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Last Friday of the month / Viernes Culturales |
Maxoly / Latin Art Core
1600 SW 8 St.
Miami Fl, 33135
305 631 0025
EMAIL
WEB
WEB
Mon – Sat 11 – 7
Gallery Night Reception Last Friday of the month Viernes Culturales
Friday
September 24, 7 – 11 |
Victor Manuel, Paisaje,Oil on Canvas, 15 x 20 in. |
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Until October 25
Victor Manuel Garcia, Vanguard artist |
| A forerunner in bringing modern styling to Cuban art, and part of the vanguard movement that took place in Havana in the 1920′s. View Exhibit
His first paintings show a tendency to mix European school with a primitive style, such as La Gitana Tropical (1929). In the 1940’s and 1950’s he adopted a more stylized look that became distinctive of his work. He was eminently a portraitist of female faces, as well as painter of landscapes, both rural and urban.
Available for purchase in the gallery, the new book “ Victor Manuel “ by Ramón Vázquez Diaz.
Maxoly / Latin Art Core gallery specializes in Colonial, Early Republic, Vanguard, and the Modern Masters Cuban paintings. Our inventory consistently includes a wide range or outstanding works by the Cuban Masters as well as select contemporary and emerging artists. View Artist |
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CREMATA Gallery
1646 SW 8th Street
Miami, FL 33135
305 644 3315
EMAIL
WEB
Tues – Sat 12 – 6
Gallery Night Reception Last Friday of the month Viernes Culturales
Friday
September 24, 7 – 11 |
Lydia Rubio, Miami – Geneva 2001 |
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Until October 18
Lydia Rubio: Identity Papers 1993-2010For the past two decades, Lydia Rubio has been engaged in a secret mission: to decipher the universe through beauty. She has done so in series of works that explores personal obsessions: exile, nature, and, particularly, the relationship between ideas and forms—the worlds both inside and out. Are there codes that explain the mystery of landscape? What are the links among colors, shapes, scales, letters, or among the disparate objects Nature has to offer: birds, flowers, earth mounds.
Today the viewer has before him the traces of that visionary quest displayed in thirty works on paper, plus one sculpture, ranging from 1993 to the present in what amounts to a dazzling retrospective. Chronologically, the show is divided into two decades: before and after Rubio’s fateful return to Cuba in 1999.
Lecture & Panel Dates:
Thursday, September 30, 7
Marijean Miyar, art historian and collector, will describe Lydia Rubio’s work in the context of naturalistic, representational art in the Western Tradition.
Thursday, October 14, 7
Panelists: Adriana Herrera, art critic and independent curator and Elena Tamargo, art critic and poet. Moderated by Marijean Miyar.
Cost : $ 40 for both |
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Obrapia Fine Arts
1648 SW 8th St.
Miami, Fl 33135
305 646 6752
EMAIL
Gallery Night Reception
Last Friday of the Month Viernes Culturales
Friday
September 24, 7 – 11 |

Zayda del Rio “Mujeres” Acrylic on canvas, 2008 23 x 46 1/2 in. |
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Until October 23
Looking through the eyes of Cuban Artists
Zayda del Rio, Carlos Quintana, Pavel Lominchar, Humberto “El Negro” Hernandez, Carlos Manuel Castillo, Quisbel Lezcano Blanco, Ernesto Rancaño & Ruben Alpizar
Obrapia Fine Arts offers professional art restoration services and framing for Art collectors, Museums, Local galleries, Interior decorators and General public with a wide selection of moldings of the most prestigious marquetry companies in the country. They use the most advanced techniques and specialized materials for archival framing: Photographs, documents, diplomas, among others. They are specialized in Art Restoration of Paintings, Ceramic, porcelain, bronze and marble and wood sculptures. |
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Mildrey Guillot
1654 SW 8th St.
Miami, FL 33135
305 642 6122
EMAIL
WEB
Tues – Fri 12 – 5
Sat 12 – 4
Artist in Residence
Gallery Night Reception Last Friday of the Month Viernes Culturales
Friday
September 24, 7 – 11 |
Mildrey Guillot, Blue Dancer, oil on canvas, 30 x 22 in. |
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| Dancers. New Series
Mildrey Guillot has devoted a good period of her life to art. To start a new painting means a great deal to her because the subjects that she chooses have to capture a specific mood, like love, happiness, sadness, etc. Then she’ll employ her unique palette to add an element of mystery or mysticism; even in her still lives she can obtain remarkable results. She favors three kinds of media: charcoals, pastels, and oils (her preferred form of expression is oil-based for its versatility and overall vivacity). On a day to day basis her themes & subjects vary drastically and are very much reflective of her mood.
Mildrey Guillot was born in Havana, Cuba. In 1962 she moved to the United States. She spent several years in Madrid, Spain where she acquired and developed some of her techniques and themes. Her love for Madrid is present in some of her works. Mrs. Guillot now exhibits in Spain, Paris, South America, Puerto Rico, The United States and Switzerland.
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