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Snake
Stranger,murderer
chokes,bites,constricts
hunter,predator,lizard,reptile
bites,chomps,fishes
chomper,fisher
Crocodile
- Brandon R.
Chupacabra
Tall,Bloody-sucking
Running,Eating,Hunting
Dog, Human, Myth, Story
Sneaking,Hiding,Killing
Terrifying,Brutal
Legend
-Leslie O.
This is just to say
I have eaten
the huevos rancheros
that were in
the refrigerator
and which you were probably
saving
for dinner
forgive me it was really good
so delicious
and so tasty.
-Jocelyn R.
This is just to say
I have killed
the fish
that you asked me
to care for
an which you probably
fed it
loved
forgive me
it was
so much work
and so boring.
-Gloria M.
This is just to Say
I have eaten
the pizza
that was in
the fridge
and which
you were probably
saving
for lunch
forgive me I was hungry
so tasty
and so good.
-Xavier R.This is just to say
I have eaten
the hot chips
that were
in your room
and which you were probably
saving
for the field trip
forgive me
they were so irresistible
so spicy
and so yummy.
-Leslie O.
If happy was a color,
It would be like the big fluffy clouds in the sky
If happy was a taste,
It would be like a sundae with a cherry on top
If happy was a smell,
It would be combined with daisies, icecream, cherry flavored lipgloss
If happy was a feeling,
It would be like when you see your soulmate
If happy was a sound,
It would be like the fireworks on the 4th of July
By Ayleen C.
If determined was a color,
it would be firing red like the biggest fire.
If determined was a taste,
it would be a pepper. because the heat is a challenge
if determined was a smell,
it would be gasoline from the Fastest car.
if determined was a feeling,
it would be power from all the punches and kicks
If determined was a sound,
it would be a car crash from the boom to the tears
Lost
Cocking me
back and
fourth
Let go
Pulling me
down
Losing my dignity
going down in the
drain
whoosh
every last
drop.
-Sirine N.
Best friends are so unique
As if they are ten kinds of people
Then swallowed love
-Aylin D.
The Birds
On smiling spring days
The soft breeze blows as I sing
To the birds chattering
-Zoe G.
Green
A wonderful color
Light, dark, and regular type
Color of nature
-Alyssa P.












Locust Projects Celebrates La Dolce Vita at the Annual Spring Fling Fundraiser


On Saturday April 26th Locust Projects invited friends and supporters to their highly anticipated annual fundraiser, the Spring Fling. The La Dolce Vita theme brought together the who is who of Miami’s visual art scene for the sunset soiree overlooking Miami Beach.
On the 7th floor of the Lincoln Road parking garage, designed by Herzog & de Meuron, a diverse crowd gathered to enjoy culinary delights, wine and cocktails, mingle, and support Locust Projects through the silent auction, which included luxury items and contemporary art works by Daniel Arsham, Michael Vasquez, Justin Beal, Evan Nesbit, Judith Eisler, Ruby Sky Stiler, Sean Duffy, and Anthony Pearson among others.
The Spring Fling, which has become a highlight on the Miami social calendar, also offered music by DJ Le Spam, a fine wine auction led by Eric Larkee, Wine Director of the Genuine Hospitality Group, and the O Miami Poetry Festival poetry station where three poets created poems on demand.
Thanks to the dedication of the host committee, including power-house names like Debra & Dennis Scholl, The Related Group, Art Basel Miami Beach, Leni Sender, Craig Robins, John Speers, Greenberg Traurig LLP, and Holland & Knight LLP the Locust Projects’ signature event was a success again in 2014. Attendees enjoyed every minute of the event and the auction raised essential funding for exhibitions and programming.

