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Marcel Duchamp Retrospective at MoMA

Marcel Duchamp Retrospective at MoMA
Marcel Duchamp Retrospective at MoMA

Marcel Duchamp Retrospective at MoMA

April 12 – August 22, 2026 | Museum of Modern Art, New York

Rethinking the Question: What Is Art?

“Why is this art?”—a question that continues to unsettle audiences—finds its most radical articulation in the work of Marcel Duchamp. The 2026 retrospective at MoMA is not merely an exhibition; it is a philosophical reconstruction of modern art’s foundations. Bringing together approximately 300 works, this marks the first major North American survey of Duchamp since 1973, offering a long-overdue reassessment of an artist whose influence permeates contemporary practice.

Duchamp’s legacy is not stylistic but conceptual. His early painting, Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2), fractured the human form into motion, destabilizing perception at the 1913 Armory Show. Yet it is his invention of the readymade—epitomized by Fountain—that irreversibly shifted authorship from craftsmanship to choice. In this gesture, Duchamp dismantled centuries of aesthetic hierarchy, proposing that the act of selection itself could constitute art.

The exhibition’s strength lies in its comprehensive scope: from the enigmatic The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass) to the intimate Box in a Valise, Duchamp’s “portable museum.” These works reveal an artist committed to contradiction, resisting coherence as a strategy of intellectual freedom.

Curated by leading figures from MoMA and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, in collaboration with the Centre Pompidou, the retrospective situates Duchamp not as a historical figure, but as an active force. His work continues to define the conditions under which art can exist.

In this sense, the exhibition does not answer the question “Why is this art?”—it reveals that the question itself is Duchamp’s most enduring artwork.

East Asian Artists

Anti-Racist Art Teachers
Anti-Racist Art Teachers

East Asian Artists

Anti-Racist Art Teachers

Artists have many layered identities and art educators need to present them as such.  
Representing diverse artists in your curriculum is only part of an Anti-Bias, Anti-Racist curriculum.  It needs to be more than a symbolic effort and art educators need to take into account intersectionality when introducing these artists to students.  How do aspects of an artists’ social and political identities (ex. gender, sex, race, class, sexuality, religion, ability, physical appearance, etc.) intersect within their work?   
In addition, we recognize that race is socially constructed and it is impossible to put humans in clearly defined categories by race. Racial identity is deeply personal, and artists within any given subgroup define themselves differently. Race, ethnicity, and nationality are all factors artist’s individually consider as their personal identity. However, as mentioned previously that is not all that there is to their identity. We know that artists have many layered identities and art educators need to do the research to present them as such. These groupings are not perfect, as humans are not meant to be divided into boxes. We hope this resource can help art educators identify who is missing from their curriculum in order to create a curriculum more representative of the incredible diversity among students and artists today.

Asian: a native or inhabitant of Asia, or a person of Asian descent.

East Asia is the eastern region of Asia, which is defined in both geographical and ethno-cultural terms. The region consists of China, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Taiwan.

