Ivan Festa — Italy
Paula Kuitenbrouwer — Netherlands
Giuseppe Daria — Brazil
Timurtaş Onan — Germany
Mark Bjorndal — United States
Jenna Laney — United Kingdom
Rolf Heinermann — Luxembourg
Bertrand Fenart — Germany
Sabine Schramm — Germany
Mark Petersen — Germany
Dominique Weiss — Switzerland
Ciro Battiloro — Germany
Eva Flury — Switzerland
Christian Kleiman — United Arab Emirates
Nadine Mohr — Germany
Arão do Nascimento Pinto — Germany

FIFA’s new cultural home inside MOAD at MDC’s Freedom Tower

FIFA Museum in Miami_Unidad - The World's Game
UNIDAD: The World’s Game FIFA’s new cultural home inside MOAD at MDC’s Freedom Tower

FIFA’s new cultural home inside MOAD at MDC’s Freedom Tower

Written By Olga Garcia-Mayoral

In Miami, soccer isn’t simply a sport—it’s a shared language. It lives in park pick-up games and weekend league rituals, in the way entire neighborhoods pulse during international tournaments, and in the multi-accented chorus that rises whenever a goal breaks the air. That’s what makes “Unidad: The World’s Game”—a permanent exhibition created by the FIFA Museum and presented at the Museum of Art and Design (MOAD) at Miami Dade College’s Freedom Tower—feel so natural here. It isn’t trying to convince Miami that soccer matters. Miami already knows. Instead, the exhibition asks a more interesting question: how does the game become a global emotional infrastructure—one capable of carrying memory, identity, struggle, and joy across generations? 

“Unidad” is built as a journey through football’s worldwide heritage and meaning, using historic objects, interactive stations, and immersive installations to trace pivotal moments in the sport’s evolution—while also spotlighting soccer’s development in the United States. And because it sits inside the Freedom Tower, the exhibition gains a second narrative layer: Miami’s most iconic symbol of arrival, belonging, and cultural transformation becomes the container for a story about the world’s most universal pastime. 

FIFA Museum in Miami_Unidad - The World's Game

A museum experience that plays like a game

Unlike traditional trophy-room presentations that can flatten sports history into a timeline of wins and losses, “Unidad” is structured around the idea that football is, at its core, a connector between countries, communities, and personal histories. FIFA frames it explicitly as a celebration of the game’s ability to inspire, connect, and unite people across continents and generations, and MOAD/Freedom Tower presents it in that same spirit, as an exhibition where learning is physical and participatory. 

The space itself signals ambition: the FIFA Museum describes “Unidad” as spanning two floors and occupying roughly 7,500 square feet, a scale that immediately shifts it from “pop-up” to institutional anchor. The exhibition is designed to be moved through the way you move through a match: scanning, noticing patterns, stopping at moments of intensity, then drifting toward the next narrative beat.

That interactivity isn’t decorative—it’s pedagogical. “Unidad” treats football not as an object of passive admiration but as a living system you can enter: its aesthetics (kits, graphics, design languages), its rituals (chants, fandom, collective memory), and its historic turning points rendered through media and objects that reward curiosity. 

FIFA Museum in Miami_Unidad - The World's Game

The Rainbow of Shirts: 211 identities, one field

One of the exhibition’s central symbolic gestures is the “Rainbow of Shirts,” a display of jerseys representing all 211 FIFA Member Associations. It’s difficult to stand before that many national identifiers and not feel something shift. Jerseys are not neutral fabric—they are portable flags, emotional armor, family inheritance, diaspora shorthand. In a city like Miami—where so many people carry more than one homeland in their bodies—the Rainbow reads as both unity and multiplicity. It suggests that football’s global power isn’t built on sameness, but on the astonishing fact that millions of distinct identities can share one set of rules and still recognize each other in motion.

There is also a design lesson embedded here. A jersey is graphic communication: color, emblem, typography, and material engineering—design decisions that become shorthand for belonging. “Unidad,” housed inside MOAD at MDC, implicitly highlights how much the “beautiful game” has always relied on visual culture to transmit meaning. 