Guests included SocialMiami.com publisher Aaron Glickman, President of Northern Trust Ed Joyce, Program Director of the Knight Foundation, Matt Haggman and wife Dane Linares, Art Advisor Lisa Austin, Coral Gables Commissioner Vicente Lago, art collectors Florence & Sheldon Anderson and Isabelle Kowal, gallerists Carol Jazzar and Anthony Spinello, as well as artists like Daniel Arsham, Typoe, Asif Farooq, Agustina Woodgate, Brookhart Jonquil and Jillian Mayer.
Locust Projects, a not for profit exhibition space in the Design District, is known for embracing cutting-edge exhibitions and innovative installations. “We are celebrating more than 15 years of providing local, national and internationally based contemporary visual artists the freedom to experiment with new ideas and methods without the limitations of conventional exhibition spaces. Community support has always been vital to Locust Projects' success and the Spring Fling is one of Locust Projects’ most important sources of revenue for the year” says Locust Projects Executive Director, Chana Sheldon.

Locust Projects supports the local community through educational initiatives and programming that are free to the public. For more information visit www.locustprojects.org

























So much depends
upon
uploaded Youtube
videos
he posted everyday
Asfjerome
beside benja & Bacca
Olympics
The Tissue
So much depends
Upon
A crisp white
Tissue
Swiping off your
Boogers
Beside your messy
Bed
-Sirine N.
So much depends
upon
A shiny IPhone’s
Siri
Who answers my
Questions
Beside the store
T-Mobile
So much depends
upon
a boring math
book
filled with unsolvable problems
beside the tired
student
So much depends
upon
A funny Yellow
Sponge
With a pink
star
Patrick
-Julian S.
So much depends
Upon
A piece of
technology
helping me with
homework
replacing all the
texting.
-Davyana C.
So much depends
upon
a nerdy math
book
that helps my
homework
besides the understandable
science
By Emmanual G.
Tell us a bit on how you got started in your career.
It goes back to school, I guess. I always had a passion for painting and art but then, when I was in college, I focused more towards graphic design. I realized I could not really do both. It was difficult to graduate in both majors. It would take me forever so I put art to the side and focused on design. I graduated and worked in advertising for a couple of years and then I realized I was kind of miserable. I was living with my mom at the time so I was able to save enough money to quit and focus on my art. I have been doing that since 2008. Really glad I did. That’s kind of how I got started.
Please share some career highlights with us.
Some highlights of my career have been getting into mural painting. My first one was in 2009. A lot of my graffiti writer friends were always encouraging me to take my stuff out to the streets and I finally did. I was really nervous. A blank canvas is already intimidating for me so a blank wall was even more so.

What’s the hardest about painting a mural?
To me, the scale and being in public. It’s not my favorite thing. I still prefer to paint in the privacy of my studio. You are vulnerable. People see your progress and the mistakes. I kind of get uncomfortable and it is really hard to cover up. I feel like, don’t look at me, don’t look at me. It’s stressful because you always have an audience. It’s something you have to get used to. Also, it’s different materials. I am still getting comfortable with the spray cans. I am still trying to figure out my technique when it comes to murals.
You have been doing a lot of mermaids lately. Is that a particular passion of yours?
I have always been inspired by Disney. I have always liked the little mermaid. It is one of my favorite cartoons. When I started painting the girls in high school I had a fascination with the fantastical. Fairies and mermaids. The whole mermaid mural thing lately though, I think it happened while I was living in New York. That was my way of feeling nostalgic of Miami. The ocean and stuff like that. It is just like a fluid figure for a while. It seems appropriate for Miami. It is funny that I never really considered that but now people are like, oh, do you want to paint a mermaid? I am kind of falling into the category of mermaid painters. It’s funny.

