Mother Mold monuments in AIM Biennial @ Miami Art Week 12.1.2023 – 1.4.2024

Lenguas Espinas Descolumnas I Spiny Spineless Tongues

Coralina Rodriguez Meyer solo show of Mother Mold monuments from Mama Spa Botanica

AIM Biennial @ Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum

3225 NW 8th Ave Allapattah Miami FL 33127
Reception Fri Dec 8 2023 11am – 2pm
On view December 1 2023 – January 4 2024

FREE & open to public unlimited RSVP on Eventbrite


Nesting voyeurs within a verdant Foliage Obscura retablo from artist Coralina Rodriguez Meyer’s multidisciplinary Mama Spa Botanica collaborative project (2007-present), Lenguas Espinas Descolumnas reflects the neon rituals, fertile flora, vulnerable fauna and endangered activists vibrating in Queer, Latinx and Caribbean diaspora immigrant communities in America. A tropical sanctuary installation of Mother Mold monuments at the Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum in Allapattah Miami FL for AIM Biennial and Linea Negra photographs at Prizm Art Fair during Miami Art Week 2023, illuminates full spectrum cultural care from Indigenous American mummification rituals from the Andes to Caribbean fertility effigies of the Caribbean preserved by Miami matriarchs.
The Mama Spa Botanica documents in Mother Mold sculpture, Linea Negra photography and immersive Foliage Obscura retablos, conflicting reproductive health and climate crisis in America where LGBTQIA+BIPOC pregnant people are dying at 10x the rate of white women birthing in Miami hospitals. Fertility effigies are monuments to survivors made by, of and for diasporic families in agency building workshops lead by matriarchs, doulas, historians, herbalists, midwives, griots, quipucamayocs, educators, archivists, advocates & environmental activists. The Mama Spa Botanica workshop builds civic agency, restores dignity to under-resourced yet unvanquished colorful communities in a co-creative photography and pregnancy casting process. Transgressing violent American statutes and deadly statistics with vibrant fertility effigy statues; the works critique structural violence in American mythology while celebrating ancestral life cycle traditions that preserve and restore social habitats to historically redlined communities hovering above tidelines.
Artist Coralina Rodriguez Meyer’s social justice practice in collaboration with full spectrum Doula/Griot Nicky Dawkins (Menstrual Market, Period Miami, Southern Birth Justice Network) delivers lifesaving reproductive healthcare and matriarchal interdependence strategies through cultural advocacy and direct-action community organizing on the front lines of democratic fertility in America. Linea Negra photographs are on view at Prizm Art Fair at Omni Building 1501 Biscayne Boulevard Miami and Mother Mold monuments are on view at Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum
3225 NW 8 ave Allapattah Miami Dec 5-10 2023 10am – 5pm during Miami Art Week.

ARTIST BIO
Born in a car in an Everglades swamp, and raised Tinkuy (queer) between a rural US Southern immigrant neighborhood and the Caribbean, Coralina Rodriguez Meyer is a mixed-race indigenous Andinx (Colombian Muisca/Peruvian Inca), Brooklyn and Miami-based Quipucamayoc artist, architect, activist. Spanning 20 years and 30 countries, Coralina has collaborated with reproductive justice and climate leaders working across disciplines including architecture, activism, archives, education, documentary sculpture and moving images. She studied painting at MICA and anthropology at Hopkins and holds a BFA in Architecture from Parsons and MFA in Combined Media from Hunter College. Rodriguez Meyer received awards from National Latino Arts & Culture, Oolite Arts, VSArts, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, NYFA, South Arts, Miami Dade, and Young Arts. They have been a resident of Mildred’s Lane and the Bronx Museum AIM program. She was a research fellow at Museo Machu Picchu Peru, Syracuse University Florence, Artist’s Institute NYC and Universitat Der Kunst Berlin studying Nazi Utopian urban design with Hito Steyerl. Coralina taught architecture and urban design at Florida International University prior to completing a recent artist & scholar in residence program at Miami Dade College where her work in the University of Miami Kislak Americas collection culminated in her 2023 Voladores solo show at MDC Koubek Memorial Center. Rodriguez Meyer has exhibited at Queens Museum, Bronx Museum, Perez Art Museum Miami, Smithsonian Museum, Kunsthaus Brethanien Berlin, Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum, CAC New Orleans, and Bronx River Art Center among others. Coralina’s current Mother Molds solo show at University of Maryland (Sept 13- Dec 8 2023) combines 2 decades of her Mother Mold monuments, Linea Negra photographs & Foliage Obscura paintings from the Mama Spa Botanica with 2 centuries of African Effigy Figures from the Jackson collection archives.