Name/Nationality
Adam Chau Asian American
Aki Sasamoto Japanese
Ai Weiwei Chinese
Ariuntuya Jambaldorj Mongolian
Audrey Kawasaki Japanese-American
Aya Takano Japanese
Ayumi Horie Japanese American
Akio Takamori Japanese-American
Baatarzorig Batjargal Mongolian
Barbara Horiuchi Japanese American
Battur Tsedenpil Mongolian
Bian Qing Chinese
Bingyi Chinese
Byron Kim Korean American
Cai Guo-Qiang Chinese
Cao Fei Chinese
Cai Xiaosong Chinese
Cheryll Leo-Gwin Chinese American
Chen Xi Chinese
Chen Ting-shih Chinese
Chen Yujun Chinese
Chen Yufan Chinese
Chen Qi Chinese
Cheong Soo Pieng Chinese
Chiho Aoshima Japanese
Christina Neston Japanese & American
Chuang Che Chinese
Chu Wei-Bor Chinese
D. Tsolmon Mongolian
DALeast Chinese
David Choe Korean American
Do Ho Suh Korean
Dong Shawhwei Taiwanese
Eun-Ha Paek Korean
Eva Kwong Chinese American
Fong Chung-Ray Chinese
Flo Oy Wong Chinese-American
GAO Xingjian Chinese
Gayle Tanaka Japanese American
Greg Ito Japanese American
Godo Dashdondov Bayartsetseg Mongolian
Gu Wenda Chinese (East Asian)
Haegue Yang Korean
Han Hsiang-Ning Chinese
Hang Chunhui Chinese
Haraguchi Noriyuki Japanese
Haruki Japanese
Hieu Nguyen AKA kelogsloops Australian
Hiroshi Sugimoto Japanese
Hong Zhu An Chinese
Hsiao Chin Chinese
Hu Weiyi Chinese
Hung Liu Chinese-Born American
Isamu Noguchi Japanese American
Jean Shin American-Korean
JeeYoung Lee Korean
Jeon Bora Korean
Jiang Cheng Chinese
Jiang Ji’an Chinese
Jingfang Hao & Lingjie Wang (duo) Chinese
Jiha Moon Korean
Jin Jinghong Chinese
Joseph Wu Canadian (Born in Hong Kong)
Jun Ahn Korean
Juliana Kang Robinson Korean
Jun Yang Korean American
Ka-Man Tse Chinese-American
Kao Jun-Honn Taiwanese
Katsushika Hokusai Japanese
Kang Chun-hyuk Korean
Kay Kang Korean American
Kea Tawana Japanese American
Khishigsuren Batdelger Mongolian
Kimsooja Korean
Kitagawa Utamaro Japanese
Koon Wai Bong Chinese
Koshimizu Susumu Japanese
Ko Byung Jun Korean
Lee Bul Korean
Lenore Chinn Chinese-American
Lexy Ho-Tai Canadian-Chinese
Li Chen Taiwanese
Li Yushuang Chinese
Lim Minouk Korean
Lim Young Sun Korean
Ling Chun Chinese
Lily Yeh Chinese American
Liu Dan Chinese
Liu Guosong Taiwanese
Lkhagvadorj Enkhbat Mongolian
Luo Kai Chinese
Louise Jones (née Chen) Chinese American
Ma Paisui Chinese
MA Shuqing Chinese
Mao Chenyu Chinese
Maya Lin Chinese American
Mel Chin Chinese American
Miho Hirano Japanese
Mika Tajima Japanese American
Mina Cheon Korean American
Miné Okubo Japanese American
Moon Kyungwon Korean
Motonaga Sadamasa Japanese
Munkhtsetseg Jalkhaajav (Mugi) Mongolian
Musquiqui Chihying Taiwanese
Nam June Paik Korean American
Nandin Erdene Budzagd Mongolian
Nikki S. Lee Korean
Noriyuki Haraguchi Japanese
Orkhontuul Banzragch Mongolian
Onon Urjinkhand Mongolian
Pan Hsinhua Taiwanese
Peng Yihsuan Taiwanese
Park Chan-kyong Korean
Qin Feng Chinese
Reiko Fujii Japanese American
Roger Shimomura Japanese American
Ruth Asawa Japanese American
Red Hong Yi Chinese-Malaysian
Sarah Sze Chinese American
Sekine Nobuo Japanese
Shen Kelong Chinese
Seund Ja Rhee Korean
Shang Yang Chinese
Shari Arai DeBoer Japanese American
Shen Hao Chinese
Shen Qin Chinese
Shelly Wan Chinese
Stephanie Mei Huang Asian American
Sun Mu Korean
Szeto Lap Chinese
Szu-Han Ho Taiwanese
Takashi Murakami Japanese
Tehching Hsieh Taiwanese
Teruko Nimura Japanese American
Tera Stockdale Japanese American
Taili Wu Taiwanese
Tatsuya Tanaka Japanese
Trinh T. Minh-ha Vietnamese
Utagawa Hiroshige Japanese
Uuriintuya Dagvasambuu Mongolian
Walasse Ting Chinese
Wang Tiande Chinese
Wang Zhiyi Chinese
Wendy Maruyama Japanese American
Wen Zhengming Chinese
Xu Bing Chinese
Yang Chihung Chinese
Yang Yuyu Taiwanese
Yayoi Kusama Japanese
Ye Yongqing Chinese
YIN Zhaoyang Chinese
YING Tianqi Chinese
Yoko Ono Japanese
Yoshitomo Nara Japanese
Yoshio Itagaki Japanese
Yoshitoshi Kanemaki Japanese
Young In Hong Korean
Yun-Fei Ji Chinese
Yodogawa Technique Japanese
Zao Wou-Ki Chinese-French
Zayasaikhan Sambuu Mongolian
Zeng Fanzhi Chinese
Zhang Huan Chinese
Zheng Chongbin Chinese

