Most Popular
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Failed School
In Allapattah, kids threaten teachers, and bosses look the other way.
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Lambs to Slaughter
Miami's Catholic leaders covered for a priest who drugged and sodomized at least a dozen boys.
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The Shooting of Estefano
One of Miami's best-known songwriters was nearly killed in a possible contract hit.
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Puff, Puff, Class
Were hitting the hookah at the Ritz-Carlton.
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Shirley Q. Liquor's Racist Scum
Ban ugliness from Miami Beach.
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Failed School (108)
In Allapattah, kids threaten teachers, and bosses look the other way.
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Shirley Q. Liquor's Racist Scum (24)
Ban ugliness from Miami Beach.
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Lambs to Slaughter (9)
Miami's Catholic leaders covered for a priest who drugged and sodomized at least a dozen boys.
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Blowing Up (7)
Does Hialeah have the fattest school in the nation?
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Death Becomes Her (7)
Naked Stage makes morbid abstraction a little lively.
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Death Becomes Her
Naked Stage makes morbid abstraction a little lively.
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Flower Derangement
A pair of artists on view in Wynwood offers deconstructed flora.
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Art with Laughs
A new Lincoln Road show delivers the sting of comedy.
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Hot and Sour
China's booming art parade makes a second stop in Coral Gables.
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Mission Impossible
New Theatre's latest is an abject lesson in hot air.
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Style Soldiers - Popped Collar Edition
03:13PM 05/12/08 -
Corvaia's Human Factor
12:04PM 05/12/08 -
Over the Weekend - 944 One Year, Freegums and FriendsWithYou
11:09AM 05/12/08 -
Late-Breaking: Dead Prez Tonight in Hollywood
02:26PM 05/12/08 -
Rick Ross Learns Tigers Aren't Props
02:20PM 05/12/08 -
PrunkTV - My Date with Trina (I love you, Trina)
01:16PM 05/08/08
What we are writing about
- Arsht Center
- Bicentennial Park
- Churchill's
- CiFo Art Space
- Coconut Grove
- Coral Gables
- Culture Room
- Design District
- downtown Miami
- Fillmore
- Fort Lauderdale
- Hollywood
- Julia Tuttle Causeway
- Little Haiti
- Little Havana
- Marc Sarnoff
- Miami Art Museum
- Miami Beach
- Miami local art
- Miami local music
- Miami local theater
- PlayStation
- sex offenders
- Studio A
- Tobacco Road
- Ultra Music Festival
- White Room
- Wii
- WMC
- Wynwood
Recent Articles By Carlos Suarez De Jesus
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Things That Go Bump in Wynwood
Slightly spooky radio-friendly art hits the galleries.
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Writers on the Storm
Student artists present their craft One Page at a Time.
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Madness and Art
A local gallery spreads the spotlight on artists at the margins.
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Art with Laughs
A new Lincoln Road show delivers the sting of comedy.
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Hop a Trolley
Go see fresh art at these Gables galleries.
Recent Articles By Frank Houston
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Jay McCarroll Wins Again
Miami Gay & Lesbian Film Fest reels in the Project Runway winner.
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Art Capsules
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Art Capsules
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Scarface in Miami
Twenty-five years ago this month, the gangster epic caused a local stir.
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Ode to Celebration
If youre a poet, its time to show it.
Recent Articles By Steph Hurst
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Art Capsules
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Art Capsules
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Ladies First
A powerhouse of feminist art comes to Miami.
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Art Capsules
Current shows.
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Art Capsules
Current shows.
National Features
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The Pitch
We (Heart) Matt
The Shawnee Mission East class of '08 loves its gay homecoming king.
By Jen Chen -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Things That Go Bump on the Flight
Something went horribly wrong on American Airlines Flight 48--and we've got the pictures to prove it.
By Ed Newton -
Seattle Weekly
Being Gary Busey
Everybody thinks Jeff Swanson is somebody famous. And he does nothing to dissuade them of the notion.
By Aimee Curl -
Cleveland Scene
The Artful Dodger
Women loved Zachary Coleman. And he loved their money.
By Lisa Rab
Wifredo Lam in North America
More than a quarter-century after his death, Cuba's greatest artist is getting his due in the first large-scale solo exhibition. The beautifully encyclopedic show features more than 60 paintings and drawings spanning the breadth of Lam's prolific career. The exhibit is beefed up with nearly 30 works loaned by local collectors. Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through May 18. Miami Art Museum, 101 W. Flagler St., Miami; 305-375-3000, www.miamiartmuseum.org
Cristina Lei Rodriguez, Paul Morrison
Steering clear of her usual gooey weeping willows, the homegrown artist has tapped into the central nervous system of Sixties minimalist and junk art in her new show. Rodriguez deserves kudos for avoiding her comfort zone. New paintings and sculptures by British artist Paul Morrison are ripe with botanical roots and resonate with muffled gloom. They are gorgeous, immaculately executed works that tweak perception with a skull-humping finesse. Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through May 24. Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, 194 NW 30th St., Miami; 305-573-2130, www.galerieperrotin.com
Botero, Chihuly, and Lichtenstein
With the sculptural works of Fernando Botero, Dale Chihuly, and especially Roy Lichtenstein at every turn throughout its 83 acres, there's widespread whimsy at Fairchild. Chihuly's glass pieces resemble plants and flowers boosted by alien DNA; Botero's languorously bulbous sculptures of people and horses seem pridefully overfed. But it's Lichtenstein who steals the show with works such as Coup de Chapeau II, Airplane, and House II. Frank Houston Through May 31. Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, 10901 Old Cutler Rd., Coral Gables; 305-667-1651, www.fairchildgarden.org
Wifredo Lam: One-Man Show
Late in life, Lam incorporated sculptural media into his art. These statuesque, totemlike forms illustrate Lam's association with Picasso and friends, and prove to be the collection's novel elements. Nader is also showing Fernando Botero and Muñoz Vera, but "Frank Stella: Studio" on the second floor steals the spotlight. The work is beautifully organized chaos and the perfect exhibition to fill the high ceilings and vast white space. The garish Day-Glo colors and monumental streamlined forms are pure fun and funk. Steph Hurst Through May 31. Gary Nader Fine Art, 62 NE 27th St., Miami; 305-576-0256, www.garynader.com
Frank Stella: Studio
This exhibition features eight artists making their U.S. debut: Liang Haopeng, Li Jia, Wang Limin, Liu Qi Ming, Zhu Yan, Liao Yibai, Liao Zhenwu, and He Zubin. Many of the works exude an undeniable political veneer. Li Jia's The Mind of the Rose #2 depicts a lollipop-headed dumpling clad in a skimpy red dress whose tears suggest her crush on socialism has hit a dead end. Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through June 2. ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries, 169 Madeira Ave., Coral Gables; 305-444-4493, www.virginiamiller.com
Under the Radar: Nine Chinese Artists Interpret the Figure
From the Bronx Museum comes the widely acclaimed survey of 17 years of work by Cuban-Dominican artist Quisqueya Henríquez, a design-oriented intermedia artist with impeccable craftsmanship and activist tendencies. The exhibition showcases the artist's proclivity for self-determination and versatility through photography, sculpture, drawing, sound, video, and installation. From her early photographic documentation of seaweed arranged in honeycomb sculptures to found sounds from the streets of Santo Domingo installed in a sofa, her works engage the viewer in a fresh multisensory experience. Steph Hurst Through July 20. Miami Art Museum, 101 W. Flagler St., Miami; 305-375-3000, www.miamiartmuseum.org









