Keiichi Tanaami: Reminiscence CollageInstitute of Up to date Artwork Miami, till 30 March 2025An icon of the Japanese counterculture who served as the primary artwork director for Playboy Japan, the late Keiichi Tanaami (1936-2024) was enormously influential in his homeland’s modern artwork scene. His cacophonous imagery, mixing references to fantastic artwork and in style tradition from inside Japan and overseas, imprinted on a era of artists. Like many artists of his period, Tanaami was closely influenced by American tradition and artists. He emulated Andy Warhol, whom he met a number of instances each in Japan and New York, by pivoting away from pure illustration in direction of strategies like collage and printing.
“His graphic design was very inspiring to many younger generations,” says Shinji Nanzuka, the founding father of the Pop art-focused Nanzuka Underground Gallery in Tokyo, which began working with Tanaami in 2005. “His profession, which began within the late Nineteen Fifties, represents the conjunction between democracy and American in style tradition towards Japanese outdated traditions.” D.M.
Andrea Chung: Between Too Late and Too EarlyMuseum of Up to date Artwork North Miami, till 6 April 2025In her solo exhibition, Between Too Late and Too Early on the Museum of Up to date Artwork North Miami, Andrea Chung presents a strong investigation of motherhood, the Atlantic slave commerce and the legacies of commerce and labour. It showcases a number of our bodies of Chung’s work, together with collages on paper produced from birthing cloths, lithographs and cyanotypes. The present additionally includes a site-specific set up consisting of bottles product of sugar which are melting over the course of the exhibition.
“I’m drawn to the ephemerality of the fabric and that the work has its personal lifespan, so it may well’t be commodified,” Chung says. “I really feel unusual making one thing extraordinarily private or speaking about trauma after which pondering that it might go up for public sale or be purchased and resold.” A.Okay.
Rachel Feinstein: The Miami YearsThe Bass, till 17 August 2025Rachel Feinstein’s exhibition traces almost three many years of the artist’s multifaceted profession, marking her first main exhibition in her hometown of Miami. The centrepiece is the brand new site-specific fee, Panorama of Miami (2024), a scenographic mirrored wall panel spanning 30ft that evokes Feinstein’s reminiscences of town and the way it has formed and continues to affect her observe.
“I consider that each artist’s life work and what they’re making an attempt to realize from making their artwork stems from their childhood sights, sounds, tastes and experiences,” Feinstein says. “Rising up in Miami within the Seventies and 80s was the fertile floor the place all my inventive visions have been born. The eccentricity, lack of tradition, encroaching jungle and faux-everything had an enormous impression on me as a little bit woman.” G.A.
Hearst: Lampooning the King of Yellow JournalismThe Wolfsonian, Florida Worldwide College, till 2 March 2025The infamous media mogul William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951) was a pioneer of sensationalism, publishing exaggerated tales involving intercourse, violence and scandals of all types with big lurid headlines in an effort to promote his newspapers. The good-grandfather of clickbait’s “yellow journalism” prioritised revenue over information in a battle to achieve readership for his New York Journal over his rival Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World, which employed the identical unethical techniques.
The Wolfsonian-FIU’s exhibition, curated by two Florida Worldwide College historical past college students, collects archival supplies from the college’s library with a deal with cartoonist caricatures of Hearst leveraging his media empire in an try to achieve political energy; he was briefly a congressman and unsuccessfully ran for mayor of New York Metropolis, governor of New York and president of the US. Impressed by the fictionalised depiction of Hearst in Orson Welles’s well-known 1941 movie Citizen Kane, the present offers a peek into the backlash towards the once-great titan as he languished, debt-ridden in his gaudy citadel. E.G.
Marguerite Humeau: *sk*/ey-Institute of Up to date Artwork Miami, till 30 March 2025The French London-based artist Marguerite Humeau is a grasp of science-fiction, extrapolating future worlds knowledgeable by her research-intensive observe. For her first large-scale presentation at a US establishment, she has envisioned a future by which gravity’s maintain has loosened and Earth’s inhabitants are adapting to a newly nomadic, floating existence.
A video chronicles how this example happened, together with a mass migration and the rising of a brand new, humanmade solar. The present’s central, large-scale set up contains tree-like kinds and a gaggle of seemingly natural, floating figures, crafted from rubber, glass, silk, felt and wool. The ensuing otherworldly setting presents a sobering analogy for our current actuality of local weather cataclysm and migrations spurred by floods, fires and heatwaves. B.S.
Fighters for Freedom: William H. Johnson Picturing JusticeFrost Artwork Museum, till 5 January 2025The Harlem Renaissance artist William H. Johnson’s prescient, social justice-forward closing sequence of work, Fighters for Freedom, options 29 portraits of change makers—together with Black scientists, singers, educators, activists, musicians and worldwide leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and Toussaint L’Ouverture. That is the primary time the sequence has been proven collectively as a single physique of labor. Johnson’s Modernist type, described on the time as “trendy primitive”, is characterised by easy kinds and vibrant, flat colors.
“In the course of the Nineteen Forties, photos of African Individuals have been usually destructive, a group of racist stereotypes supposed to minimise Black folks and rob them of their humanity,” says Lonnie G. Bunch III, the secretary of the Smithsonian Establishment, which organised the touring exhibition. “Johnson provided an vital counter narrative, exhibiting how a lot African Individuals had contributed to the nation’s historical past.” V.P.