Black Artists

Anti-Racist Art Teachers
Anti-Racist Art Teachers

Black Artists

Artists have many layered identities and art educators need to present them as such.  
Representing diverse artists in your curriculum is only part of an Anti-Bias, Anti-Racist curriculum.  It needs to be more than a symbolic effort and art educators need to take into account intersectionality when introducing these artists to students.  How do aspects of an artists’ social and political identities (ex. gender, sex, race, class, sexuality, religion, ability, physical appearance, etc.) intersect within their work?   
In addition, we recognize that race is socially constructed and it is impossible to put humans in clearly defined categories by race. Racial identity is deeply personal, and artists within any given subgroup define themselves differently. Race, ethnicity, and nationality are all factors artist’s individually consider as their personal identity. However, as mentioned previously that is not all that there is to their identity. We know that artists have many layered identities and art educators need to do the research to present them as such. These groupings are not perfect, as humans are not meant to be divided into boxes. We hope this resource can help art educators identify who is missing from their curriculum in order to create a curriculum more representative of the incredible diversity among students and artists today.

Name/Nationality
Aaron Douglas American
Abe Odedina Nigerian
Adia Millett American
Adde Adesokan German / Nigerian
Adrian Brandon American
Afewerk Tekle Ethiopian
Aïda Muluneh Ethiopian
Alyssia Gibson American
Alexandria Smith British
Alice Beasley American
Alma Woodsey Thomas American
Alison Saar American
Amir Abdul-Shakur American
Amir Khadar Sierra Leonean-American
Amy Sherald American
Angela Pilgrim American
Andrea Chung American
Angelica Dass Brazilian
Anna Jane McIntyre Canadian
Andrea Pippins Swedish
Ashanté Kindle American
Asuka Anastacia Ogawa Japanese-Brazilian
Augusta Savage American
Aurélia Durand American
Ashley Chew American
Barbara Jone-Hogu American
Barkley L Hendricks American
Barry Johnson American
Bayeté Ross Smith American
Benny Andrews American
Bee Harris American
Betye Saar American
Bisa Butler American
Brandan “BMike” Odums American
Brittany Williams American
Camille Turner Canadian
Carrie Mae Weems American
Cauleen Smith American
Cbabi Bayoc American
Charles Alston American
Chakaia Booker American
Charles White American
Chip Thomas AKA jetsonorama American
Christo Musinguzi Ugandan
Christopher Myers American
Ciara LeRoy American
Clementine Hunter American
Cy Gavin American
Cedric Michael Cox American
Carolyn Mazloomi American
Dáreece J. Walker American
David Alabo Ghanaian-Moroccan
David Driskell American
David Hammons American
Dawoud Bey American
Deana Lawson American
Deborah Roberts American
Delfin Finley American
Delita Martin American
Derrick Adams American
Délio Jasse Angolan
Derek Fordjour American (Ghanaian heritage)
Devin Allen American
Didier William Haitian
Dissirama Ghanaian
Dewey Crumpler American
Ebony G. Patterson Jamaican
Ejatu Shaw British
Ekow Nimako Ghanaian-Canadian
Ekua Holmes American
El Anatsui Ghanaian
Eliana Rodgers American
Elias Sime Ethiopian
Elizabeth Catlett American & Mexican
Ellis Wilson American
Emma Amos American
Emory Douglas American
Ernie Barnes American
Faith Bebbington British (Jamaican heritage)
Faith Ringgold American
Falko One South African
Francis Robateau Belizean American
Frank Bowling Guyanan/British
Frank Morrison American
Fred Wilson American
Glenn Ligon American
Gordon Parks American
Gerald A. Brown American
Hale Woodruff American
Hamilton Glass American
Hank Willis Thomas American
Harold D. Smith Jr. American
Hebru Brantley American
Henry Ossawa Tanner American
Henry Taylor American
Horace Pippin American
Howardena Pindell American
Hippy Potter American
Iona Rozeal Brown American
Ibrahim el-Salahi Sudanese
Jack Whitten American
Jackie Ormes American
Jacob Lawrence American
Jacolby Satterwhite American
Jade Purple Brown American
Jae Jarrell American
Jalondra Quvon American
Jamaal Barber American
Jamel Shabazz African American
Jean-Michel Basquiat Haitian/Puerto Rican
Jeanette Ehlers Danish-Trinidadian
Jen Hewett American
Jennifer Mack-Watkins American
Jennifer Packer American
Jessi Raulet American
Jessica Spence Jamaican-American
Jibade-Khalil Huffman American