Legacy of Champions: collective memory, projected at scale

Another key section, described by the FIFA Museum as “The Legacy of Champions,” honors the nations that have claimed glory in both the FIFA World Cup™ and the FIFA Women’s World Cup™, using historical artifacts and large-scale audiovisual elements to celebrate the heroes, legends, and defining moments that move fans across generations. 

That inclusion of the Women’s World Cup lineage matters. It places women’s football within the same monumental frame, not as an addendum but as a co-author of global football history. In an era when women’s sports are finally receiving overdue institutional visibility, “Unidad” makes the point through exhibition design: history is not just what happened—it’s what we choose to preserve, display, and teach.

FIFA Museum in Miami_Unidad - The World's Game

Miami, the Freedom Tower, and the meaning of “permanent.”

“Unidad” is more than a touring show; the FIFA Museum itself has designated it as its first permanent exhibition in North America, a designation that carries cultural weight in the lead-up to FIFA World Cup 2026™ and beyond. Permanence is a kind of promise: that Miami is not only a host city or a fan destination, but a long-term site where football culture can be studied as heritage—where the sport’s artifacts and stories belong inside an institution, not just a stadium.

That decision aligns with the Freedom Tower’s evolving role as a cultural hub. Tourism and civic sites describe the Tower not only as a historic landmark but as a place where Miami’s layered narratives—migration, identity, art, and memory—are actively curated through exhibitions. In that context, “Unidad” reads almost like a civic mirror: a global sport installed inside a building that has witnessed waves of newcomers and the cultural reweaving of the city itself.

Soccer as culture, not commodity

What “Unidad” does especially well is refuse the narrow framing of sports as entertainment only. It positions football as culture—a force that shapes music, fashion, language, photography, graphic design, and public life. The exhibition’s blend of historic objects and immersive media helps visitors understand the sport not just through championships but through how it feels: the intensity of collective anticipation, the way a single moment becomes a memory shared by millions. These rituals make strangers into allies for ninety minutes. 

For Miami audiences, that framing is instantly legible. Miami is a city where cultural identity is practiced daily—through bilingual conversation, neighborhood festivals, family traditions, and the ongoing choreography of diaspora life. “Unidad” links that mosaic explicitly to the “world’s game,” presented in partnership with MDC and described as connecting the global passion for football to Miami’s cultural diversity. 

A museum built for many kinds of visitors

Because “Unidad” is designed around interactive and immersive elements, it also functions as a gateway exhibition. This experience can welcome visitors who might not typically enter an art-and-design museum. That matters for institutions like MOAD at MDC, which sits at a crossroads of education, civic memory, and public culture.

A great permanent exhibition should do two things at once: serve as an accessible entry point for first-time visitors and sustain repeated visits with new details each time. “Unidad” is built for that. It’s a show you can visit as a family and enjoy at the level of play, then return to as an adult and read through deeper layers: geopolitics, migration, identity, gender, design history, and how global narratives are constructed through iconic moments. 

FIFA Museum in Miami_Unidad - The World's Game

Why “Unidad” matters now

With the World Cup coming to North America, it’s easy for football culture to be reduced to marketing and mega-events. “Unidad” offers something quieter and more durable: an argument for football as a shared human archive.

The FIFA Museum has positioned the Miami exhibition as part of a broader effort to safeguard football heritage while engaging diverse audiences, and it explicitly links “Unidad” to the idea of legacy—something meant to remain after the tournament spotlight moves on. That goal feels especially resonant in Miami, a city that constantly negotiates what it chooses to keep, commemorate, and build anew.

In the end, “Unidad: The World’s Game” succeeds because it understands what fans already know: football is never only about the ball. It’s about the people around it—the ones who carry jerseys across borders, the ones who teach their kids to love a team as a kind of inheritance, the ones who find community in a chant, the ones who feel at home for ninety minutes even if they’re far from home.

