Miami Art Week
Oolite Arts: Miami Art Week Guide
Check out where our resident artists and alumni are showing their work with this local guide.
Check out where our resident artists and alumni are showing their work with this local guide.
One Is Two and Two Are Many More
Curated by Gean Moreno
Nov. 19, 2025 – Jan. 18, 2026
Featuring works by Carlos Betancourt, william cordova, Dara Friedman, Regina José Galindo, Luis Gispert, GeoVanna Gonzalez, Jillian Mayer, Robert Melee, and Tag Purvis, and activations such as a film series curated by Barron Sherer, the presentation underscores how artmaking and collaboration have shaped the city’s creative fabric.
Miami Art Week Brunch + Open Studios + Exhibition
Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025
10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Oolite Arts, 924 Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach
NADA Art Fair
See a selection of works by Lee Pivnik at Booth D202 in the Projects section on December 2-6 at the Ice Palace Studios, 1400 North Miami Ave., Miami.
Attend the NADA Panel Discussion In Residence: Miami, featuring Oolite Arts President and CEO John Abodeely on Saturday, December 6 at 3 p.m. at the Ice Palace Studios.
Untitled Art Fair
Ocean Drive and 12th Street, Miami Beach
The works of Bex McCharen, “Queer Atlantics,” presented in partnership with Oolite Arts and Dot Fiftyone Gallery can been seen at the Untitled Art Fair on Ocean Drive and 12th Street at Booth #SP15 on December 2-6.
Attend the Panel Discussion: Art Institutions — Change, Innovation, and Looking to the Future, featuring Oolite Arts President and CEO John Abodeely on Wednesday, December 3 from 12:00 to 12:45 p.m.
Visit the “Women Artists Archive Miami” at booth A96, and Marisa Telleria at Patrick Heide Contemporary (London), in collaboration with Pablo’s Birthday, at Booth #B33 on December 3-6.
Windows Beautiful
A Glimpse into Oolite Arts’ Live.In.Art Residency
Oct. 8, 2025 – Jan. 9, 2026
Eight remarkable artists transformed Walgreens’ Collins Avenue windows at 67th & 74th Streets into bold, street-facing installations. Featuring Sue Beyer, Jevon Brown, Elaine Defibaugh, Luna Palazzolo-Daboul, Edison Peñafiel, Jacoub Reyes, Oscar Rieveling, Zonia Zena.
Art Basel Miami Beach
Miami Beach Convention Center
1901 Convention Ctr Dr, Miami Beach
Visit Troy Simmons and Marielle Plaisir at the Fredric Snitzer Gallery Booth and Anastasia Samoylova at the Wentrup Gallery booth on Dec. 5-7.
The Goodtime Hotel will present “Borderline,” a Miami Art Week exhibition in partnership with Queue Gallery, Supermarket Gallery, and Miami Art Society. Featuring 11 South Florida-based artists working across painting, photography, sculpture, and ceramics, including Harumi Abe. The show invites audiences to “linger in the in-between.”
No Vacancy
No Vacancy is a juried art competition that supports and celebrates local artists, provokes critical discourse, and encourages the public to experience 12 of Miami Beach’s famed hotels as temporary art destinations in their own right. This year’s participating artists include past and current Oolite Arts residents Nathalie Alfonso, LIZN’BOW, Fabiola Larios, Amanda Linares, Pepe Mar, Edison Peñafiel, Lee Pivnik, and Denise Treizman.
KEY Art + Design Fair
Miami Beach Art Deco Museum 1001 Ocean Drive, South Exhibit Room
Through curated exhibitions, special programming, and immersive experiences, KEY Art + Design Fair creates a platform for established and emerging artists to engage with collectors, curators, and art lovers worldwide. Check out the work of current Live.In.Art Resident Jevon Brown.
Sue Beyer: Open Studio
Take a break from the crowds to see what Sue Beyer is working on. Her studio is a 10-minute walk from the Convention Center. RSVP at [email protected] for address and details.
SCOPE Art Show
801 Ocean Dr, Miami Beach, FL 33139
Visit Carlos Betancourt at Claire Oliver Gallery Booth F001.
Art Miami
Federico Uribe’s work is being exhibited as part of a selection of artists at the Art Miami fair at the Art Miami Pavilion.