Johnson Eziefula Nigerian
Joiri Minaya Dominican-United Statesian
Jonelle James Guyanese & Jamaican
Jordan Casteel American
Joyce J. Scott African American
Julie Mehretu Ethiopian
Kara Walker American
Kayla Mahaffey American
Kadir Nelson American
Khari Turner American
Kay Brown American
Kay Douglas American
Kerry James Marshall American
Kenyatta AC Hinkle American
Kehinde Wiley American
Kesha Bruce American
Kevin Kabue Kenyan
Kevin Snipes American
Kimmy Cantrell American
Kori Newkirk American
Kip Omolade American
Laci Jordan American
LaKela Brown American
Lakwena Maciver British
LaToya Hobbs American
LaToya Ruby Frazier American
Lauren Halsey American
Laylah Ali American
La Vaughn Belle Virgin Islands
Lavaughan Jenkins American
Lava Thomas American
Leslie Diuguid American
Leeya Rose Jackson American
Lina Iris Viktor British-Liberian
Lois Mailou Jones American
Lonnie Holley American
Lorna Simpson American
LaShawnda Crowe Storm American
Madelyn Sneed Grays American
Magdalene Odundo Kenyan, British
Malaya Lalog American
Malcolm Mobutu Smith American
Mark Bradford American
Mary Jackson American
Manuel Mendive Afro-Cuban
Marlon Riggs American
Martin Puryear American
Mary Edmonia Lewis American
Mia Saine American
Michael C. Thorpe American
Mickalene Thomas American
Michael Zeray African American
Mildred Beltré American
Mimi Moffie Dutch
Moe Brooker American
Musah Swallah Ghanaian
Mike Henderson American
Mildred Howard American
Nadine Robinson Jamaican
Natasha Cunningham Jamaican
Nick Cave American
Nicholle Kobi French
Njideka Akunyili Crosby Nigerian American
Norman Lewis American
Nontsikelelo ‘Lolo’ Veleko South African
Nathan Murray American
Natasha Nayo Ghanaian
Nina Chanel Abney American
Noah Purifoy American
Odili Donald Odita Nigerian
Oge Mora American
Palmer Hayden American
Paul Andrew Wandless American
Paul Briggs American
Pierre Santos British
Prince Gyasi Nyantakyi Ghanaian
Queenbe Moneyi American
Quentin Veracity Canadian
Rashid Diab Sudanese
Rashid Johnson American
Rashod Taylor American
Reggie Laurent American
Renee Cox Jamaican-American
Renée Stout American
Robert S. Duncanson American
Romare Bearden American
Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze Nigerian-British
Sam Gilliam American
Sam Dunson American
Sharee Miller American
Sharif Bey American
Sharon Norwood Canadian, Jamaican, American
Shanée Benjamin American
Simone Leigh American
Simone Saunders Jamaican European
Stanley Whitney American
Stephen Carter American
Stephen Marc American
Stephen Wiltshire British
Stephanie Santana American
Tanekeya Word American
Tatyana Fazlalizadeh American
Tawny Chatmon American
Taylor McManus American
Temi Coker Nigerian
Thomas J. Price British
Thornton Dial African-American
Titus Kaphar American
Tiffany Thomas American
Tre Crews American
Torkwase Dyson American
Toyin Ojih Odutola American-Nigerian
Tyree Guyton American
Umar Rashid AKA Frohawk Two Feathers American
vanessa german American
Vashti Harrison American
Veronica Ryan American
Wangechi Mutu Kenyan
Wayde McIntosh American
Willard Wigan British
William Johnson American
Woody De Othello American
Willie Cole American
Xenobia Bailey African-American
Yinka Shonibare British-Nigerian
Yung Jake American
Zanele Muholi South African
Zipporah Camille Thompson American
Zora J Murff American (Black)

Blink Group

Christian Albarracín
Christian Albarracín

Blink Group

A CONTEMPORARY

Fine Art Gallery in South Florida

Sales & Art Inquiries  
[email protected]
+1 (786) 843-2276
@blinkgroupgallery

Blink Group is a contemporary art gallery founded by Elizabeth Reyes in 2012. We offer extensive experience in art consulting, acquisition advice, sourcing of artists, art collection building, and curated art exhibitions. Blink Group represents both established and emerging international artists who create contemporary art which can include: painting, sculpture, installation, photography, video, and new media. Throughout the year, we participate in international art fairs to introduce our artists to a global audience. This also allows collectors to discover new and original art from around the world. Our mission is to ensure that every detail of our artist/client relationship meets tevery need. We believe that by building meaningful bonds within the art world can lead to unique works of art reaching a broader audience. Blinkgroup Fine Art Gallery wishes to give everyone the chance to be artistically transformed.