And perhaps that’s the deepest fit between exhibition and site. Inside the Freedom Tower—Miami’s monument to arrival—“Unidad” reminds us that belonging can be built in many ways. Sometimes, it’s built through papers and policies. Sometimes, it’s built through art and memory. And sometimes, it’s built through the simplest global ritual of all: a game where everyone, everywhere, understands what it means when the net moves.

Harmony Korine: Perfect Nonsense

Harmony Korine: Perfect Nonsense
Harmony Korine: Perfect Nonsense

Harmony Korine: Perfect Nonsense

Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami
Apr 15 – Oct 4, 2026
61 NE 41st Street Miami, FL 331377
Special Exhibition / 3rd Floor

“Perfect Nonsense” is the first US museum survey for the legendary and multifaceted work of Harmony Korine The exhibition traces the full arc of Korine’s career, bringing together over 50 works and situating his practice within a broader continuum of image-making that collapses distinctions between cinema, contemporary art, and popular culture. 

Since entering the public consciousness at nineteen after writing the screenplay for the 1995 generation-defining feature Kids, Korine has been a leading filmmaker. He has continually expanded the language of cinema while redefining notions of the counterculture and exploring novel image-making technologies.

Simultaneously, Korine’s activities have crossed the boundaries of discipline and form, and this exhibition includes the expansive worlds of painting, photography, collage, zines, and drawing that he has created since adolescence. Most recently, Korine has vigorously pursued painting, exploring figuration and abstraction while restlessly experimenting with the technologies of image making, from photocopies to gaming engines. 

From his earliest works, Korine explored themes of the individual and the outsider through a clear-eyed view of class and poverty, celebrity and authenticity, and a fascination with the gothic dimensions of the American South. His perspective is deeply structured by the figure of the American teenager. Some of Korine’s earliest works feature childlike figures and writings, and often explore the coming-of-age genre and its complex unfoldings. These childlike and coming-of-age themes have evolved into a ghostly form he calls “Twitchy,” found in paintings that are produced by combining images captured on an iPhone with painterly techniques. In his films, characters often use avatars, with elaborate masks and new forms of language, to create unprecedented realities. Meanwhile, works from the “Fazer” (2015) and “Chex” (2011–14) series showcase Korine’s investigation of psychedelic effects and escape. Many of Korine’s most recent works, including the films Baby Invasion (2024) and Aggro Dr1ft (2023), demonstrate his pioneering inquiry into technology and its impact on everyday life and the future of images.

Korine has lived in Miami since 2015, where he founded the experimental media company EDGLRD. The city’s visual excess has deeply shaped his recent films and paintings, reframing the American landscape as a delirious and unstable field of images, invention, and myth.

Harmony Korine was born in Bolinas, California, in 1973, and grew up in Nashville, Tennessee. He shot his first film, Gummo, in 1997 and went on to create seven more films, including Mister Lonely (2007), Spring Breakers (2012), The Beach Bum (2019), and Julien Donkey-Boy (1999), among others. He has shot music videos for Rihanna, Sonic Youth, Will Oldham, Cat Power, and the Black Keys. Korine was the subject of a major exhibition at the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2017), and has exhibited at institutions worldwide, including the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent, Belgium; Whitney Biennial, New York; CAPC Musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux, France; Contemporary Art Gallery, Art Tower Mito, Japan; 50th Biennale di Venezia; Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Germany; Swiss Institute, New York; Casino Luxembourg–Forum d’art contemporain, Luxembourg; and Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery, Nashville.

“Harmony Korine: Perfect Nonsense” is organized by the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, and curated by Alex Gartenfeld, Irma and Norman Braman Artistic Director, and Gean Moreno, Director of the Art + Research Center, with research assistance from Donna Honarpisheh, Associate Curator, Art + Research Center at ICA Miami.

