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Lauryn Lawrence

My lens engages with individuals and their spaces, centering the importance of reconstructing and unpacking the representation of intersectional experiences. Through exploring intersectional feminist literature and photographic journals, my work explores shared human experiences while highlighting the power of differences. My desire to explore identity outside of the socialization sphere motivated my interest in intersectional feminist literature, especially as that relates to the navigation of my career as an artist and curator. My work is influenced by my experiences as Afro-Latina, creating imagery that speaks to my heritage and to the connections I have made along the way. Photography helps me build bridges, fortifying establishing friendships and creative experiences within the communities that I create in and with. Through my work, I continue to survey the many facets of emotions and subjectivity that are present in spaces that people move within.

Lesli-Ann Belnavis

Lesli Ann Belnavis‘love and passion for the arts led her to study at the Florida State University where she pursued a Bachelor Degree in Studio Art and a Masters Degree in Art Therapy. While studying for her Bachelor’s Degree she explored many genres of art and it was here she fell in love with photography. This flamed passion later ignited to digital photography where she researched varying themes and topics. By2015,conödent and ready with a body of work entered the JCDC Visual Art competition with her piece“Acceptance”.July 2017 saw bigger and more promising opportunities internationally, as she was asked to participate in the Jamaica Spiritual Exhibition based in London at the historical St.Stephen Walbrook Cathedral and it was here she contributed two pieces “Peaceful Resolve”and ”EyesWide Shut”.

Margaret Chen

Margaret Chen was born in St. Catherine, Jamaica. She received a Diploma distinction in Sculpture at the Jamaica School of Art ( now the Edna Manley College of the Visual & Performing Arts) in Kingston and BFA and MFA from York University in Toronto. Canada. The persistent themes in her large, intricate mixed media constructions explore the body's subterrene and reflect an inner journey. Organic and man-made materials are transformed into metaphors for impermanence and temporality. Her solo exhibitions in Jamaica include X-radiation , currently on (2024), Substrata in 2019 and Ovoid (2003) in Kingston and in Toronto Subterrene (2000) . Group exhibitions include everything slackens in a wreck in NYC (2022), Cultural Encounters / No oceans between us (2021), Circles and Circuits in Los Angeles, California (2017), the National Biennial at the National Gallery of Jamaica (2017) and About Change (2011) at the IDB Gallery, Washington DC. Her participation in several artist residencies include the Bemis Centre for Contemporary Art in Nebraska. Chen currently lives in Jamaica and Toronto.

Mark Delmont

Delmont emerges as a dynamic multidisciplinary artist in the vibrant heart of Miami Gardens (accurately known as Carol City), where cultural diversity thrives. He prioritizes making art about the catacombs that are this city and its dwellers, the people cameras do not follow, the people with vast lives who need their stories told and are unaware of it. Delmont took consolation in the worlds of music and cinema from a young age, with luminaries such as Outkast, Curtis Mayfield, and Kendrick Lamar serving as a sonic background for his path of self-discovery. Films like "Equilibrium," "Boyz n the Hood," and "Memento" provided as entry points into the study of identity, blackness, and masculinity. These artistic forms were his sanctuaries, allowing him to be free of society standards and celebrating his distinct individuality. As Delmont's artistic journey progressed, he became affected not only by his heroes' songs and storytelling, but also by the mechanical world. His father, a talented contractor and fabricator, exposed him to a world of hydraulics, tools, and machines, fostering in him a fascination with mechanics, building structures and alway finding a way to make it work. At the age of 25, Delmont boldly embraced self-taught artistry, creating dramatic portraiture and expansive black iconography wrapped in permeable surroundings using paints, construction materials, and fabrics on wooden frames, recalling his blue-collar upbringing. Delmont's art celebrates the strength of the black experience, which is currently experiencing a revival that reflects a modern-day renaissance. Delmont feels like house parties resemble masquerades, DJ speakers become orchestral symphonies of kings, and rolling dice represent the rolling heads within the Colosseum. The audience cheers as we argue domino tables. We are as captivated by entertainment as we were then and are now, drowning in vices. Delmont's paintings serve as a reminder that we exist, have always existed, and that our experiences deserve to be shared-in full color.

