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MAD Arts
481 S Federal Hwy, Dania Beach, FL 33004
Join us for the launch of Taimy Alvarez’s What the Hands Remember. Transforming the gallery into a living, breathing archive of thread, memory, and motion, this deeply immersive exhibition blurs the boundaries between documentary cinema and material art. It creates a space where floating, large-scale films live alongside physical artworks — allowing the screen’s light and shadow to immediately meet tactile reality.
Captured through the nuanced lens of Emmy and Pulitzer Prize-winning visual storyteller Taimy Alvarez, the exhibition centers on six distinct documentaries. These projections envelop visitors in the intimate, rhythmic worlds of masterful fiber artists Yochi Y. Avin, Marina Font, Karla Kantorovich, Magda Love, Aurora Molina, and Lisu Vega. Bound by their shared experiences as South Florida-based women with diverse international and immigrant roots, these artists speak a unified, unspoken language.
As the films surround the space, viewers are invited to follow the hypnotic movement of the artists’ hands as they stitch, pull, layer, and weave. It is an exploration of how memory lives within the body, translating homelands and histories into physical form to reveal deeply wrought stories of identity and cultural lineage. Standing within reach as tangible extensions of the rhythmic practice unfolding on screen, the physical pieces offer a stunning, textured echo of the cinematic narratives projected onto the floating screens.
Made possible with support from the Broward County Cultural Division.
Support has been provided by the following Funds at the Community Foundation of Broward:


Taimy Alvarez is a Cuban-American photojournalist, Director of Photography, editor, and mixed-media artist based in South Florida. Raised within a vibrant Caribbean and Latin American diaspora, she was immersed in the music, color, and traditions of her community — an influence that continues to shape her visual language and storytelling.
Her work is driven by a desire to go beyond the surface, capturing the emotional and human essence of a moment, a person, or the creative process. Taimy sees photography and film as universal languages — capable of evoking emotion, fostering empathy for others, shaping perception, and inspiring action. She views documentary storytelling as a vital medium for preserving artists, culture, and lived experiences in an increasingly visual world.
Throughout her award-winning career, Taimy has collaborated with major media outlets including The Washington Post, USA Today, Associated Press, INSIDER, Go Traveler, and the South Florida Sun Sentinel. She was part of the Sun Sentinel team awarded the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its coverage of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, and received a Suncoast Regional Emmy Award for “The Gulf’s Deadly Harvest.”
In recent years, she has expanded into independent filmmaking, exploring themes of migration, identity, and cultural legacy. Her film CROSSING THE WATERS was featured at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival and NewFilmmakers NY. She is currently the Assistant Director of Multimedia for Marketing and Communications at Florida Atlantic University and serves as Director of Photography and Editor for the global travel series WaterVoyagers, which is scheduled to air on PBS in 2027.
Beyond her professional work, Taimy is an educator and mixed-media artist who integrates photography, paint, and textiles to explore memory, heritage, and belonging — creating work that bridges art, identity, and human connection.
Memory, material, and identity converge in Yochi Y. Avin’s multidisciplinary work, where painting, textile, photography, and installation weave together to trace personal and collective histories. Thread, sheer fabric, and worn imagery meet industrial materials, creating tactile, poetic compositions that explore fragility, persistence, and the echoes of memory across time.
Born in Poland and raised in Israel, Yochi studied fine arts in Israel and Italy, earning her BFA from the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan. Based in South Florida, she has expanded her practice to performance and theater, blending visual and experiential forms to investigate how memory is preserved, reshaped, and inherited.
As an educator, Yochi engages students in material exploration and conceptual inquiry, inspiring curiosity, reflection, and creative experimentation. Her work transforms familiar textures and images into layered narratives, inviting viewers to feel the delicate passage of time and the intimate traces of lived experience.
Exploring memory, identity, and the psyche, Marina Font transforms photography, collage, textiles, and found objects into immersive, layered worlds. Threads and fragments become tactile narratives of womanhood, domesticity, and resilience, inviting viewers into emotional landscapes where personal and collective histories collide and reassemble.