Henrik Simonsen: Recent Works

Henrik Simonsen: Recent Works

Findlay Galleries Palm Beach

Exhibition Details
Henrik Simonsen: Recent Works
Findlay Galleries

April 17 – May 29, 2026
Monday–Saturday, 10 AM – 6 PM

Location: Findlay Galleries, Palm Beach, USA

At Findlay Galleries, Henrik Simonsen: Recent Works unfolds as a meditation on perception—where landscape is no longer something observed, but something felt. The exhibition presents a new body of paintings that expand Simonsen’s long-standing dialogue with nature, pushing it toward a more immersive and sensorial register.

Simonsen’s practice begins with drawing, yet what emerges on canvas transcends line. His compositions dissolve into layered atmospheres where color takes precedence over form. In these recent works, chromatic intensity becomes the driving force: saturated hues pulse across the surface, generating a visual rhythm that oscillates between structure and spontaneity.

Botanical references appear not as illustrations, but as fleeting presences—forms that surface, fragment, and recombine. Leaves, stems, and organic patterns are suggested rather than defined, existing in a state of transformation. This fluidity situates the work between abstraction and memory, where the natural world is reconfigured through intuition.

What distinguishes Simonsen’s approach is his ability to balance a restrained Nordic sensibility with expressive freedom. There is a quiet discipline underlying the exuberance of color—a compositional intelligence that prevents the work from collapsing into chaos. Instead, each painting becomes a field of tension between control and release, observation and invention.

In Recent Works, nature is not depicted as a fixed reality, but as an evolving experience. Light, rhythm, and movement replace traditional representation, inviting the viewer into an environment that feels both familiar and elusive. These paintings do not ask to be read; they ask to be entered.

On Worth Avenue, amid the polished architecture of Palm Beach, Simonsen’s work introduces a different kind of space—one that is immersive, unstable, and alive. It is here, within these shifting fields of color, that landscape becomes not a place, but a condition of perception.

Artist Statement

My work has had nature as a central theme for years. There is a lesson to learn from how nature is able to vary simple forms infinite. I think this is where my Scandinavian background becomes evident. Scandinavia has a long tradition for art, design and architecture inspired by natural forms. For me personally the draw of the subject matter is its inexhaustible richness and metaphorical ability to speak of human existence. Of life, passion and the brevity of existence.

Like the subject matter the process of creating them is an organic process where the elements are allowed to ‘grow’ onto the canvas. The first mark will suggest others and in this way I will move around the canvas until it is completed. The canvas will have washed off paint poured onto it and oil paint applied to it. There is no set order to the process above and any of them can be repeated a number of times. I feel this gives the painting a feel of having occupied a period in time because the layers allow the history of creation to be visible rather then reducing the piece to just an impenetrable surface.

I paint all elements freehand. I do not use stencils or projectors.

I have been asked why I paint with such vivid colours, when such colours are rarely found in nature. My reply is that if I painted nature like it appears, I would not be painting it as it feels to me.

El Nacimiento de la Tragedia

Friedrich Nietzche: El nacimiento de la tragedia.
Friedrich Nietzche: El nacimiento de la tragedia.

El Nacimiento de la Tragedia

Nietzsche y el abismo entre la forma y el éxtasis

Inspirado en Dr. Alejandro Vidal-Montoya  ·  Filosofía del Arte  ·  2024

Una voz incómoda en el banquete de los filólogos

Cuando Friedrich Nietzsche publicó El nacimiento de la tragedia en 1872, tenía apenas veintisiete años y un puesto de filología clásica en la Universidad de Basilea. Era, en apariencia, un joven académico de prometedora carrera. Pero lo que entregó a la imprenta no fue un ejercicio de filología: fue una detonación filosófica disfrazada de erudición griega. Sus colegas, encabezados por Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, lo recibieron con horror académico. Su amigo Erwin Rohde y el propio Richard Wagner lo celebraron con fervor casi religioso. Nadie, en ningún bando, quedó indiferente.

