• Expert Tour: Renaissance to Baroque — Understanding Two Artistic Eras

    Join Lowe Art Museum in comparing the defining visual and cultural characteristics of Renaissance and Baroque painting—from harmony and ideal proportion to movement, theatricality, and spiritual intensity in this expert-led gallery conversation exploring key works from the Old Masters Collection.

  • Women’s & Men’s Voices

    Celebrate the creative life force through movement, storytelling, and bold exploration at the Sanctuary of the Arts with Peter London Global Dance Company. Featuring works by Stephanie Franco, Mar’Kayla Michel, and Kayin Knighton, the program explores the intersection of lived experience, artistic expression, and gender within society’s cultural landscape.

    Peter London’s latest work for six male dancers dives into an intense emotional terrain where traditional ideas of beauty are challenged and transformed, embracing what Martha Graham described as “divine ugliness.”

    The evening also includes A Folk’s Tale by Jamar Roberts, reflecting the depth and resilience of African American experiences, and concludes with London’s Caribbean Suite, a vibrant, carnival inspired finale set to music by Etienne Charles.

  • CHOPIN Salons: World Piano Day with Marina Lomazov

    Celebrate World Piano Day in an intimate and elegant setting at the historic Miami Beach Woman’s Club. The CHOPIN Salons present internationally acclaimed Ukrainian-American pianist Marina Lomazov, praised by The New York Times as “dazzling,” in a special afternoon dedicated to Chopin and the Romantic piano tradition.

  • Gospel on the Road

    Gospel on the Road is a free pop-up performance series bringing the uplifting power of gospel music to communities across Miami-Dade. Hosted by Sylvester Britton at the Betty T. Ferguson Recreational Complex, the event features performances by the Mt. Pisgah Choir, New Sounds of Joy Ministries, Emmanuel Apostolic Church Choir, Deana & Sarah in Harmony, and dance groups Simone’s Just Dance Performing Arts and RickyDanco’s School of Dance.

    RSVP required.

  • Representation Matters: Women’s Lived Experiences

    Closing event for Women’s History Month. This event will begin with a brief recognition of women who make a meaningful impact on our campus, followed by a film screening and conversation exploring how media shapes identity, gender norms, and our understanding of womanhood.

    Using Barbie as a cultural lens, participants are invited to reflect on representation, societal expectations, and the ways women’s lived experiences are portrayed—and challenged—on screen. A post-screening discussion will provide space for thoughtful dialogue, critical reflection, and shared perspectives.

  • nightLAB: Forces of Nature

    Prepare to be blown away at nightLAB: Forces of Nature, an adults-only (21+) evening inspired by the wild mechanics of wind, waves, storms and motion. Explore the museum after hours as science comes alive through high-energy experiments, interactive programming and special experiences throughout the building.

    Journey into the Frost Planetarium for Wildest Weather in Our Solar System, produced by National Geographic, and witness the beautiful, powerful and mysterious weather phenomena shaping worlds beyond our own. Connect with community partners, wander through select exhibitions at night, and experience the museum in a whole new way.

  • The Audience

    Location: Coral Gables Art Cinema

    For 60 years, Queen Elizabeth II met with each of her 12 prime ministers in a private weekly meeting. This meeting is known as The Audience. From Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher and David Cameron, the Queen advised her prime ministers on matters both public and personal. Through these private audiences, we see glimpses of the woman behind the crown and witness the moments that shaped a monarch. Peter Morgan’s Netflix phenomenon The Crown was based on this hit play that was captured live from London’s West End in 2013 and went on to become one of the most-watched NT Live productions.

    This production includes an intermission. The screening on Friday, April 4 features open captions as part of our commitment to make programs more accessible to d/Deaf and hard of hearing audiences.

  • My Neighbor Totoro

    Location: Coral Gables Art Cinema

    One of the most endearing films ever made for children, My Neighbor Totoro, is a deceptively simple tale of two girls, Satsuki and Mei, who move with their father to a new house in the countryside while he cares for their ailing mother.

    They soon discover that the surrounding forests are home to a family of Totoros, gentle but powerful creatures who live in a huge and ancient camphor tree and are seen only by children. But beneath the film’s playfulness and narrative simplicity lie depths of wisdom.

    As with much of Miyazaki’s work, My Neighbor Totoro is infused with an almost spiritual reverence for the power of nature. Like Satsuki and Mei, audiences are left with a sense of wonder at the beauty, mystery, and preciousness of the world around us.

    Saturday, April 4 – 11:00 AM – Japanese with English subtitles

    Sunday, April 5 – 11:00 AM – English dubbed

  • The Ten Commandments

    Location: Coral Gables Art Cinema

    Easter Weekend Special Screening

    For sheer pageantry and spectacle, few motion pictures can claim to equal the splendor of Cecil B. DeMille’s 1956 remake of his epic The Ten Commandments. Filmed in Egypt and the Sinai with one of the biggest sets ever constructed for a motion picture, this version tells the story of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston), once favored in the Pharaoh’s (Yul Brynner) household, who turned his back on a privileged life to lead his people to freedom.

    This film includes a 10-minute intermission.

  • An Evening With Meow Meow

    Location: The Dennis C. Moss Cultural Arts Center

    International siren and comedienne extraordinaire Meow Meow brings her glorious brand of subversive and sublime to North America. The spectacular crowd-surfing queen of song creates an unforgettable evening of exquisite music and much mayhem.

    Prepare for Piazzolla tangos, Weill, Brecht, Brel, and even Radiohead alongside original chansons. With Bowie and Pina Bausch as curators of her work, Meow is an award-winning phenomenon, from Shanghai to the dives of Berlin, on London’s glittering West End, to Lincoln Center, Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall, the London Philharmonic Orchestra and at Shakespeare’s Globe in London.