Martin Carbajal

In the past years, I continue working in images that compile and re-interpret signs, forms and marks. These images are manifested in a poetic form…in essence, that tends to explore the spaces beyond, within the urban surrounding. Spontaneous gestures, forms changing, foot prints, are the theater of the astonishment, in an oneiric way… My obsession of a new place….

Michael Elliott

Michael Elliott is typically known as a fine art painter, who nurtures his craft in the style of photorealism. Born in Manchester, Jamaica Michael had always been experimenting with different mediums and techniques in art through his early years. Realism became his preferred style during his tenure at the Edna Manley College of the Visual Arts and while attending, Michael developed a keen interest in photography to the extent that it also became an assisted medium in developing the look and feel of his paintings. Michael Elliot’s artwork “Seeds of the Last Tide (Clotilda)” from the DVCAI exhibition, “Depth of Identity: Art as Memory and Archive,” was recently acquired by the Smithsonian, Caribbean, and Global South Archives. The artist’s participation in Windrush Portraits, Public Art Exhibition for Black History Month by John Hansard Gallery London, and Kingston Creative. Elliott is a co-founder of the DVCAI Photo Collective, an ongoing participating artist with DVCAI, a winner of multiple DVCAI Catalyst Awards, and a participant in multiple exhibitions and Cultural Exchanges in the Caribbean.

Michele Parchment

Michele A. Parchment is Brandywine Workshop and Archives’ Executive Director. She joined BWA in August 2023, succeeding Founder Allan L. Edmunds. Parchment’s extensive résumé includes more than 30 years working with nonprofit and for-profit organizations in arts and museum management and as a senior supervisor for public engagement and educational programming, visitor and volunteer services, collections, exhibitions, cultural festivals, and community initiatives. She has worked with influential museums across the United States, and has served in leadership roles in developing and opening new facilities at the Sarasota Art Museum, FL; Harvey B. Gantt Center for African American Arts + Culture, Charlotte, NC; Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, Detroit, MI; and Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture in Baltimore, MD. She began her career in the arts at the Studio Museum in Harlem, NY, and was registrar/consultant with Diversity Vibe Cultural Arts Incubator (DVCAI), Miami, before joining BWA. Parchment earned her BA in liberal arts from Excelsior University, Albany, NY; MA in history from American Public University, Charles Town, WV; and an advanced certificate in nonprofit leadership from Duke University, Durham, NC. In her words, “As our global communities continue to grow, it is important as a cultural professional that I share my experiences by continuing to bring diverse communities together. We all learn differently; we all see the world from various lenses. Through educational and cultural institutions, we are given the opportunity to explore, experience, enhance, enrich, and share our diverse histories, cultures, and values.”

Minia Biabiany

Minia Biabiany works and lives between Mexico City and Guadeloupe. In her practice, Minia Biabiany uses the deconstruction of narratives in installations, videos and drawings, by building up ephemeral poetics of forms in relation with colonial presence, past or present. Her work proceeds from an investigation on the perception of space to the use of the paradigms of weaving and opacity on language. She initiated the artistic and pedagogical collective project Semillero Caribe in 2016 in Mexico City and continue to explore the deconstruction of narratives with the body and concepts from Caribbean authors with the experimental platform Doukou.

Moises Aragon

Moisés Aragón is a self-taught interdisciplinary artist from Cuba whose work interprets personal mythology with his reality. Moisés interest in the arts started when he was introduced at a young age to the act of “artistic recognition,” having had his self-portrait drawing assignment exhibited in the school’s cafeteria. During his formative years after the 9/11 incident, he began to question his relation to the “American empire” as it stood as a beacon of expansion during those initial years of war and occupation in the Middle East. Intrepid curiosity led to the acknowledgment that he had been born in exile and would like to return home.