One Herald Plaza, NE 14th Street & Biscayne Bay, Miami
Bakehouse at Forty: Past, Present, Future
Bakehouse Art Complex
Past, Present, Future is a tribute to the artists, advocates, funders, and community members who have shaped and championed Bakehouse Art Complex over the past forty years. It acknowledges the organization’s heritage as an artist-founded and -serving space, while showcasing the vibrancy of Miami’s creative community today. Check out the work of current Studio Resident Amanda Linares.
Libertad
Museum of Arts and Design
600 Biscayne Boulevard, Second Floor, Miami
This sweeping, permanent exhibition spans the first and second floors of the Freedom Tower, immersing visitors in Miami’s story as a city built by waves of resilience and opportunity. Through cutting-edge digital installations, community testimonials, and historic artifacts, Libertad captures the journeys of those who found refuge and began new lives in the Magic City.
“Languages of Migration” is housed within the Kislak Center, this permanent exhibition explores the evolution of communication, migration, and identity across time and place. Drawing from the extraordinary Kislak Collection, donated by Jay I. Kislak, “Languages of Migration” pairs rare ancient and colonial works with powerful contemporary art.
Visitors can explore 17th- and 18th-century maps, books, and prints alongside modern works by artists such as Harold Mendez, Julie Buffalohead, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Edouard Duval-Carrié and Pepe Mar. A new study center allows for hands-on engagement, offering deeper insight into how language, memory, and cultural traditions are preserved and reinterpreted across generations.
“We Carry Our Homes With Us” is on view through January 11, 2026. This temporary exhibition complements both “Libertad” and “Languages of Migration,” delving into universal themes of migration, exile, and home through thought-provoking contemporary works of art.
Featuring works by renowned artists Félix González-Torres, Tomm El-Saieh, Rashid Johnson, Sanford Biggers, José Bedía, María Martínez-Cañas, Yanira Collado, Ana Mendieta, Suchitra Mattai, Nobuhko Nqaba, and Joel Gaitan, the exhibition reflects on how identity and belonging endure despite displacement. The exhibition is inspired by Marisella Veiga’s memoir “We Carry Our Homes With Us” recounts her own journey to Miami as a Cuban exile through the Freedom Tower.
Bakehouse has commissioned a collaborative public art project by poet Arsimmer McCoy and visual artist Chris Friday that responds to the organization’s legacy of serving as a sanctuary of production from its time as a bakery producing Merita bread to its past three-plus decades as an important center of artistic and cultural production. Ode to Bakehouse features words written by the poet in honor of the institution’s anniversary interwoven with monumental visuals created by the artist.
Public Art Reveal and Tour: Commissions, Acquisitions and Exhibitions at the Osvaldo N. Soto Miami-Dade Justice Center
111 NW 1st St., Suite 625, Miami
Art in Public Places of the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs is pleased to present a tour of site-specific commissions, exhibitions and art acquisitions at the new Osvaldo N. Soto Miami-Dade Justice Center.
Featured artists include Diana Larrea, Amanda Linares, Lee Pivnik, Edouard Duval-Carrie, Loni Johnson, Karen Rifas, Morel Doucet, Jennifer Basile, Carol Jazzar, and Onajide Shabaka.
The Way I See the World” – Screening Facade (2025)
See Marielle Plaisir’s large-scale illuminated façade installation at Atlantic Station building downtown Miami.
Feria Clandestina
Gold Dust Motel
7700 Biscayne Blvd., Miami
Visit Brandon Opalka in Room 209, Devora Perez and Pablo Contrisciani at the Laundromat in Room 227, and Alette Simmons-Jiménez in Room 230.
Forms of Memory and Rewriting
Mahara+Co
224 NW 71st St., Miami
Through materials, gestures, and spaces, the exhibiting artists explore memory as something alive, constantly rewritten through the body, matter, and time. Featured artists include Rafael Domenech, Yessica Gispert, Amanda Linares, and Marisa Tellería.
That Which Frightens Us
7410 NW Miami Court, Miami
“That which frightens us” introduces new work from David Correa, Genesis Moreno, Richard Moreno, and current Live.In.Art Resident Luna Palazzolo-Daboul. Opening Saturday, November 29, 2025, the exhibition coincides with Miami Art Week and will remain on view through January 17, 2026.