FEATURED ARTISTS

Blink Group serves as the representative for a diverse array of artists, encompassing both well-established figures and emerging talents on the global stage. These artists specialize in crafting contemporary artworks spanning various mediums such as painting, sculpture, installation, photography, video, and new media.

Alejandro Frieri

Amy Shekhter

Andres Moreno

Andres Pruna

Anibal Gomescasseres

Billy Monsalve Duffo

Canal-Cheong Jagerroos

Carla D’Amato

Carlos Villabon

Carol Moreno

Christian Abusaid

Christian Albarracin

Claudio Castillo

Cuchi Taborda

Débora Sánchez Viqueira

Diana Beltran

Elizabeth Pruna

Humberto Castro

Ignacio Gana

Javier Valle Perez

Juan Pablo Gutierrez B.

Kaiser Suidan

Lisa Lloyd

LouAnn Wukitsch

Luis Kaiulani

Mactivo

Marco Grassi

Marta Fabregas

Mercedes Jelinek

Monica Agudelo

Pablo Fernandez

Shawn Kolodny

Silvio Porzionato

Solange Heilenkotter

Stef Ross

TBoy

Tiffany Trenda

Tommaso Fattovich

Veronica Matiz

Zack Knudson

Anabel Ruiz

Ariel Vargassal

Jorge Santos Marcos

Mr. Brainwash

Noel Dobarganes Perez

Retna

Oolite Arts launches Oolite Arts Conversations with Antoni Miralda indialogue with César Trasobares and Stephan Palmié

Oolite Arts launches Oolite Arts Conversations with Antoni Miralda in dialogue with César Trasobares and Stephan Palmié
Oolite Arts launches Oolite Arts Conversations with Antoni Miralda in dialogue with César Trasobares and Stephan Palmié

Oolite Arts launches Oolite Arts Conversations with Antoni Miralda indialogue with César Trasobares and Stephan Palmié

Oolite Arts is pleased to inaugurate Oolite Arts Conversations, a new public series that convenes artists, curators, museum professionals, and cultural thinkers in rigorous and lively dialogue.

The inaugural event, on May 7, 2026, opens the series with an evening devoted to Antoni Miralda, the internationally renowned artist whose practice has, since the 1960s, transformed food into a powerful artistic, social, and political medium.

Bringing together art, anthropology, and civic history, the conversation will place Miralda in dialogue with César E. Trasobares, artist, curator, and a key architect of Miami’s public art infrastructure and policy framework, and Stephan Palmié, anthropologist and Norman & Edna Freehling Professor of Anthropology and Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. Together, they will examine Miralda’s singular impact on Miami and beyond, tracing the ways food, ritual, and collective participation have shaped his work and its enduring cultural resonance.

Through their respective practices and perspectives, Miralda, Trasobares, and Palmié will explore Miami as both laboratory and crossroads, a city where artistic experimentation, cultural translation, and public life converge. In doing so, the event will inaugurate Oolite Arts Conversations by enacting the very values at the heart of the series—a sustained commitment to contemporary art as a critical framework for understanding the social world.

About the SpeakersBorn in Terrassa, Barcelona, in 1942, Antoni Miralda first established his practice in Paris before relocating to New York in 1972, and has since maintained an active presence between Miami and Barcelona. From his early Happenings with the “Paris Catalans”—collective rituals centered on ceremonial food, color, and symbolism—to his large-scale installations and research-driven projects, Miralda’s work unfolds through a vibrant, baroque, and nonconformist language that brings art directly into the social fabric of everyday life.

