top of page

Moca North Miami Unveils Fall 2025 Exhibitions Ahead of 30th Anniversary

The Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami (MOCA) has announced its Fall 2025 programming, unveiling three contemporary presentations that reflect on nature, heritage, and environmental stewardship. Opening this November 5, the season’s highlights include Hiba Schahbaz: The Garden, Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams, and Magnus Sodamin’s Floridian Totems—a site-specific installation on MOCA’s plaza.


ree

Timed ahead of MOCA’s 30th anniversary in 2026, the fall exhibitions will be celebrated during Miami Art Week with a public reception on Tuesday, December 2.

“These exhibitions speak powerfully to the values and experiences of our community,” said Chana Sheldon, MOCA’s Executive Director. “They reflect our mission to uplift contemporary art grounded in both local roots and global perspectives.”


ree

Art/Philip Smith: Magnetic Fields

Fall 2025 Exhibitions at MOCA:

Hiba Schahbaz: The Garden

Schahbaz’s first-ever museum survey brings together over 80 works spanning 15 years, including new pieces and a site-specific commission. Curated by Jasmine Wahi, the exhibition explores themes of identity, transformation, and feminist reclamation through dreamlike, mythological landscapes. Inspired by Persian and Mughal gardens, the show blends ancient miniature painting traditions with large-scale contemporary compositions, placing women at the center of mystical and symbolic worlds.

Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams

Marking her first solo museum exhibition, Miami-based textile artist Diana Eusebio presents 38 works rooted in her Indigenous Peruvian-Quechua and Afro-Dominican heritage. Using natural dyes and digital printing, Eusebio merges ancestral techniques with modern design, creating immersive, fabric-based installations. The exhibition will feature naturally dyed gallery walls and host public programming, including dye workshops, to celebrate sustainable craft and intergenerational knowledge.

Magnus Sodamin: Floridian Totems

Debuting September 24 as part of MOCA’s Art on the Plaza series, Magnus Sodamin’s Floridian Totems transforms wildlife sketches into aluminum sculptures celebrating Florida’s ecosystems. Vibrant and reflective, the totems stand as symbolic markers of the state’s ecological fragility and will remain on view through February 1, 2026.

The exhibitions will remain on view through March 16, 2026.

For more information on upcoming exhibitions and public programming, visit mocanomi.org.

By ML Staff. Photos/MOCA


 
 
bottom of page