Molly Joyce

Active as a composer and performer, Molly Joyce’s music has been described as “impassioned” (The Washington Post), written to “superb effect” (The Wire), and “vibrant, inventive music that communicates straight from the heart” (Prufrock’s Dilemma). Her works have been commissioned and performed by several distinguished ensembles including the New World Symphony, New York Youth Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, and the New Juilliard, Decoda, andContemporaneous ensembles. Additionally, her work has been performed at the Bang on a Can Marathon and VisionIntoArt’s FERUS Festival, and featured in outlets such as Pitchfork, WNYC’s New Sounds, Q2 Music, I Care If You Listen, and The Log Journal. Her debut EP, Lean Back and Release, was released in January 2017 on New Amsterdam Records to much acclaim. Featuring violinists Monica Germino and Adrianna Mateo, the EP was praised as “energetic, heady and blisteringly emotive” by Paste Magazine and “arresting” by Textura. Additionally, Molly’s piece Rave was included on pianist Vicky Chow’s recent album on New Amsterdam, and the work was subsequently featured on Pitchfork and WNYC’s New Sounds. Past seasons have seen commissions from performers such as Avi Avital, Vicky Chow, Mike Truesdell, Present Music, and the Grand Valley State New Music Ensemble, among others. Additionally, Molly has received grants from New Music USA, the Jerome Fund/ American Composers Forum, and has held residencies at ArtCenter/ South Florida, Headlands Center for the Arts,and Willapa Bay AiR. As a performer, Molly often plays on her vintage toy organ, an instrument she bought on eBay and has performed on in multiple capacities; including solo, with toy piano, and with a beatboxer. She is additionally active as a DJ, spinning under the moniker “DJ MJ.” Molly has studied at The Juilliard School (graduating with scholastic distinction), the Royal Conservatory in The Hague as a recipient of the Frank Huntington Beebe Fund Grant, and the Yale School of Music.

Monica Tyran

Monica Tyran is a screenprinter/printmaker and arts administrator who was born and raised in New Orleans. She creates illustrations and printed goods that reflect her imagination and formative imagery connected to her upbringing and family memories. She studied screenprinting and printmaking at Penland School of Arts & Crafts and letterpress & bookmaking at San Francisco Center for the Book. Her work has been exhibited at the New Orleans Community Printshop, Contemporary Arts Center, and Stella Jones Gallery in New Orleans. Tyran earned a BA in Visual Arts from Dillard University and a MA in Arts Administration from the University of New Orleans.

Monique Luck

Soulful figures textured with emotion emerge, revealing colorful, lyrical stories moving fluidly across canvas. Luck models the features of figures and natural forms using fragments of found paper. “As I assemble a collage, I often wish I could rearrange pieces of my life as I do pieces of colored paper.” she explains. “Each day I am reminded that life choices are not as easily moved.” Luck is an award-winning international artist and muralist. She has exhibited her work frequently at galleries and museums across the US including: The African American Museum of Dallas, The South Carolina State Museum, and the Heinz History Center Museum in Pittsburgh. She was chosen to receive one of the emerging artist scholarships for the Three Rivers Arts Festival in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She was also honored to be chosen as one of the 25 honorees of the Woman and Girls Foundation’s celebration of Women in the Material World at the Carnegie Music Hall in Pittsburgh. Monique’s work as a public muralist with the Sprout Fund is featured in the PBS Documentary, “It’s the Neighborhoods.” She was also awarded a grant from the Multi Cultural Arts Initiative in Pittsburgh to create a permanent mural Installation in honor of August Wilson. Monique has been the recipient of several awards including: Judges Choice award and Best in Show award at Festival in the Park Charlotte, NC. Honorable Mention, Beverly Hills Art Show, and Best Bearden Inspired Collage at the Mint Museum. She was honored to be selected twice as one of Charlotte’s ArtPop Street Gallery Public Art artists. Her most recent projects include a residency at the McColl Center for Arts + Innovation in Charlotte, NC; and a large public art installation “Hope Springs Forth Brightly” for the city of Asheville, NC through a collaboration with local artists and community members for the Celebrating African Americans Through Public Art Project. Her public art installation “Welcoming Dreams” in Charlotte can be viewed at the Renaissance West Community Initiative. Currently, her artwork can also be found at the Harvey B. Gantt Center Museum in Charlotte.