Jacqueline de Jong: Vicious CirclesNSU Artwork Museum Fort Lauderdale, till 4 Could 2025The NSU Artwork Museum has organised the primary US solo present dedicated to Jacqueline de Jong, the avant-garde Dutch artist who died in June, aged 85. That includes work, sculptures, works on paper and magazines, Vicious Circles explores her curiosity in conflict, protest, humour and eroticism, in addition to her involvement with European avant-garde actions, together with the Situationist Worldwide and Cobra. The exhibition contains the whole lot from De Jong’s early summary explorations of color seen in 1962’s Doomsnight (Doomsday) all the way in which to extra figurative, harrowing scenes of the conflict in Ukraine in Mariupol (2022).
Though she labored prolifically from the Sixties, De Jong has solely seen broad recognition in recent times. She died earlier than having the ability to see the present however labored carefully with the museum for almost 4 years planning the exhibition. “Jacqueline is a part of this epidemic of girls artists who’ve needed to wait till they’re on the finish of their lives to be critically recognised,” says Ariella Wolens, the exhibition’s curator. A.Okay.
One Turns into ManyPérez Artwork Museum Miami, till 16 April 2026One Turns into Many is likely one of the first exhibitions within the US dedicated to themes associated to Candomblé, an animist African diasporic faith that originated in Brazil within the nineteenth century. It contains works by ten Brazilian artists spanning the Sixties to in the present day, most of which not too long ago entered the Pérez Artwork Museum Miami’s assortment.
“Maybe different exhibits have referenced these themes right here and there, however none has targeted on them,” says Jennifer Inacio, the exhibition’s curator. “Nonetheless, it’s not didactic. The works ought to converse for themselves. Not all are particularly speaking about Candomblé, however slightly ancestral historical past and the way that informs the current.”
Notably, One Turns into Many has an overarching deal with abstraction. It options a number of drawings by Tadáskía, who had her breakthrough exhibition on the Museum of Fashionable Artwork in New York earlier this yr. Different works—by artists together with Emanoel Araújo, Mestre Didi and Antonio Obá—carry extra specific references to Candomblé, honouring the deity Oxumaré, the rainbow serpent in Yoruba mythology that symbolises regeneration, dying and rebirth. G.A.
Virgil Ortiz: SlipstreamLowe Artwork Museum, till 11 January 2025The Pueblo Revolt of 1680, which has been referred to as “the primary American revolution”, was an rebellion by which the Pueblos, Navajos and Apaches banded collectively to run Spanish colonisers out of what’s now Santa Fe, New Mexico. Virgil Ortiz, an enrolled member of the Cochiti Pueblo, took inspiration from this occasion to create the round 30 works on view right here. Foremost amongst them are the ceramic figures that draw on conventional Pueblo strategies he was taught by his mom and grandmother, which forged figures from the Pueblo Revolt in an aesthetic that blends historic and futuristic components. These clay items, a few of which additionally function glass components, are accompanied by video, pictures, costumes and augmented actuality (AR) options. B.S.
José Parlá: HomecomingPeréz Artwork Museum Miami, till 6 July 2025José Parlá has had multiple brush with dying. The Cuban American painter spent his early life as a “author”—his most popular time period for a graffiti artist—on the cut-throat streets of Miami within the Nineteen Eighties. However dodging bullets was nothing in comparison with Covid-19. In 2021, he contracted the virus and survived a four-month coma, a stroke and bleeding from the mind. His gravelly voice, broken by the virus, is a continuing of the ordeal.
Parlá’s expertise offers the title of his Pérez Artwork Museum Miami present one other layer of which means. He isn’t solely returning to his hometown; he’s returning to art-making after a near-death expertise. “It’s not simply me I’m right here to characterize,” Parlá says. “I’m representing a tribe of individuals, younger women and men, who selected to make artwork in actually determined situations.” D.M.
Smita Sen: EmbodiedMuseum of Up to date Artwork North Miami, till 6 April 2025Smita Sen’s sculptures, performances and works on paper discover the motion of the physique via house and time, with a watch in direction of the emotional weight it inevitably accumulates. Incorporating 3D fashions and scans, Sen considers the ways in which our bodies internalise their setting and the reminiscences they accumulate. She makes an attempt to work via the grief and trauma saved inside by way of meditative workouts and narrative medication drawn from South Asian cultural and spiritual practices.
A dancer by coaching, Sen usually makes use of her personal experiences of damage, each bodily and emotional, in her work. Notably, she considers the bodily illnesses, or “ghost pains”, that she skilled throughout her father’s final days and after his dying in 2019. Her sculptures, movies and collages utilizing topographical maps function each tangible manifestations of grief and ache and tributes to her late father’s profession as a geologist. E.G.
Lauren Shapiro: PasticheVizcaya Museum & Gardens, till 19 Could 2025To mark the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its unique inventive director, Paul Chalfin (1874-1959), Vizcaya commissioned the Miami-based artist Lauren Shapiro to stage a sequence of interventions on the historic dwelling that resonate together with his legacy. In the home’s enclosed loggia, reception room and breakfast room, Shapiro’s intricate ceramic, glass and Plexiglas sculptures mix human-made and pure kinds to carry the property’s lush vegetation inside whereas alluding to the motifs in Chalfin’s designs. The present’s title, Pastiche, displays Shapiro’s mixing of disparate strategies and kinds, in addition to Chalfin’s omnivorous aesthetic.
“My method to creating objects combines digital fabrication applied sciences with conventional ceramic strategies,” Shapiro says. “The ensuing artworks not solely spotlight every room’s distinctive traits but additionally function a mix of kinds from the pure world with Vizcaya’s design components, mixing architectural and natural shapes.” B.S.