Flex & Flux
Collective 62
827 NW 62nd St., Miami
In this nuanced space between certainty and suggestion, artists reveal how language can move beyond its conventional use, becoming both visual elements and a conceptual framework. Flex & Flux highlights this dynamic interplay, where words stretch, bend, and reshape themselves, exposing the layered ways we communicate, interpret, and understand the world at this moment. Exhibition artists include Laura Marsh and Ricardo E. Zulueta.
Suns & Shadows
African Heritage Cultural Arts Center
6161 NW 22nd Ave., Miami
Exploring the contrasts that define Miami, its brilliance and its burdens, the exhibition captures the city’s tension between allure and adversity through themes of displacement, resilience and preservation. This exhibition was curated by Roscoè B. Thickè III and exhibiting artists include Mark Delmont, Reginald O’Neal, T. Eliott Mansa, and Mark Fleuridor.
Porch Passages: Creole Collage
African Heritage Cultural Arts Center
6161 NW 22nd Ave, Miami, FL 33142
An installation by Cornelius Tulloch originally created for the Florida Prize at the Orlando Museum of Art, Porch Passages: Creole Collage was envisioned as an adaptive, site-responsive architectural installation. This iteration of the installation was created in partnership with youth workshops at Fab Lab Miami and AHCAC led by Tulloch and Arsimmer McCoy. This Knight New Works project integrates advanced digital fabrication and youth workshops to innovate and expand upon the architectural vernacular of Black and Caribbean spaces through community-driven creativity and design exploration.
Now Voyager
Dot Fiftyone Gallery
7275 NE 4th Ave. #101
Miami, FL 33138
In “Now, Voyager,” Anastasia Samoylova extends her photographic language into the territory of painting and of reckoning. These hybrid works, formed by overlaying photographs with poured and dripped paint, inhabit a charged space between document and abstraction, between the seen and the felt. Taking its title from Walt Whitman’s exhortation, “Now, Voyager, sail thou forth, to seek and find,” the series follows the artist’s ongoing search for meaning within the shifting image of America.
North Miami / Broward
Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams
Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami (MoCa NoMi)
770 NE 125th St., North Miami
“Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams” is the South Florida-based artist’s reimagining of what it means to build and preserve a sense of home. Drawing from her Afro-Dominican and Indigenous Quechua Peruvian heritage, Eusebio uses natural dyes and textiles to tell stories about memory, migration, and belonging. This first solo museum exhibition features hand-dyed fabrics and digital works that pay tribute to those places the artist calls home: the Dominican Republic, Peru, and Miami, Florida. “Field of Dreams” reminds us of ancestral traditions and celebrates nature and wisdom passed down through generations, and on view until March 16, 2026.
At the Edge of Entanglement
Ten North Campus in the Opa-locka Arts District
“At the Edge of Entanglement” speaks to the intricate interplay of cultural, historical, and political influences that shape Black artistic expression. Featured artists include Arsimmer McCoy and Vanta Black.
Kokon Tōzai 古今東西
Broward College (Davie)
3501 SW Davie Rd., Davie
Building 6
“Kokon Tōzai 古今東西,” meaning ‘old and new, east and west,’ is a duo exhibition at Broward College’s Rosemary Duffy Larson Gallery that showcases the kinship that artists Harumi Abe and Dustin London found in each other’s culture of upbringing.
Mulheres: Proposals from Brazil
ArtNexus
12500 NE 8th Ave., Second Floor, North Miami
“Women: Proposals from Brazil” presents the work of Brazilian artists, including Liene Bosquê, whose aesthetic proposals have distinguished themselves at various moments in the history of art, both in their country and internationally.
On The Move
The Copper Pop-Up Gallery
800 NE 125th St., North Miami
Federico Uribe’s newest body of work “On The Move” is a vivid and poignant sculptural installation that addresses the global narrative of migration, displacement, and human resilience.
Where do I go from here?
Hollywood Art and Culture Center
1650 Harrison St., Hollywood
Felice Grodin’s architectural training informs her drawings, intricately weaving together elements of imagination, the future, and the past. With meticulous care and references to ancient civilizations, Grodin renders lines into complex arrangements of circles and curves, creating dynamic three-dimensional forms and exploring the concept of mental boundaries.