La pregunta que articula el libro parece simple: ¿cómo nació la tragedia griega? La respuesta de Nietzsche, sin embargo, es cualquier cosa menos simple. Para él, la tragedia no fue un género literario ni un ritual cívico: fue la expresión suprema de una tensión metafísica que atraviesa la existencia humana entera. Y esa tensión tiene dos nombres propios: Apolo y Dioniso.

Apolo y Dionisio: el sueño y el abismo

La audacia conceptual de Nietzsche reside en haber convertido dos divinidades del panteón griego en fuerzas cosmológicas del arte y la vida. No son metáforas decorativas ni tipos psicológicos: son, en su lectura, las dos pulsiones fundamentales que constituyen toda experiencia estética y toda existencia consciente.

Lo Apolíneo

Representado por el dios del sol y de la profecía, encarna la forma, el orden, la bella apariencia y el principio de individuación. Es la lógica de la escultura: el contorno nítido, la proporción, el sueño lúcido. Apolo nos da la ilusión consoladora de un mundo coherente.

Lo Dionisíaco

El dios del vino y el éxtasis representa la disolución del yo, el caos primordial y la música como torrente instintivo. Dioniso deshace las fronteras del individuo y lo reintegra al fondo indiferenciado de la existencia. Es terror y júbilo simultáneos.

Lo que hace a esta dualidad filosóficamente potente es que Nietzsche se niega a privilegiar uno sobre el otro. No es una batalla entre razón y pasión, ni entre civilización y barbarie. Es una tensión creativa necesaria. El arte más elevado —y aquí está el núcleo del argumento— emerge precisamente de la fricción entre ambas fuerzas, nunca de la victoria de una sobre la otra.

«En la embriaguez dionisíaca, el velo de Maya se rasga, y el individuo vislumbra, por un instante terrible y glorioso, la unidad primordial de toda existencia.»El nacimiento de la tragedia, §1

La tragedia ática: el momento en que el cosmos cantó con forma

Para Nietzsche, los griegos de la época de Esquilo y Sófocles lograron algo que ninguna otra cultura ha conseguido replicar: mantener el abismo dionisíaco abierto bajo los pies del espectador, sin cerrarlo ni escapar de él, gracias al poder formalizante de lo apolíneo. El coro ditirámico —masa dionisíaca, voz colectiva del instinto— era envuelto en el mito apolíneo del héroe trágico, cuya bella forma individual confería inteligibilidad a la catástrofe sin negarla.

Esta síntesis no era un compromiso ni una mediación burguesa entre extremos: era una alquimia. El espectador de la tragedia ática experimentaba simultáneamente el placer de la forma escultural —los versos perfectos de Sófocles, la arquitectura visual del teatro— y el horror de la disolución —Edipo descubriendo que su identidad era una ficción sangrienta, Orestes perseguido por las Erinias. El arte trágico enseñaba que la existencia es justificada como fenómeno estético; no moralmente, no racionalmente, sino estéticamente.

Este es uno de los gestos más radicales de Nietzsche en todo el libro. Frente a la tradición socrática y cristiana que busca una justificación ética o metafísica del sufrimiento, Nietzsche propone que el dolor y la destrucción son redimibles únicamente como espectáculo bello. La tragedia no consuela: transfigura.

Sócrates, o la muerte de la ilusión necesaria

El villano intelectual del libro no es un tirano ni un bárbaro: es Sócrates. Y en este punto, Nietzsche ejecuta su crítica más provocadora. El filósofo ateniense representa para él el surgimiento del hombre teórico: aquel que cree que el conocimiento racional puede penetrar toda superficie, corregir todo error, iluminar todo rincón oscuro de la existencia. El optimismo socrático es la convicción de que la razón es suficiente, de que la virtud es sinónimo de saber, de que la oscuridad es simplemente ignorancia disfrazada.

Pero la tragedia necesitaba exactamente lo contrario: necesitaba mantener la oscuridad, honrar lo insoluble, dejar que el abismo permaneciera abierto. En la obra de Eurípides —que Nietzsche trata como el agente literario del socratismo— el conflicto trágico se vuelve comprensible, los personajes adquieren motivaciones psicológicamente coherentes, el mito se racionaliza. Y al volverse comprensible, pierde su poder. La tragedia muere no por un golpe externo, sino por un exceso de luz interior.