Miami has been a crucial site in Miralda’s career since 1981, when he was invited as a guest artist for the New World Festival of the Arts, with interventions at Coral Castle, Vizcaya, the Bass Museum, and the Lowe Art Museum. In 1992, together with chef and longtime collaborator Montse Guillén, he established a base on Española Way, initiating a sustained period of engagement with the city as a site of experimentation that included Big Fish Mayaimi on the Miami River (1996–1999) and a major exhibition at the Miami Art Museum in 1998. Since 2000, his ongoing FoodCulturaMuseum, anchored in both Miami and Barcelona, has functioned as an evolving archive that examines food diversity as a lens through which to understand cultures across the world.

Among Miralda’s landmark projects is Honeymoon Project (1986/1992), a multi-site international undertaking staging the symbolic marriage between the Statue of Liberty in New York and the Columbus Monument in Barcelona, an incisive deconstruction of Old World/New World relations through ritual, food, and collective celebration. His work has been presented at major international platforms, including documenta VI, the 17th São Paulo Biennial, and the 44th Venice Biennale. In 2018, he received Spain’s prestigiousVelázquez Prize for Visual Arts.

César E. Trasobares’ career bridges studio practice, cultural policy, and civic infrastructure. As Executive Director of Metro-Dade County’s Art in Public Places Program (1985–1990), Trasobares oversaw landmark commissions by artists including Ed Ruscha, Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Nam June Paik, and Betye Saar—projects that helped define Miami’s public art landscape. A longtime collaborator on Miralda’s Miami initiatives, Trasobares brings a deeply informed perspective on the artist’s formative role within the city’s cultural life.

Stephan Palmié’s scholarship on Afro-Caribbean cultures, foodways, slavery, migration, and constructions of race and ethnicity provides a critical framework for understanding the historical and symbolic dimensions of Miralda’s practice. His collaboration with Miralda on Maggi Galaxy, a multidisciplinary project exploring the aesthetics and politics of the Maggi bouillon cube, underscores the rich intersections between artistic production and anthropological inquiry that the evening’s dialogue will bring into focus.

The event will be followed by a reception and book signing of Miralda and Stephan Palmié’s Maggi Galaxy, which will be available for purchase at the event in collaboration with EXILE Projects.

When: May 7, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.

Where: Proscenium Theatre, Little Haiti Cultural Complex212 NE 59th Terrace, Miami, FL 33137

Admission FreeFree On-Site Parking

How to Write an Artist Statement (2026 Edition)

How to Write an Artist Statement (2026 Edition)

A Curatorial and Critical Approach

In 2026, the artist statement is no longer a simple descriptive text—it is a strategic, conceptual, and curatorial tool that positions your work within contemporary discourse. Far from being a formality, it operates as a bridge between your practice and multiple audiences: curators, collectors, institutions, and the broader cultural field.

An artist statement is not about explaining your work exhaustively, but about articulating a framework of thought. As suggested in contemporary art writing pedagogy, effective statements function as interpretive guides rather than didactic explanations, enabling the viewer to enter the work without closing its meaning (Elkins, What Happened to Art Criticism?).

At its core, the artist statement should address three essential dimensions:
What you do, how you do it, and why it matters.

Clarity is fundamental. Avoid excessive jargon or “artspeak,” which often alienates rather than communicates. Research in art education emphasizes that accessible language fosters broader engagement without diminishing conceptual rigor (Barrett, Criticizing Art).

Structure remains key: a concise introduction, a reflection on process and medium, and a closing that situates your work within a larger conceptual or cultural context.

Writing is iterative. No statement emerges complete in its first draft; it is refined through revision, reflection, and critical feedback.

In an era shaped by artificial intelligence, many tools can assist in drafting text. However, not all AI systems are capable of understanding the nuances of artistic practice. Ultimately, the most meaningful artist statements are those shaped through dialogue—often with a curator or art critic—who can situate your work within a broader intellectual and cultural framework.

The Light of the World: Artist Talk

The Light of the World: Artist Talk
The Light of the World: Artist Talk

The Light of the World: Artist Talk

Thu Apr 232026 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM EDT

Saladrigas Gallery at Belen Jesuit

The Olga M. and Carlos A. Saladrigas Gallery at Belen Jesuit Preparatory School proudly announces the opening of The Light of the World, a Christ-centered art exhibition exploring the depiction of Jesus Christ across centuries and cultures. The exhibition will be on view from March 12 through May 6, 2026.