Born in Argentina in 1970, Font has exhibited widely in the U.S. and abroad. Her work is held in the MDC Museum of Art + Design, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Frost Art Museum at FIU, and the LOWE Art Museum. Her monograph Anatomy is Destiny was spotlighted by the Aperture Foundation at AIPAD.
By stitching together memory, psyche, and material, Font creates multisensory experiences that pulse with transformation, resilience, and poetic depth, inviting audiences to reflect, imagine, and connect.
Transforming paint, textiles, handmade paper, and found objects into layered explorations of life, decay, and renewal, Miami-based, Mexico City-born mixed media artist Karla Kantorovich draws inspiration from the textures, cycles, and resilience of the natural world. She deconstructs and reassembles sustainably sourced materials into immersive, tactile works that invite viewers to experience the rhythms of nature and the poetry of transformation.
Her work has earned international recognition, including the Ellies Creator Award from Oolite Arts in 2021, which led to her immersive installation AMATE at Piero Atchugarry Gallery in 2022. Exhibitions span prestigious venues such as the XIX Bienal Rufino Tamayo, Museo Rufino Tamayo, MACO Oaxaca, the MFA Exhibition at the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, the Mexican Consulate in Miami, and the Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach.
Holding an MFA from Florida International University, she is also a passionate teaching artist, inspiring dialogue, creativity, and community engagement. Through her art, Karla weaves material, memory, and muse into visual stories that illuminate our profound connection to the natural world.
Bursting with color, texture, and imagination, Magda Love transforms public spaces into immersive stories celebrating nature, humanity, and shared experience. Inspired by Magical Realism and Latin American folk arts, she blends painting, sculpture, textiles, and embroidery to create works that invite viewers to dream, explore, and connect. From New York City murals to intimate mixed-media pieces, her practice pushes boundaries of scale, medium, and narrative.
Her bold, playful, and socially engaged projects have reached audiences worldwide through collaborations with Google, Red Bull, W Hotels, Johnnie Walker, and Hudson Yards, earning recognition from the United Nations, MOMA PS1, TEDx Fulton St., and the Sustainable Arts Foundation. Passionate about education, she works with schools and communities to spark creativity and dialogue.
Born Maria Magdalena Marcenaro in Argentina, Magda weaves her heritage into every creation, exploring cultural memory, identity, and connection. Her work is an invitation to imagine, reflect, and celebrate the beauty and magic of everyday life.
Threads, fibers, and sculpted forms transform into immersive narratives under Aurora Molina’s hands, illuminating aging, invisibility, and human connection. Her work fuses texture, color, and memory, turning the overlooked into tactile, poetic experiences that confront beauty standards, isolation, and societal erasure. Each piece invites viewers to see the extraordinary in the ordinary.
Born in Havana, Cuba, Aurora emigrated to the U.S. at sixteen, pursuing an AA in Visual Arts at Miami Dade College, a BFA in Mixed Media at Florida International University, and an MFA in Contemporary Art from Universidad Europea de Madrid. Represented by Bernice Steinbaum Gallery since 2011, her multidisciplinary practice blends embroidery, sculpture, and drawing into works that are both conceptually rigorous and emotionally resonant.
A committed community-builder, Aurora co-founded FAMA, the Fiber Artists-Miami Association, supporting collaboration, mentorship, and visibility for textile artists. As an educator, she inspires students to explore creative pathways, think critically, and harness art as a tool for personal and social transformation.
Aurora Molina’s fiber art spins threads of memory, vulnerability, and resilience into visual narratives that make the hidden visible, the ordinary extraordinary, and invite reflection, empathy, and connection.
Blending fiber, photography, sculpture, and fashion, Lisu Vega creates immersive stories of migration, memory, identity, and sustainability. Raised in Venezuela and based in Miami, her work transforms materials into tactile, layered narratives that invite viewers into personal and collective experiences of resilience and transformation.
Her pieces have been featured in solo and group exhibitions across the U.S. and internationally, including the Florida Prize in Contemporary Art, Coral Gables Museum, CICA Museum (South Korea), and Kates-Ferri Projects (NYC). Recognized as Designer of the Year at Miami Art Fashion Week, her work is in private collections from Florida to New York.
Through her multidisciplinary practice, Vega weaves material, memory, and imagination into dynamic experiences that spark reflection, connection, and wonder.