The Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) continues to lead Miami’s institutional conversation under chief curator José Carlos Díaz. The museum’s winter lineup highlights international voices while embracing Miami’s cultural identity, reminding visitors that art here is as much about place as perspective.
ICA Miami balances conceptual rigor with visual surprise, while No Vacancy pairs artists with hotels across Miami Beach — including The Betsy, The Sagamore and The Shelborne — turning hospitality into a medium for installation art.
Along Lincoln Road, sculptures by local and global artists animate the pedestrian promenade. The fourteen impactful installations transform Lincoln Road into an open-air gallery this season. Highlights include “Empower Flower,” Rubem Robierb’s gleaming lotus that feels both fragile and fierce, and Oscar Esteban Martinez’s “La Herencia Viva,” a towering human head etched with puzzle pieces. Overhead, Philippe Katerine’s five bubblegum-pink inflatables — collectively titled “Mr. Pink Takes Flight” — float playfully against the Miami sky, a reminder that art can make you look up and wish for wings.
For Miami Art Week, Soho Beach House unveils an entirely new permanent art collection — and for the first time, it’s dedicated entirely to photography. Curated by Kate Bryan, the house’s global head of collections, the exhibition celebrates the power and versatility of the medium through a lineup that bridges continents and generations. Works by Isaac Julien, JR, Marilyn Minter, Walead Beshty, Ming Smith, Hank Willis Thomas, René Matic, Dayanita Singh, Thomas Dozol and Douglas Gordon headline the curation.
The collection captures the immediacy and emotion of photography as fine art — exploring light, identity and narrative in strikingly personal ways. As guests move through the space, they’ll find the works integrated throughout the property’s interiors, turning the members’ club into a living gallery that reflects Miami’s role as a crossroads for global creativity.
Reefline, Leandro Erlich.
At the forefront of contemporary urban art, Wynwood Walls Museum remains the world’s premier outdoor street art destination — a cultural landmark that continues to evolve with Miami’s creative energy. Curated by Jessica Goldman Srebnick, the 2025 Art Week program introduces a new exhibition titled “ONLY HUMAN,” exploring what remains uniquely human in an age of accelerating technology.
The show celebrates lived experience and imagination through murals by SETH, Miss Birdy, Cryptik, Sickid, Joe Iurato and Pursue, each transforming the museum’s walls into meditations on empathy, expression and connection. Inside the Goldman Global Arts Gallery, companion works by Retna, Simon Berger, Sandra Chevrier and El Mac expand the theme through texture and portraiture.
With artists from more than 25 countries represented, the Wynwood Walls experience this year reflects both the global reach and local roots of street art’s evolution — reaffirming Miami’s reputation as the canvas of contemporary culture.