A Journey Through Sacred Art

For nearly two thousand years, artists have interpreted the figure of Jesus Christ—shaping some of history’s most profound and visually stunning masterpieces. The Light of the World invites visitors to experience this rich tradition, featuring paintings, sculptures, and drawings from the 16th century to today. The exhibition brings together Russian icons, Renaissance works, paintings from the Cuzco School, late 19th- and early 20th-century Latin American art, and contemporary works by local and international artists—including icons created as prayers in the 21st century.

Curated by Carol Damian, Ph.D., and Adriana Herrera, Ph.D., the exhibition offers an immersive journey through the story of Jesus Christ as seen through the eyes of artists from Europe, Russia, South America, and the United States.

Location

Saladrigas Gallery at Belen Jesuit

500 SW 127th Ave, Miami, FL 33184, USA

100 Collaborations with Félix Morelo. No. 1

artist Félix Morelo

100 Collaborations with Félix Morelo. No. 1

The PRIV. Y Gallery, located at 46 Hester Street in New York, is pleased to present the exhibition 100 Collaborations with Félix Morelo. No. 1, featuring one hundred artists in collaboration with Colombian-American artist Félix Morelo. The exhibition will open to the public on April 9.

Among the participants are ten notable artists contributing distinct visual proposals: Judy Glatzman (Grieving Spot), John Matos CRASH (Healing Spot), Alejandro Caiazza (Dancing Spot), Al Diaz (Language Spot), Glenn Goldberg (Quiet Spot), Eric Orr (Robot Spot), Peter Drake (Process Spot), HEKTAD (Hektad Spot), Ayakamay (Esoteric Spot), and MIKI-MU (Miki Mu Spot).

Morelo has established himself within the New York art scene through his unique approach to street art, a practice he began developing in 2009 while studying at Parsons School of Design. Initially focused on portraiture, his work evolved into his now-recognizable circular interventions made with chalk—white and color—applied to sidewalks, streets, and walls throughout the city.

These urban gestures transform public space into a participatory canvas, confronting passersby with phrases such as Good Luck Spot and Bad Luck Spot, as well as more provocative expressions like Suicide Spot, Pooping Spot, and Kissing Spot, momentarily shifting perception and awareness.

In this exhibition, participating artists reinterpret Morelo’s visual language—developed over 17 years in urban contexts—translating it into small-format works for the gallery setting. The project becomes both a tribute and a collective exercise, where minimal scale opens a dialogue between one hundred contemporary artistic perspectives.

artist Félix Morelo

The Idea of a Garden by Yossi Peled

Yossi Peled
Spring Garden 163 W x 57 H x 6 D in Wire Metal, and Metal Mesh

The Idea of a Garden by Yossi Peled

Bernice Steinbaum Gallery
2101 Tigertail Avenue, Miami, FL 33133

“What does wire have to do with a garden?”

Yossi Peled’s exhibition The Idea of a Garden unfolds as a perceptual experience in which line transcends its two-dimensional condition to become structure, space, and a mode of thought. From the very first encounter, what compels is not form, but the line itself—insistent, expansive, seeking to inhabit space.

Peled’s “garden” is constructed not through mass, but through the tension between presence and absence. Wire and mesh—industrial, rigid materials seemingly distant from the organic—are transformed into living gestures that evoke growth, respiration, and movement. In this transformation, the work recalls the logic of the Hilbert curve: a continuous line capable of filling space without interruption. Yet, unlike this mathematical ideal, Peled’s lines break. They fragment, intersect, and restart. Where the Hilbert curve promises continuity, Peled introduces rupture.

This distinction is crucial. His garden does not aspire to totality, but to experience. It is in the interruption that the work becomes human—where perception hesitates, where the eye must reconstruct what is missing.

A third element intensifies this condition: the shadow. Not as a secondary effect, but as an extension of the work itself. In projection, the line multiplies and destabilizes, producing a layered field where drawing oscillates between presence and disappearance.

Peled ultimately redefines sculpture as expanded drawing. His garden is not merely seen; it is traversed, inhabited, and reconstructed through perception.

Bernice Steinbaum Gallery
2101 Tigertail Avenue, Miami, FL 33133
The gallery is open on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM, or by appointment.

For more information, please contact us at (305) 860-3681.