Nadia Rae Morales

Nadia Rea Morales is a contemporary artist and educator living in Baltimore, Maryland. She was born in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico in 1989, shortly after her family migrated to Park City, Utah where she spent most of her young life. As an adult she lived Salt Lake City where she received a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree with an emphasis in photography from Westminster College. She is heavily influenced by her Mexican traditions and Catholic background, calling dominant narratives about gender, sex and ethnicity into question. While navigating complex social and political spaces, she often strives to achieve balance between her native culture and her American upbringing. She is inspired by both worlds but feels most comfortable living in pursuit of her own voice. Nadia is the first generation in her family to pursue a master’s degree, receiving her MFA in the Mount Royal School of Art from MICA. She currently works as an art educator in a residential school for adolescence with behavioral and emotional disabilities while also maintaining and active art practice.

Nadine Hall

Nadine Natalie Hall is originally from Bull Bay, a small coastal community in East Rural, St. Andrew, Jamaica. She completed her Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degree in Textiles and Fiber Arts at the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts and an MFA at the University of Miami in Sculpture. She was a recent visiting artist of DVCAI. Her earliest in influences into the world of textiles were spawned from her childhood, where she would watch her mother – a dressmaker – transform yards of ordinary fabrics into beautiful garments. Although not strictly a maker of clothing Nadine Hall is exploring ways to expand her textiles beyond the known and expected.

Najja Moon

Najja Moon is a Miami based artist and cultural practitioner, born and raised in Durham, North Carolina. Her visual arts practice uses drawing, text and sound to explore the intersections of queer identity, the body and movement, black culture and familiar relations both personal and communal. A preacher’s kid and daughter of musicians raised on gospel music and HBCU’s, order Augmentin online before she committed to being an artist full time, she was a basketball player who used to be a kid who wanted to be an artist. Her art practice has in some ways become the probing of these intersections. Moon is the inaugural artist to be commissioned by the Bass Museum for their “New Monuments” series. She is also the winner of a 2020 Knight New Work Grant for her ongoing project “The Huddle is a Prayer Circle”. Other recent exhibitions and commissions included: What if the Matriarchy was here all along at the Altadena Library in Los Angeles, CA (2022), buy Cleocin without a prescription Blueprint at Bridge Red Studios in North Miami, FL (2022) and Dust Specks on the Sea at Villa du Parc Contemporary Art Center in Annemasse, France(2022). She was also awarded a public art commission in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 2022.

Nicole Winter

Nicole Winter is an emerging Caribbean artist who specializes in the field of ceramics. She has recently obtained her Bachelor’s in Fine Arts and is currently continuing her studies in the field of Art Education at the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts. Nicole has been practicing her art and exhibiting locally since 2006. Her work and her approach are unconventional. Her process embodies her exploration with wildlife and life cycles using clay as her medium. Her designs are inspired by Myriapods and other underground creatures that propel her intuition of equilibrium and poise especially through the drama and dynamism of these forms. Nicole sees her work as a metaphor of the society we live in; while her works aim to educate, bring awareness, admiration and appreciation of particular functions within nature. Nicole hopes that her sculptures will inspire innovative ways of viewing referencing and using the environment as a resource for creating contemporary art works.

Onajide Shabaka

Onajide Shabaka, is an interdisciplinary cultural practitioner and currently lives and works in Miami, Florida. Shabaka was awarded an MFA from Vermont College of the Fine Arts and represented by Emerson Dorsch Gallery, Miami, Florida. Through a well developed research based walking practice working both outdoors and in the studio where I explore the environment and its biology allowing site specific histories to reveal untold or hidden narratives.

Petrona Morrison

Petrona Morrison is a Jamaican artist who lives in Kingston, Jamaica. For the past thirty years her work has engaged deeply personal, as well as socio-political concerns through assemblages and installations. Her totemic assemblages made from discarded objects culled from the streets of Kingston, and installations that evoke ritual spaces, serve as metaphors for transformation, renewal and healing, and themes of fragility, survival and resilience reoccur in her practice. She incorporates digital photographs, text and video into her installations, a process she describes by saying, “I use fragments – conversations, photographs, recorded images appropriated from the internet, to create narratives which explore ideas”. Her recent work has become less autobiographical and more overtly political. Her video installation “Selfie,” a collaboration with theatre artist Rachael Allen, signals a new direction in her practice. The work, which explores the construction of identity through social media, has opened new possibilities through its performance and collaborative process. Morrison holds a BA (Fine Arts) from McMaster University, Canada and an MFA from Howard University, USA.