«Sócrates fue el primer gran optimista; y en su sonrisa socarrona ante el misterio, mató algo que los griegos habían tardado siglos en construir.»Lectura crítica del §13

Esta crítica al racionalismo socrático anticipa, con asombrosa clarividencia, los argumentos que Nietzsche desarrollará veinte años después en El crepúsculo de los ídolos y en La voluntad de poder. En 1872, ya está formulando el diagnóstico de que la cultura occidental tomó un giro patológico al apostar toda su ficción fundacional sobre la razón.

American Dance Odyssey: When the Orchestra Moves and the Dancers Sing

American Dance Odyssey: When the Orchestra Moves and the Dancers Sing

New World Symphony + Miami City Ballet premiere a choreographic concerto–and honor Jerome Robbins in a sweeping celebration of American movement

Written By Olga Garcia-Mayoral

There are evenings at the New World Center that feel like a performance—and others that feel like a statement. American Dance Odyssey, presented by New World Symphony (NWS) and Miami City Ballet (MCB) April 17–19 under the leadership of Artistic Director Stéphane Denève, belongs emphatically to the second category. It is a world premiere built on collaboration at the highest level: a new Choreographic Concerto created by ten artists—five composers and five choreographers—followed by a tribute to the legendary Jerome Robbins, performed by principal dancers from major American ballet companies.

It’s rare to see a program that so directly argues for the present tense of classical music and ballet—not as institutions clinging to tradition, but as living forms that evolve through partnership, risk, and reinvention. Denève has become one of Miami’s most persuasive advocates for that kind of artistic courage. This project feels like an extension of a larger philosophy he has brought to NWS: that the orchestra is not a museum of repertoire, but an engine of new work, new formats, and new audiences—especially when it shares the stage with other disciplines.

The result is a night that doesn’t just present dance to music, or music to dance. It offers something more ambitious: a full-bodied portrait of American artistry through sound, rhythm, stamina, and storytelling—from new commissions that move like fresh weather to Robbins’ enduring genius bridging ballet and Broadway.

A World Premiere with Five Voices—and Five Ways of Moving

At the heart of the program is the Choreographic Concerto, structured in five movements, each created by a composer–choreographer pair. Rather than forcing uniformity, the design invites contrast: each movement becomes its own micro-world—its own vocabulary of tempo, gesture, and atmosphere—while still belonging to the larger structure of a single evening. That balance between independence and cohesion is not accidental; it’s the point.

In my interviews with Tiler Peck (choreographer) and Jennifer Higdon (composer), both artists returned to the same essential truth: when dance and music align, the music becomes a roadmap, and the body becomes its proof.

Tiler Peck: “The roadmap for me is the music.”

Peck spoke with refreshing clarity about her approach. She emphasized that she wasn’t trying to “match” other choreographers’ aesthetics—because she hadn’t seen their works yet. “I approached mine just as I would make any ballet,” she told me, “listening to the music I was given and coming up with what I thought worked the best.” She added that she believed each team was offered their own “world” to make, rather than being asked to contribute to a single choreographic style.

That idea—each movement as its own world—mirrors the nature of contemporary American art itself. The most compelling American work is rarely monolithic. It’s plural, energetic, sometimes contradictory, and often built on collaboration.

For Peck, the engine was the score. “Oh, 100%. The music tells me exactly how the piece should feel and look,” she said. “That’s definitely the roadmap for me—the music influences every step that I make.”

She described the particular music she received as intense and propulsive—ideal for athletic movement but demanding in its lack of downtime. It “felt like it had a lot of power and drive,” she said, “a propelling forward… a fast five minutes of really intense music that calls for athletic movement.” Her word “stamina” came up more than once—not only describing what dancers must do, but what choreography must become when set to relentless musical momentum: something that doesn’t pose, but moves.

