
MIAMI — I made it through Friday without forgetting or developing my press pass in an Uber cafecito-related palpitations, and by Miami Art Week standards, I’d call that a win. Yesterday we discussed serious issues like the financial sustainability of the art fair ecosystem, but today we’re tired and regretting having that third margarita at Bacara, so we’ll look at art.
I saw a staggering amount of striking work at Art Basel Miami Beach, NADA Miami, and Untitled Art, but the most underrated ticket of the week was the Open Invitational, a new fair for nonprofits and galleries focused on artists with disabilities, aka ‘ progressive art studios’. .” Co-founder David Fierman, who I spoke with on opening night on Monday, emphasized the importance of focusing on different ways of seeing the world.
“There’s a lot of purity in this work that’s missing in some of the higher echelons of the market,” Fierman told me. “Let’s have a story where people have a positive impact on people’s lives, and do it in a truly sustainable, people-to-people way.”
So without further ado, I’m sharing below my favorite works from Art Basel Miami Beach, NADA, the Open Invitational, and Untitled Art—from Mapuche artist Seba Calfuqueo’s ceramics to Michael Angelo Mangino’s punchy text paintings and whimsical sculptures.

Art Basel Miami Beach
Howardena Pindell at Garth Greenan Gallery

Javier Barrios at Pequod Co.

Iván Argote at Albarrán Bourdais


Seba Calfuqueo at Galeria Marilia Razuk

Tina Girouard on Magenta Plains

NADA Miami
Melissa Wallen and Alissa Alfonso at Baker-Hall


Bre Andy at Cierra Britton Gallery

Susan Wick at David B. Smith Gallery

Joseph Jones at Roland Ross

The Open Invitational
Billy Bolds at Center for Creative Works Philadelphia

Nyla Isaac in the Living Museum

Michael Angelo Mangino op Studio route 29

Art without title
Talia Levitt at VM Projects

Léo Luccioni at Stems Gallery

Kenny Nguyen at Sundaram Tagore Gallery

Judd Schiffman at Emerson Dorsch

Lilyjon at Cub_ism_Artspace

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