Yossi Peled
Yossi Peled
Yossi Peled
Poppy Flower
38 x 34 in
Wire Metal and Metal Mesh
Yossi Peled
Catching the Light
94 x 21 x 10 in
Wire Metal and Metal Mesh

La métrica, la óptica, la dimensión y el color

Kube Man by Rafael Montilla - photo Ricardo Cornejo

La métrica, la óptica, la dimensión y el color: Herramientas Claves en la Arquitectura y el Arte

El uso del color en la arquitectura es un elemento fundamental que va más allá de lo decorativo. En el contexto de movimientos como el Neoplasticismo y el De Stijl, el color se convierte en una herramienta esencial para definir espacios, crear contrastes y establecer relaciones visuales. A continuación, exploramos cómo la métrica, la óptica, la dimensión y la calidad cromática influyen en la percepción y el diseño arquitectónico.

1. La Métrica: Proporción y Equilibrio

La métrica en arquitectura se refiere a la proporción y el equilibrio entre los elementos que componen un espacio. En el Neoplasticismo, el color se utiliza para definir planos y establecer relaciones métricas entre ellos. Por ejemplo:

  • Líneas y planos: El uso de colores primarios (rojo, azul, amarillo) y neutros (blanco, negro, gris) ayuda a delimitar superficies y crear una sensación de orden y armonía.
  • Equilibrio asimétrico: A diferencia de la simetría clásica, el Neoplasticismo busca un equilibrio dinámico a través de la disposición de formas y colores que contrastan entre sí.

2. La Óptica: Percepción Visual

La óptica en arquitectura se relaciona con cómo percibimos los espacios y los elementos que los componen. El color juega un papel crucial en esta percepción:

  • Profundidad y perspectiva: Los colores claros (como el blanco) tienden a expandir visualmente un espacio, mientras que los colores oscuros (como el negro) lo contraen. Esto permite manipular la percepción de profundidad en un diseño.
  • Contraste y enfoque: El uso de colores contrastantes (por ejemplo, rojo sobre blanco) puede dirigir la atención hacia elementos específicos, como una pared o una columna.

3. La Dimensión: Espacio y Volumen

El color también influye en la percepción de la dimensión en arquitectura, es decir, cómo se perciben los volúmenes y los espacios:

  • Desmaterialización: En el Neoplasticismo, el color se utiliza para “desmaterializar” las formas, es decir, para reducir la sensación de masa y enfatizar la idea de espacio. Por ejemplo, en la Casa Schröder de Gerrit Rietveld, los planos de colores primarios parecen flotar, creando una sensación de ligereza.
  • Integración de interior y exterior: El color puede ayudar a difuminar los límites entre el interior y el exterior, creando una sensación de continuidad espacial.

4. La Calidad Cromática: Expresión y Simbolismo

La calidad cromática se refiere a las propiedades expresivas y simbólicas del color. En arquitectura, el color no solo es un elemento visual, sino también emocional y conceptual:

  • Colores primarios y neutros: En el Neoplasticismo, los colores primarios (rojo, azul, amarillo) representan la pureza y la esencialidad, mientras que los neutros (blanco, negro, gris) aportan equilibrio y contraste.
  • Luz y sombra: El color interactúa con la luz para crear efectos dinámicos. Por ejemplo, un plano rojo bajo la luz del sol puede parecer vibrante, mientras que bajo la sombra puede adquirir un tono más oscuro y dramático.
  • Simbolismo: El color también puede tener un significado simbólico. Por ejemplo, el rojo puede representar energía y dinamismo, mientras que el azul puede evocar calma y serenidad.

El Color en la Arquitectura Neoplástica: Un Ejemplo Práctico

Un ejemplo emblemático del uso del color en la arquitectura neoplástica es la Casa Schröder de Gerrit Rietveld. En esta obra:

  • Los planos de colores primarios (rojo, azul, amarillo) contrastan con los planos blancos y grises, creando una composición visualmente dinámica.
  • El color define los límites de los planos y los volúmenes, permitiendo que el espacio se perciba como una serie de elementos independientes pero interconectados.
  • La interacción entre el color y la luz natural crea efectos cambiantes a lo largo del día, lo que añade una dimensión temporal al diseño.

El color en la arquitectura no es simplemente un añadido estético; es una herramienta poderosa que influye en la métrica, la óptica, la dimensión y la calidad cromática de un espacio. En movimientos como el Neoplasticismo, el color se convierte en un elemento esencial para crear una arquitectura que trasciende lo físico y se convierte en una expresión pura de ideas y principios. A través del uso estratégico del color, los arquitectos pueden transformar la percepción de los espacios, creando obras que son tanto funcionales como profundamente significativas.

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