
From December 5 to 7, galleries across Latin America and the Caribbean showcase how cultural heritage influences contemporary practice through process-driven art, social dialogue, and historical reflection.
Leon Tovar Gallery highlights pioneering women of Latin American modernism—Feliza Bursztyn’s welded assemblages, Tecla Tofano’s satirical ceramics, and Emma Reyes’s vivid storytelling—embodying feminist resistance.
Newcomers El Apartamento (Havana) and Galatea (São Paulo, Salvador) explore themes of otherness, identity, and cultural affirmation, merging Afro-Cuban symbols with urban fragments.
A Gentil Carioca (Rio de Janeiro) showcases works on migration, belonging, and community, with contributions from Afro-Atlantic and Indigenous artists like Arjan Martins and OPAVIVARÁ!
Almeida & Dale features Brazilian talents like Maxwell Alexandre and Tunga alongside Zimbabwean Moffat Takadiwa and Georgian Nino Kapanadze, emphasizing transformation and memory.
Mendes Wood DM displays pioneering work of Paulo Nazareth, Sonia Gomes, and Mimi Lauter, evoking place and emotion through textures and color.
Kurimanzutto presents Gabriel Orozco’s geometric explorations, transforming perception with new works inspired by chance, movement, and play.
This diverse showcase affirms Art Basel Miami Beach as a vital platform for cross-hemispheric dialogue and cultural exchange.
The show runs December 5–7, 2025, with Preview Days on December 3–4, and its Global Lead Partner is UBS. Tickets are available at artbasel.com/miami-beach/buy-tickets.