Past

    MOAD Artist Residency Featuring Loni Johnson

    July 1, 2024 - November 30, 2024

    Open Studio: 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

    October 17

    October 24

    Miami Dade College Homestead Campus
    500 College Terrace, Homestead, FL 33030
    Building C, Room C405

    This summer through fall, MOAD Projects is pleased to host artist Loni Johnson for an artist residency at Miami Dade College's Homestead Campus. The artist will use the campus's gallery as a space in which to create new work.

    Loni Johnson is a multi-disciplinary visual artist born and raised in Miami, FL. As an artist, educator, mother, and activist, Johnson's work is rooted in family history and spiritual traditions. For Johnson, there is a cyclical obligation to give back and nurture our communities with her creative gift and it must be utilized to better our world. Through movement and ritual, the artist explores how ancestral and historical memory informs how, when and where we enter and claim spaces. Johnson graduated in 2003 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from SUNY at Purchase College School of Art and Design.

    Selected exhibitions and performances include: Remnants at Locust Projects, Miami, (2021); Making Visible: The Studio Archives of Chire Regans and Loni Johnson, WAAM at Dimensions Variable, Miami (2020); Say Their Names, Chire Regans/Vanta Black Memorial Mural Project Unveiling, Bakehouse Art Complex, Miami (2020); Performans Fanm/Global Borderless Caribbean XII: Focus Miami, Little Haiti Cultural Arts Center, Miami (2020). MOAD is proud to offer artists spaces to create in Miami, while at the same time providing MDC students and the community with the opportunity to learn from working artists.

    MOAD's programs are made possible with the support of the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor, and Board of County Commissioners. They are sponsored in part by the State of Florida through the Division of Arts and Culture and the National Endowment for the Arts, and with generous support from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. The Miami Herald is a media sponsor of MOAD's programming.

    Photo by World Red Eye, courtesy of Locust Projects.