What Peck hopes audiences feel is immediate and physical: “I hope the audience is on the edge of their seat… thinking what’s happening next, and then for it to finish and be like, ‘Wait, it’s already over.’”

That’s the best description of a successful dance premiere: not simply “beautiful,” but urgent—a burst of time that the audience experiences as too short, because it was alive.

Jennifer Higdon: “Tempo and beat—the big things.”

If Peck builds from music outward, Higdon builds from the dancers inward. Her language is practical and deeply respectful of the body. When I asked how composing for dance differs from composing for the concert stage, she answered immediately: “Structurally, we worry about the tempo… the pacing of the music. That’s the biggest thing because the dancers have to be able to articulate and dance what we put on the page.”

Then she added something more philosophical than it sounds: “I also make sure… to make a clear pulse… so it’s not too ethereal. So I like a beat to be present.” Tempo and beat aren’t only musical devices; they’re a kind of ethical agreement with the dancer. The music gives the body something to hold onto.

Higdon’s contribution, Dance Measures, expands on an earlier movement she wrote for string orchestra. Here she did something that reveals her compositional instinct: she didn’t reinvent the work so much as deepened it. “I took that one movement… and expanded it to make it longer to develop the musical ideas,” she said. “It used to be a string orchestra. Now it’s full orchestra… and there’s a little more complexity because I had a bigger sound palette.”

That phrase—“sound palette”—is perfect for a program like this, where orchestral color functions like stage lighting: an emotional tool as much as a sonic one.

Her collaboration with Peck happened mostly in parallel. “We actually worked independently,” Higdon told me, “but the music came first.” When she learned Peck would choreograph her piece, she admitted she “geeked out.” Their enthusiasm for each other’s craft came through instantly. She described it as “a good artistic pairing,” one built on trust.

The rhythmic architecture in Dance Measures is both clear and clever. Higdon told me she alternates meters—“four beats in a measure and then three beats and then four and three”—but keeps the pulse clean so dancers can embody it. She knew Peck would translate it: “Because I was in Tyler’s hands, it would work well.”

Higdon also spoke eloquently about the idea of a choreographic concerto. “I think it’s miraculous,” she said. “I’m bad at dancing, and the thought that people could fill the space visually… it blows me away.” She called the format “brilliant” and “very unusual,” emphasizing how rare it is for audiences to experience multiple new works in one evening that still feel connected.

Her metaphor was my favorite: “It’s almost like a multicourse meal.” Variety matters. Contrast matters. “I think the days of just doing one thing don’t always work as well,” she said. “So having this variety is ideal.”

That’s a curator’s statement as much as a composer’s. And in Miami—where art audiences move fluidly between disciplines—American Dance Odyssey understands the contemporary appetite: we want to be challenged, but we also want to be carried.

The New World Center: A Stage Built for Collaboration

The New World Center is uniquely suited to projects like this—an orchestra hall designed not only for concert ritual, but for reinvention. Denève’s leadership has amplified that capacity by programming more multidisciplinary work that pushes the Fellows beyond their default training.

What is most striking about this project is how it treats the NWS Fellows not as accompaniment to dance, but as an equally visible force. Ballet and orchestra are often presented as parallel trains moving together. Here, they are more like intertwined currents—each shaping the other’s momentum.

There’s also something deeply Miami about this collaboration: a city that is constantly negotiating identity through mixture—languages, histories, styles—watching an orchestra and a ballet company share authorship on the same stage feels not like novelty, but like truth.

A Tribute to Jerome Robbins: American Legend, Still Burning

If the first half is about the future—new commissions, new structures, new voices—the second half is about legacy, but not nostalgia. Jerome Robbins remains one of the most influential choreographers of the 20th century precisely because he refused to choose between genres. He treated ballet and Broadway as equal languages. He understood rhythm as narrative. He understood gesture as psychology. And he understood America as a place where the sacred and the popular constantly remix.

