Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas

Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas MoCA-Americas is committed to being a space for art, research & exchange.
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The Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas is an emerging museum dedicated to the preservation and education of Caribbean and Latin American contemporary art. As a museum, MoCAA is committed to flourishing in the post-pandemic era; the museum dedicates itself to serving the diverse communities of South Florida and the Americas, bringing a range of new voices, artists, methodologies, and practi

ces to the forefront. The Rodriguez Collection, on extended loan to MoCAA, offers outstanding works from Cuban and Latin American contemporary art to engage visitors; the paintings, sculptures, photographs, drawings, and ceramics on display invite our audiences to investigate their relationship to creativity. The MoCAA Collection is envisioned as a space for research, inquiry, training, exchange, education and community enjoyment. A vital component of the Museum program, The Rodriguez Collection motivates a cultural enterprise of education-through-art in order to provide a broader vision of modern and contemporary art to present and future generations. As a museum, MoCAA is open to debate, discovery and critical thinking, a place for integration and exchange where the notion of community is fundamental. It is a place of concurrence, not opulence, and MoCAA conveys the ongoing deliberate effort to ensure that differences are welcomed and different perspectives are heard so that individuals feel respected and engaged in the Museum’s evolving work.

🌍✨ Cuban art reaches as far as IndiaThe exhibition "Other Worlds of Art: Artworks from Latin America and Northern Africa...
05/28/2026

🌍✨ Cuban art reaches as far as India
The exhibition "Other Worlds of Art: Artworks from Latin America and Northern Africa (1980s–2000s)" is on view through June 15 at the Varija Art Gallery of the .museum in Chennai, India 🇮🇳
Curated by Liliam Mariana Boti Llanes from the Boti-Llanes family collection, the show brings together prints and multiples by masters of Latin America and Africa in dialogue with the Indian context — a bridge across the Global South 🌎🌍
Among the works on view, a piece by Cuban artist Ivonne Ferrer 🎨 — and one of her images was chosen for the exhibition's poster.
Though the show has no direct link to MoCAA, the fact that works by Cuban artists — many of them held in our permanent collection — travel as far as southern India is a reminder of something we hold dear: the global reach of Cuban art and our commitment to following its journeys across the most diverse contexts in the world ✨
From Miami to São Paulo, from Madrid to Chennai 🛫
📍 Varija Art Gallery, DakshinaChitra Museum, Chennai
🗓 Through June 15, 2026

05/23/2026
05/19/2026
05/15/2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMay 9, 2026Contact: MoCA-Americas Press OfficeMuseum of Contemporary Art of the AmericasKendall, Mi...
05/14/2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 9, 2026
Contact: MoCA-Americas Press Office
Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas
Kendall, Miami
[email protected] | +1 (305) 213-4162

MoCAA PRESENTS SENTIENT CONSTRUCTIVISM, A LATIN AMERICAN DIALOGUE BETWEEN SCULPTOR JORGE SALAS AND CERAMIST MARIO MARINONI

The exhibition opens May 22 and brings together the work of the Venezuelan sculptor and the Uruguayan ceramist around a shared question: how does Latin American constructivism continue to interrogate, today, the very matter that gives it body?

KENDALL, MIAMI — May 9, 2026 — The Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA) will open on Friday, May 22 the exhibition Sentient Constructivism. Techniques and Materials, a Latin American Dialogue, featuring works by Jorge Salas (Venezuela) and Mario Marinoni (Uruguay). The show will remain on view through June 12 in the museum's main gallery.
The exhibition departs from a curatorial intuition: that Latin American constructivism, far from having been frozen into the historical grids of the twentieth-century avant-garde, continues to produce forms, continues to ask questions, and increasingly does so through the hand that touches matter. Salas and Marinoni embody that vitality through techniques and materials that appear distinct yet share, at heart, the same grammar.