Pierre Obando

Pierre Obando was born in Belize City, Belize, and grew up in Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, Miami, FL and Jackson, MS. He completed his MFA at Hunter College, New York City. He works primarily in the mediums of painting and drawing. Solo exhibitions have been at Heskin Contemporary, New York, NY, 2008, Rush Arts Gallery, New York, NY, 2009 and Thierry Goldberg Gallery, New York, NY, 2015. Group exhibitions include the Queens International Biennial, Queens, NY, 2004, ‘Caribe Now’ at the Nathan Cummings Foundation, New York, NY, 2012, and ‘Browsing Chamber’ at Torch Gallery, Amsterdam, 2017. He attended Artist-in-Residence Programs at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in 2012 and the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts in 2013. And has been a DVCAI Fellow for an International Cultural Exchange to Belize in 2019. He will be a Visiting Assistant Professor at Indiana University’s J. Irwin Miller Architecture Program in 2019 – 2020. The artist lives in New York City.

Reginald O'Neal

Reginald O’Neal (L.E.O.) (Miami, Florida 1992) began painting in 2012, soon meeting his friend and mentor, Alejandro Dorda, who would teach him classically. In 2014, L.E.O. took his first trip to Europe to complete murals in Austria, Norway, and Spain, as well as exhibit in a collective show alongside his teacher in Berlin, Germany. In the years since, Reggie has focused on canvas work, residencies, and murals that embody his community surroundings, experiences and beliefs.

Ronald Cyrille

Ronald CYRILLE is a Caribbean visual artist who is also known as B. BIRD for his talents as a muralist. His artistic works are strongly influenced by his roots and history, as well as the Caribbean universe in which he operates. He draws inspiration from this material to fuel his imagination and explore his own obsessions, often considered to be his subconscious. In his works, he combines figures and elements from a real and imaginary bestiary, which often take on symbolic and meaningful forms. By seeking to move shapes and objects according to his own will, Ronald Cyrille explores the "magico-religious" universe of Creole imagery and creates references to a sacred or profane elsewhere that transcends conventions. His work coexists with a tangible, geographically inscribed universe and a symbolic universe derived from his imagination and island identity. The quote from Jean Dubuffet, taken from the preface of the exhibition "Paysage Portatif" (1968): "No more mystical execution on the physical world [...]. Now the unreal delights me, I hunger for the non-real, for false life, for the anti-world; my works aspire to surrealism," perfectly summarises the approach of this creative and inspired artist. Originally from Guadeloupe and Dominica, Ronald CYRILLE studied visual arts at the Caribbean Arts Campus in Fort-de-France, Martinique.

Rondell Crier

My life revolves around creativity, not just in practicing visual art forms, but also by using creative energy as a means to support and inspire communities. Everyday I make art, whether that is grinding on a piece of metal, painting, clicking away at the mouse designing graphics, or mentoring a kid who needs help on a project, I engage in creativity everyday of the week. I do not claim a particular art-form as my form of practice. I believe that working exclusively in one form will be very limiting to my creativity. The more knowledge I have, the better I can imagine, design, and fabricate. New technologies and processes are being created and experimented with everyday, and I’m eager to discover them and find ways in which they can expand my ideas. I embrace this culture of art-making and challenge myself to find ways to combine skills and use of materials to create artwork that speaks its own language. Repurposing materials is something that also encourages my artistic growth. It provides unforeseen aspects of conception and stimulates critical thinking to work through creative challenges.