The Container Project
Diaspora Vibe Cultural Arts Incubator
Barry University Library
11300 NE 2nd Ave., Miami Shores
The shipping container, a vessel of movement, transportation, and memory, serves as a lens through which we explore the personal and collective histories of containment. “The Container Project” is a trans-coastal, transcontinental, and Caribbean diasporic project posing the question, “What’s in Your Container?” Featured artists include Jevon Alexander Brown, Rosa Naday Garmendia, Sydney Rose Maubert, Evelyn Politzer, and Clara Toro.
The Weight of Light
Space Untitled
2422 Dixie Highway
Wilton Manors, FL 33305
The Weight of Light brings together a new body of original oil paintings and ink drawings by John Sanchez, an artist whose work lives in that magical space between realism and atmosphere.
Pinta Miami
The Hanger
3385 Pan American Dr., Coral Gables
Visit Carrie Sieh at the Bernice Steinbaum Gallery booth (Main Section) and Carolina Sardi at the Pan American Art Projects booth (Main Section).
Unveiling of “Planting Pollinators,” Centennial Public Art Sculpture and Artist Talk
Coral Gables City Hall
405 Biltmore Way, Coral Gables
Commissioned through the City’s Art in Public Places program, “Planting Pollinators” is a hand-carved, hand-painted ceramic sculpture measuring 66 by 48 by 48 inches. Created by Xavier Cortada to honor the Garden Club’s 100th anniversary, the donated artwork serves as both a visual landmark and an educational tool for the community.
Point of Reference: T-Shirt to Canvas
Flow Brickell
275 SW 6th St., Miami
“Point of reference: T-Shirt to Canvas” honors artists who lived and made culture from the ground up. Through diptychs of classic T-shirts graphics and contemporary works, the show reveals how their creative language has transformed while remaining true to its origins. Featuring work by artists including Diego Gabaldon.
Framing Miami: Art, Photography & Film in Focus
Coral Gables Museum
285 Aragon Ave, Coral Gables, FL 33134
Attend a panel discussion exploring How visual storytellers shape Miami’s identity, the document culture and rapid change, and building inclusive narratives through art. Featured panelists include Oolite Arts President and CEO John Abodeely and alumnus Carl Juste on Thursday, Dec. 4, at 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Anastasia Samoylova: Atlantic Coast
The Norton Museum of Art
1450 South Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach
Anastasia Samoylova: Atlantic Coast presents a new body of work in which the artist traces the enduring complexities of American identity through a contemporary lens. Inspired by Berenice Abbott’s 1954 project documenting the historic U.S. Route 1, Samoylova embarks on her own photographic journey from Key West, Florida, to Fort Kent, Maine, examining the national landscape as a site of both mythmaking and fracture.
From the Cup
Tree Fall
1830 North Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach
Treefall is proud to announce “From the Cup” a new group exhibition curated by Molly Aubry and Sebastian Duncan-Portuondo. Featuring 20 South Florida-based artists whose work spans the space between the river of grass and the ocean, asking how we can hold what is sacred? Exhibition artists include Jenna Efrein, Brookhart Jonquil, Monica Lopez de Victoria, Bex McCharen, Najja Moon, Christina Pettersson, Lee Pivnik, Sheherazade Thénard, and Melissa Wallen.
Full Circle
Armory Art Center.
811 Park Place, West Palm Beach
“In Full Circle,” artists create work depicting subjects with a circular form, or exploring symbolism, metaphor, or traditions expanding the basic circle. From oranges to eggs, drum rolls to figure eights, we challenged artists to close the loop, spiral out of control, and share their sphere of influence in this year’s Creative Market juried exhibition.
Marmoris
Arts Warehouse
313 NE 3rd St., Delray Beach
This archival group of selected artworks highlights the Deering Estate’s Artists-in-Residence (AIR) program’s commitment to process-based exploration and place-based creation. Marmoris invites viewers to consider how artistic practices preserve, question, and reshape our collective memory by revisiting key works and moments from the residency’s legacy. Featured artists include Jennifer Basile, Elaine Defibaugh, Charles Humes, Jr., Regina Jestrow, Gustavo Matamoros, Karen Rifas, Enma Saiz, Lissette Schaeffler, and Barron Sherer.
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