A Constructive Language in Stone and Wood

Jorge Salas works stone, marble, travertine, and wood with a logic of assembly and sculptural carpentry that moves between the solidity of the ancient world and modernist abstraction. His pieces combine polished surfaces with raw areas, fragments of patinated or found wood with quarried blocks, in compositions where the grid operates as an underground organizing principle.
Series such as Tú y Yo / Escrituras sin Tiempo condense his approach: a constructive language that flattens the three-dimensional in order to reorganize it into a new structure, close in its logic to Synthetic Cubism, where the carved word, the abstract sign, and the reference to urban architecture coexist within articulated modules.
As Dr. Carol Damian has observed, in Salas the viewer discovers texture as an integral function of composition and comes to appreciate each section of the assemblage as a foundational block of a whole that reveals itself only when the process, physical and conceptual, is complete.

Ceramics That Carry the Aura of the Unearthed

Mario Marinoni works ceramics with a familiar vocabulary: cylinders fitted into oval blocks, clusters of spheres serially arranged on bronze trays, latticed grids that fold across plates, cubes of saturated color that bear organic volumes, trapezoidal vessels that answer to the elemental geometry of cone, sphere, and cylinder. The syntax is constructive. The matter is ceramic, patinated in oxidized greens, eroded ochres, deep blues, weathered golds, and lunar grays.
There is a poetic decision at work in that mise-en-scène. Marinoni produces ceramics carrying the aura of unearthed ceramics, and in doing so displaces constructivism from the plane of the canvas to the volume of the vessel, from oil paint to the kiln, and from the wall to the table.

His recent practice, which encompasses the cycle El Banquete, carried out alongside the psychoanalyst Sodely Páez in alliance with NF Art & Design and MIFA, reveals the extent to which, in his work, the laid table and the geometric module form part of a single operation. To construct, in Marinoni, is also to offer.

Summoning the Archaic From Within Modern Form

What Salas and Marinoni share goes beyond the formal repertoire. They share a way of understanding constructivism as a means of summoning the archaic from within modern form. Salas finds it in stone and in reclaimed wood, materials that arrive at the studio already laden with time. Marinoni shapes it in clay and entrusts it to fire with patinas that feign, in the high sense of the word, the passage of centuries. Both build objects that recall the ancient world and yet speak in the idiom of Latin American modernity.
The curatorial design proposes a conversational installation, where the structures of Salas find their echo in the ceramics of Marinoni, and where the carved grid replies to the modeled grid. It is a choral portrait of a constructivism of the south, in which geometry often bears earth, oxide, and memory.

Latin American constructivism remains alive. It absorbs whatever ceramics, stone, and patinated wood can offer it as fresh sap. Salas and Marinoni are two contemporary voices joining this conversation. To bring them together in Miami is to recognize that the south of the continent continues to deliver forms to the world.

About the Artists

Jorge Salas (Venezuela) is a sculptor whose work, held in public and private collections across the Americas, has been recognized by specialized criticism for its capacity to articulate the classical sculptural tradition with contemporary abstraction.

Mario Marinoni (Uruguay) is a ceramist, chef, and interdisciplinary artist. Trained in the Uruguayan plastic tradition and a Miami resident for decades, he has exhibited in solo and group shows since 1995 in Montevideo, Maldonado, Buenos Aires, New York, Fort Lauderdale, and Miami. His recent practice integrates ceramic sculpture, signature cuisine, performance, and collective experiences gathered around the table.

About MoCAA

The Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA), based in Kendall, Miami, is devoted to the study, exhibition, and dissemination of contemporary art of the Americas, with particular attention to the transversal dialogues between the north, the south, the Caribbean, and the Latin American diasporas in the United States.

About NARTS Foundation

The exhibition is supported by NARTS Foundation, a Miami-based cultural organization that understands culture as living language, shared conflict, and force of futurity. Under the motto Neither Museum nor Relic, Living Culture, NARTS develops projects where contemporary creation enters into conversation with migrant memory, the environment, and the written word, through programs such as Noir Week, Ellas Crean, Letras con conciencia, Raíces en tránsito, and Diálogo en colores. The alliance between the two institutions around Salas and Marinoni belongs to a shared commitment to making art a space where the common is thought through, contested, and reimagined.

EXHIBITION DETAILS
Title: Sentient Constructivism. Techniques and Materials, a Latin American Dialogue
Artists: Jorge Salas & Mario Marinoni
Opening:
On view through: June 12, 2026
Venue: Museum of Contemporary Art of the Americas (MoCAA), Main Gallery, Kendall, Miami
Support: NARTS Foundation

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