This tribute is the right culmination for a program called American Dance Odyssey. Because Robbins didn’t just choreograph American stories—he choreographed American movement: the way people walk, flirt, collide, fight, and dream. He brought ballet technique into the street without cheapening it, and he brought Broadway theatricality into ballet without diluting it.

It was also meaningful to hear Robbins’ name invoked in my interviews in a way that felt personal rather than ceremonial. Peck told me Robbins didn’t consciously shape her process for this particular premiere—but she acknowledged his influence is in her bones. “He obviously has influenced so much of me as a dancer and as a choreographer,” she said, because she has danced so many Robbins roles and absorbed that lineage from the inside.

Higdon described Robbins as “baked in” to American musical memory. When she thinks of certain scores, she sees Robbins’ movement immediately—proof that choreography can become inseparable from music in the imagination. That’s Robbins’ real legacy: he trained audiences to see music.

In that sense, the tribute portion doesn’t interrupt the world premiere. It completes it. It shows the continuum: new commissions are not a rupture from history—they are the next link in a chain of American innovation built by artists who believed collaboration could generate new language.

Why This Project Matters Now

A project like American Dance Odyssey arrives at a moment when audiences are hungry for work that feels both high-level and human—virtuosic but emotionally direct, ambitious but not aloof. In my conversation with Higdon, she said something that struck me as quietly profound: when kids hear music, they start moving. It’s visceral. It’s in our DNA. That’s the simplest argument for why dance and orchestral music endure: because they speak to the body before they speak to theory.

The Choreographic Concerto format also offers a model for the future: rather than asking audiences to invest in a single long abstract statement, it offers multiple entry points—five movements, five voices—while keeping the event cohesive through the larger concept. It’s how contemporary audiences often encounter visual art: an exhibition with multiple artists, across different rooms and energies, but with a single curatorial thesis.

This is why Miami is an ideal city for this experiment. Here, audiences already understand how to navigate multiple aesthetics in one night. They do it during art fairs. They do it in galleries. They do it in neighborhoods. The cultural literacy is already present.

Denève and NWS are simply meeting the city where it is—then raising the bar.

The Human Labor Behind the Beauty

One of the most moving dimensions of a program like this is not only the artistry, but the scale of human coordination required. A choreographic concerto is not a “piece.” It’s an ecosystem: composers writing under deadline, choreographers building movement under pressure, dancers learning new material while maintaining classical technique, musicians drilling complex rhythms and color shifts, and lighting and costume teams shaping the visual argument.

Peck described the schedule pressure as both challenging and creatively liberating: working fast prevents second-guessing. That’s true in visual art, too. Sometimes the clearest work comes when you don’t have the luxury of endless revision—when you must commit.

Higdon, meanwhile, spoke with genuine awe about dance as embodiment: the miracle of seeing music become motion. “Getting to hear something in my mind with people flying through the air… is just heaven,” she said. “It’s miraculous… and I’m so honored to be part of it.”

That sense of gratitude matters. Because it tells you something about what makes collaborations like this succeed: ego takes a back seat to wonder.

Don’t Miss This

Miami is fortunate to have institutions willing to mount a project of this scale and specificity. American Dance Odyssey doesn’t feel like a generic gala. It feels like an artistic proposition: that new music and new choreography deserve the same reverence as classics; that a tribute to Robbins is not a museum gesture but a living spark; and that an orchestra hall can be a laboratory for the future.

If you attend, go prepared to feel the music in your ribs and see rhythm in bodies. Go prepared for variety—five movements, five atmospheres—followed by the electric clarity of Robbins’ America. And go prepared for the most exhilarating kind of cultural experience: one that reminds you art is not a luxury add-on to life, but one of the most complete ways we have of understanding it.

American Dance Odyssey
Friday, April 17, 2026 – 8:00 PM
Saturday, April 18, 2026 – 8:00 PM (WALLCAST® + livestream on NWS Inside) https://media.nws.edu/
Sunday, April 19, 2026 – 2:00 PM
New World Center, Miami Beach

More info and tickets: https://nws.edu/dance

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