Are you from Miami?
Yes.
What do you love most about this city?
The ocean. That was the one thing I missed when I was gone. We live really far away from the ocean right now but we try. It’s therapy. Going out there and that’s our back yard and being able to relax and take that all in.
You had moved to New York. Why did you come back?
We were homesick. We did not ever mean to leave Miami permanently. Miami is always home but we wanted to experience living outside of this city for a little bit. The weather was a big factor. The lifestyle in New York was just too difficult.
Did you get to do any work in New York?
I did a couple of murals. I was working hard but most of the time it was for shows in California and Miami. It wasn’t until towards the end of my stay in New York that I started exhibiting there. I exhibited in a small gallery space called “My Plastic Heart.” That’s what sucks, because I just started to meet a bunch of artists. It was sad that I was leaving just as I started building relationships with them.
What was the experience like being in the New York art scene vs. Miami?
I wouldn’t really know because I am a homebody. I wouldn’t get out much. The one thing I did notice was that a lot of the art work I loved and a lot of the artists I am a fan of would exhibit there, where in Miami, you only see them during Basel time. It was always cool to attend an opening and meet them because they were going to be there.
Which artists’ work do you really like?
There is so many. When it comes to street muralists, I love Miss Van’s work. I love her canvas gallery work and her murals. I love Glenn Brown. I like the color palettes of different artists. Right now I like Eric Jones. There are just so many.
Your work always has a central female figure. Has your work always had that focus?
Yes, for the most part. It has always kind of been women or animal based. In my work, I always try to tie in females with nature. I remember in school I was always fascinated by drawing animals. I would always draw cheetahs and tigers and birds. Then it became women.

Why do you relate women and nature? Was that a conscious decision or did that just happen more randomly?
I guess it was just something that happened but it ties into Mother Nature.
Who inspires the women you paint?
She is someone that kind of just came up. People always ask if it is a self-portrait but they are not meant to be. My more recent work, it depends on the meaning and what I am going through. Maybe I put something of myself in the work but the figure is not necessarily me but the message or the symbolism is.
So are they all basically the same woman?
I never really thought about it that way. They are not supposed to be. They look the same and that’s something I want to work on more and use actual models as my reference.
Do you invent background stories or narratives for the women?
It’s funny because each piece is inspired by something super random. It could be a lyric in a song or a quote in a movie. I am really into folklore and mythology, especially from Latin America, Mexico and South America. If it is just a little tale that I heard or read somewhere, I like to base the piece off of that but I let the viewer interpret it themselves. They do come up to me and ask me and some of them do have a back story. It depends.

