Thursday, September 11, 2025

The Contemporary Art Modern Project (CAMP Gallery) presents “Aquí No Pasa Nada” featuring Miami artist Hermes Berrio

 


The Contemporary Art Modern Project (CAMP Gallery) in North Miami is currently showcasing Miami based artist Hermes Berrio in his solo exhibition: Aquí No Pasa Nada. Berrio, known for his intense exploration into the everyday and what may be termed even as the mundane, deftly elevates the everyday to the sublime. Focusing on the often over looked awe that these moments contain, as well as the potential of each and every moment, he speckles his work with mixes of mediums to compel the viewer across the entire tableaux that is his canvas. On view September 5 through October 3, 2025.


Berrio has this to say about the recent series:

 "I  walk,  observe,  absorb,  and  translate.  This  work  doesn’t  begin  in  the  studio;  it  begins in the streets of Miami: Little River, Allapattah, Overtown. I’m not inventing  new realities; I’m amplifying the ones we pass by every day, the visual noise of the  city, the discarded, the improvised, the overlooked.

Aquí  No  Pasa  Nada is  a  series  rooted  in  stillness;  in  the  everyday  moments  that  rarely make it into the frame. A slouched chair on the sidewalk. A sagging wire fence.  A  soggy  cardboard  box  splitting  open  after  the  rain.  These  are  not  landmarks  or  symbols. They’re simply there. And that’s exactly why I paint them. 

These  images  don’t  romanticize  poverty  or  decay.  Instead,  they  call  for  a  kind  of  radical attention;  to  see  the  poetry in  the  peripheral.  Each work is  built  from  real  places and  found moments: an ice cream  truck plastered with chaotic signage and  cartoon stickers; a “No Trespassing” zone turned into a playground for a sun-faded  teddy  bear  on  a  rusted  truck;  an  alligator  crossing  a  handicapped  parking  space,  part myth, part reality, entirely Miami. 

 


Rendered  in  mixed  media;  acrylic,  gold  leaf,  spray  paint,  fabrics,  charcoal;  these  paintings are tactile, dense, and full of interruptions. They mirror the city’s layered,  chaotic  texture.  The  human  figure  is  mostly  absent,  but  never  far.  Every  image  carries the trace of someone: the person who built the fence, hung the laundry, fed  the birds, or left the chair behind. These scenes are haunted by labor, improvisation,  and the quiet resilience of everyday life. 

Miami  appears  here  not  as  spectacle,  but  as  a  patchwork  of  gestures.  The  work  resists  grand  narratives  in  favor  of  the  intimate  and  the  fragmentary.  There’s  no  agenda; only an invitation to slow down, to pay attention, and to notice the strange  beauty pulsing just beneath the surface. To find gold in the gutter. 

These are scenes for no one in particular; which is exactly why they matter."

Between Berrio's work and in the sister exhibition with Katrina Makjut, each artist asks the viewer to slow down, to look and to focus on both possibility and accomplishment - let everything else become silent. 




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