Rontherin Ratliff

Rontherin Ratliff is a mixed media sculptor. His work focuses on ideas of balance and the human condition. He blends functionality, aesthetic, context, and associations to address subjects of loneliness, loss, homesickness, memory, and the burdens we carry. For Ratliff, it’s steps of a journey in search of the equilibrium existing or nonexistent amidst life and art. Ratliff examines the metaphor of the body as a house where the mind dwells. Feeling at home or in harmony within including home as one's origin or domestic place. The work questions the sociocultural constructed concepts of self. With it, he contemplates reservations regarding home as a safe-haven where one experiences positive qualities such as security and comfort. Using architectural materials and domestic objects, his work explores the notion of internal versus external balance. In 2009, Rontherin Ratliff led the artistic direction and co-creation of the set installation for the Works and Process production of Peter and the Wolf at the Guggenheim NYC. In 2010, with support from the Joan Mitchell Foundation and the Contemporary Arts Center he was commissioned to create Sounds of a Crescent City, a large-scale sculpture for New Orleans Habitat For Humanity’s Musicians’ Village. That same year, he was invited to exhibit Things That Float at Diverse Works in Texas for the exhibition “Understanding Water”. Things That Float would later be included in other exhibitions, including “Vestiges/Trinitas” at Rebecca Randall Bryan Art Gallery in South Carolina, “Tank Drama” at The Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans, and “KATRINA THEN AND NOW: ARTISTS AS WITNESS PART II: The Rebirth of Art at Iris and B, Gerald Cantor Art Gallery in Massachusetts. In 2012, he was awarded a Percent For Arts grant by the Arts Council of New Orleans to create Way Down Yonder in New Orleans, a site-specific public art sculpture at The New Orleans Mayer Branch Library. In the course of this year, he was also selected to exhibit Revolve, a large-scale sculptural installation at the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans. Revolve would later be featured in the exhibition “Art for Rights” sponsored by Amnesty International in New Orleans. In 2014, he was invited to participate in the 7th Annual Gov Island Art Fair to install Mud Room, a site-specific installation in NY. He was also a 2014 recipient of the Joan Mitchell Center Artist-In-Residence Program in New Orleans, which led to his series, Counterbalance. Work from this series was on exhibition in “Convergence” at the Joan Mitchell Center Studios in New Orleans and later on view at the exhibition “Reverb” at the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans. Also in 2014, he was selected as one of the collaborating artists for the nationally acclaimed street art installation ExhibitBe, in New Orleans, where he created the site-specific installations Hanging In the Balance and Storm Clouds. In 2015, the Diaspora Vibe Cultural Arts Incubator and NPN/VAN awarded him with an artist residency in Miami, FL. While in residency, he started on his series, Can’t Call Home. Upon returning to New Orleans, he was invited to show pieces from Can’t Call Home in the exhibition “Expanded Media” at Tulane University’s Carroll Gallery in New Orleans. Most recently, he co-founded Level Artist Collective with Ana Hernandez, Horton Humble, John Isiah Walton and Carl Joe Williams. It is the result of an organic formation of painters, sculptors and writers whose different degrees of relations extend a multitude of connections. Through cohesion and the merging of creative resources, the objective of Level Artist Collective is to cultivate a platform that promotes, supports and sustains their collective voice and vision.

Rosa Naday Garmendia

Rosa Naday Garmendia is a dynamic multidisciplinary artist born in Havana, Cuba, who merges contemporary art with activism. Influenced profoundly by her experiences of immigration and displacement, Rosa grew up in Miami, where she was confronted with glaring social disparities. These formative experiences inspire her to explore potent themes such as identity, racism, and social justice within her art practice. Rosa's creative journey is deeply rooted in the vibrant cultures of Miami, Florida, and Havana, Cuba—cities that continuously fuel her artistic inspiration. She is fluent in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole, adding a rich linguistic layer to her experiences. Her love for nature, passion for science, and dedication to community organizing also weave into her artistic narrative, enriching her perspective and depth. Throughout her career, Rosa Naday has represented cultural diplomacy on international platforms and has been an active participant in artist residencies and exhibitions across the Caribbean and beyond. Her work has graced esteemed venues like the Corcoran School of Art and Design, Harvey B. Gantt Center for African American Arts & Culture, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, among others. She has also made significant contributions to the Havana Biennials and various international museums and galleries. Rosa's commitment to her craft has been recognized with numerous awards and grants, including the Ellies Creator Award, WaveMaker Grant, and the MIA Stipend Award. Since 2004, she has maintained an active studio practice and is a vital member of the artistic community, contributing to boards such as the Diaspora Vibe Arts Incubator. Additionally, she is a museum educator at the Perez Art Museum Miami, committed to fostering artistic expression and education. Her path has solidified her belief in the importance of a community that transcends geographical and ethnic boundaries.

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