Where do you see yourself and your art going at this point?
I don’t know. I am excited. I kind of have a little time off because last year was a crazy one with deadlines. I am looking forward to just be experimenting and see where it goes from here. I always stay figurative for the most part.
What is your favorite medium?
The oil paint.
What features of the oil paint are you drawn to?
I love to blend and render and oil paint is just super creamy. It’s my favorite medium. It allows itself to get smooth and blend and it is forgiving and it smells nice. It reminds me of school.
You did a shoe collaboration with Reebok. How did that come about?
I actually met Wayne, who is the artist who represented the New York shoe during Art Basel during my first mural in 2009. A flamingo that is still kind of surviving. She has gotten vandalized a little. I met him and Stash was the one who curated the whole project. He passed my information to Stash and Stash told him to invite me. They needed an artist to represent Miami and they chose me and I was super honored. I was the only female on the project, which was cool, too.
You really incorporated Miami with the gators and the dominoes.
That was the project. All the artists had to do a canvas with your style representing your city. I did the gator. They did not want it to be too feminine, which is a weird request because my work is feminine. Every time I do incorporate animals like reptiles and mammals in my work I try to keep it less cute. I use the grouser animals that people don’t like. I tried to keep it as unfeminine as I could. It was cool. Then they just took the pieces and put them on the shoes. It was a long process.
Are you planning to do any similar projects in the future?
I hope. If I get contacted for something like that again I would love to do another shoe. It broke my heart that they did not do the female shoes so I really hope to get together with them in the future and do a female shoe.
Are you with any gallery right now?
I do not really have any representation. I show a lot. In San Francisco I show with Spoke Art. In Miami not yet. The idea of being represented right now is like getting tied down. I am not ready. Especially in Miami. I am from here so I like to participate in as many shows as I can. I don’t really want to feel tied down. Maybe if the right gallery came along.
Do you have any upcoming exhibitions?
I will be in an exhibition at Known Gallery in Los Angeles. It is going to be a three person show. I still don’t have a date.
How can people purchase your art?
My website has a shop that I need to update and I am working on getting a newsletter set up so people can keep posted. www.tatisuarez.com
What’s your favorite book?
One of my favorite books I have ever read is “Invisible Monster” by Chuck Palahniuk. I also love “Fight Club.” I am trying to get into the habit of listening to more audio books while I paint. I like to work with movies on in the background. I could listen to music but at some point I get stressed out when the song changes. I like to have TV or a movie as background. It is usually movies I have watched a million times so I don’t get distracted. I can quote movies.
Which ones?
Like “Pulp Fiction” and lately it has been “Shaun of the Dead” a lot.
You have a prominent tattoo on your arm. Can you tell us a bit about it?
It is the artist Alphonse Mucha. He is one of my favorite artists and a big inspiration. He is from the 1890s. Very art nouveau stuff. He was a big inspiration when I started painting, especially the way he paints women and their figures and his color palette. He does a lot of seasonal series. I went to Paris and I went to the Louvre and I bought one of his books and came to my tattoo artist here and he did it. We are adding as we go along.
You mentioned artist’s color palettes twice. How important is a distinct color palette to your work?
That’s another thing that sparks inspiration in pieces I have come across like a photograph. If I like the colors, I will try to incorporate that into my piece. Color is important. It changes a lot though. I don’t really have an idea when I start a piece unless something inspires me. The color palette changes as the piece goes by. That’s another struggle with the murals. You have to have more of an idea of the colors cause it is not as easy to change. It is still not super comfortable for me.
What’s the best advice your parents ever gave you?
I am super grateful that my parents have supported me and continue to so. My dad used to paint and he never pursued it. They let me follow my dreams. They never pushed me to do something I did not want to do so I guess the advice is to do what I love and continue to do it and be happy doing it.
Do you have any other news you would like to share?
I am involved in a project at the Marine Stadium in Key Biscayne . It is called Friends of the Miami Marine Stadium. They are doing this project to preserve the stadium and fix it and open it up again for business. The city has been wanting to tear it down. They are getting artists to come down, both local and from all over, and we are painting murals there and documenting it and we will release prints and the benefits will go to the stadium. For more info check out www.marinestadium.org
Primary Projects presents the solo exhibition "The Castle Dismal" by Christina Pettersson exploring her undying fascination with Southern Gothic, the poignancy of ghosts ever wronged.
In a seemingly haunted and eerie space, Pettersson addresses the Deep South through drawing, installation, sculpture, performance, and a series of weekly events.
Says Pettersson, “All this is a way of re-addressing the Deep South, a place I genuinely love and feel connected to. I am approaching this imagery hard, face first into utter desolation. A constant state of mourning. A life where everything else falls around you, until at last you are forced to admit that you may be the cause of it all."
“The Castle Dismal” is on view at Primary Projects until June 20, 2014


A leaf falling
whispering its lonely song
flowing in the air.
Tough nail polish
sparkles shining in the light
smooth as glass when dry.
Skydiving white snow
shimmering in the highsky
why changing colors?
Tides sweep out sand
Crabs, Lobsters, Dolphins, breathing
Coconuts flying
Up in the black sky
The moon shines, leading the stars
But then it moves away
- Alanis A.
I love to have fun
In the shining bright sunlight
Everyday and night
-Jenny F.
Mirror on a river
it grabs you by your
feet and tells you look you’re
an individual
Love is in the air
can't hide the feeling, cheering, smiling
don’t try to overcome it
-Ayleen C.
Twisty turny tail
swaying in the deep blue sea
wrapped in seaweed
-Skye P.
Drops of blue crystals
Falling from the grey pillows,
kiss my cold, wet cheeks.
-Aime H.
Memories remind
Us of friends, family, and life
Those big pictures in life
-Dania C.
A fish of water
Cleaning up the dirt
Leaving others behind
- Cristian U.
A falling tree is
like a ninja in the night
No witness, still there.
-Sean P.