HOST PARTNER
The Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum includes a collection of Spanish Colonial art featuring works from throughout South and Central America and the Caribbean, particularly the art centers of Cusco, greater Peru and of Mexico City, and Europe during the Colonial Period. A significant portion of the William Morgenstern Estate collection was gifted to the museum recently. Dating from the pre-hispanic period in the Americas, as well as late 16th to the early 19th century paintings and sculpture express the unique heritage of Latin America with an. Often Baroque aesthetic. The art installed at La Merced Chapel is complemented by the Chapel’s hand-carved architecture and 23.5 karat gold-leaf decoration, applied by master Cuban artisans on site. The wide-ranging collections at La Casa include: Colonial and European Paintings, Icons, Engravings and Sculpture along with a research library of original books related to the social and political history of Florida, the islands and the Americas. Uniquely situated in the Allapattah neighdorhood of Miami on site of the Catholic Archdioses, the museum encompasses works from waves of families who call Miami home. The collection includes documents and memorabilia related to Cuba from its beginnings through Independence original documents and manuscripts such as a 1492 letter from King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, memorabilia related to the Spanish American War and the relationships between the United States and the Philippines. Polymitas, Machetes, the lost art of tobacco: engravings, posters, prints, tools of the Cuban revolution are a view into the complex story of Miami’s heirlooms. Accesible by appointment are also original maps including the newly-discovered New World. Decorative Arts: silver, porcelain, furniture, tapestries, religious vestments made or used in the Americas, from XVII to XX century. The Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Museum collection is directed by Ray Zamora. Contact RRGZamora@aol.com 305-
303-5855 to schedule an appointment. https://www.corpuschristimiami.org/culturalcenter


ORGANIZER
The AIM Biennial The 2023 A.I.M. Biennial, returns during Miami Art Week 2023 and will feature 56 site-specific installations throughout South Florida, created by diverse group of visual artists, dancers, activists, and performers. The A.I.M. Biennial is an alternative to more mainstream commercial ventures. The mission of A.I.M is to disrupt and realize
different ways of perceiving how art can be realized and function in public places through independent channels of distribution. The A.I.M. Biennial is a conceptual program promoting outdoor ephemeral, virtual, and physical art projects by cultural practitioners based and affiliated with the state of Florida. The A.I.M. Biennial proposes a democratic platform and outlet for artists and public that mediates on current themes addressing, ecology, migration, economy, race, violence, survival, healing, closure,and transcendence. Participants created temporary installations, performance, or documentation of existing three-dimensional work that relates to the A.I.M. Biennial concept. Physical address location and maps invite the public to seek and experience each piece through out South Florida and partnered cities, States and Countries. The A.I.M. Biennial was founded by cultural practitioner, william cordova and initially developed with artists/curators, Gean Moreno, Marie Vickles and Amy Rosenblum-Martin.The A.I.M. Biennial is sponsored by the organizers and generously supported by The MIA (Miami Individual Artists) Grants Program. Our goal is to creatively channel collective concerns and ideas utilizing practical and resourceful methods to realizing works that provide greater artistic agency between artists and community. AIM Biennial is curated by william cordova (founder, cultural practitioner, NY/Miami); Marie Vickles (Senior Director of Education, Pérez Art Museum Miami / Curator-in-Residence, Little Haiti Cultural Center); Gean Moreno (Director, Knight Foundation Art + Research Center at Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami). Amy Rosenblum-Martin (Independent Curator and Guggenheim Museum Education Staff). http://aimbiennial.org/


For Press Inquiries Contact Coralina Rodriguez Meyer 305-742-7054 Coralinameyer@gmail.com ig @CoralinaRodriguezMeyer https://www.artworkarchive.com/profile/coralina-rodriguez-meyer

or Ray Zamora RRGZamora@aol.com 305-303-5855 for Colonial Florida Cultural Heritage Msueum exhibition tours

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