• City Reads: Global Majority

    Experience an evening of powerful storytelling with City Theatre’s City Reads, a series of short plays that center the voices and experiences of the people who make up most of the world. Through humor, honesty, and heart, these stories explore themes of family, identity, and love in ways that feel both intimate and deeply relatable.

    Each gathering features live readings by leading local actors, paired with music and guided conversation, creating a welcoming space for connection and reflection. Hosted in accessible venues across Miami, City Reads invites audiences to engage with theatre in a meaningful and community driven way.

    Free and open to all, this is theatre woven into the fabric of everyday life.

  • Orchestra Miami Presents Beethoven on the Beach

    Experience an evening of powerful orchestral music featuring husband and wife duo Karen Lord Powell and Brian Powell performing Bottesini’s Gran Duo Concertante for Violin and Bass. The program also includes Beethoven’s lively Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92, Louise Farrenc’s Overture No. 1, and more, performed by a 36 piece orchestra led by Artistic Director Elaine Rinaldi.

    Admission is free with advance reservation on a first come, first served basis. Guests can reserve premium front seating for $25, while a minimum $10 donation will be requested at the door for those without a reservation.

  • CURATOR TALKS: Amber Esseiva

    Join Locust Projects for the return of its acclaimed Curator Talks series, presented by Vivant. This dynamic program brings together emerging and established curators to share their vision, creative process, and the ideas shaping contemporary art today, while engaging directly with Miami based artists through studio visits and dialogue.

    This session features Amber Esseiva, a Swiss Senegalese American curator and educator currently serving as Senior Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs at ICA VCU and Curator at Large for The Studio Museum in Harlem. Known for her impactful exhibitions and support of emerging and mid career artists, Esseiva offers insight into her practice and the evolving landscape of contemporary curating.

  • Miami City Ballet: Carmen

    Annabelle Lopez Ochoa’s fiery Carmen returns for an encore that’s bold and unforgettable.

    This powerful production brings fresh perspective to the iconic tale, blending classical ballet with flamenco flair and Ochoa’s signature and sensual theatricality. Set to a rich new arrangement of Bizet’s beloved score, Carmen commands the stage with passion, power and a heroine who owns her story. Fierce, fearless and captivating, Carmen is back.

  • André Is an Idiot

    South Florida Theatrical Premiere

    A celebration of life filled with raw honesty, surreal bursts of imagination, and brazen irreverence, André Is an Idiot shows us what it really means to live happily, truthfully, and hilariously. In this Sundance award winning documentary, André Riccardi sets out to chronicle his final journey after receiving a diagnosis he could have prevented, through comedic vérité storytelling and fantastical stop-motion interludes.

    Red Carpet Opening Night Event – Fri. 3/27
    Reception at 7:30 PM
    Film followed by a Q&A with director Tony Benna, moderated by Allison Rose at 8:00 PM

    Film and Q&A Event – Sat. 3/28
    Film followed by a Q&A with director Tony Benna, moderated by Allison Rose at 1:30 PM

  • Palestine ’36

    Join Coral Cables Arts Cinema as they take you to 1936. As villages across Mandatory Palestine rise against British colonial rule, Yusuf drifts between his rural home and the restless energy of Jerusalem, longing for a future beyond the growing unrest. But history is relentless. With rising numbers of Jewish immigrants escaping antisemitism in Europe, and the Palestinian population uniting in the largest and longest uprising against Britain’s 30-year dominion, all sides spiral towards inevitable collision in a decisive moment for the British Empire and the future of the entire region.

    Palestine ’36 was selected as the Palestinian entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 98th Academy Awards®.

  • Artist Reception: Aesthetics of Decay

    The Betsy Hotel invites you to an Artist Reception for Aesthetics of Decay by Miami-based transmedia artist . Experience this immersive XR cinematic installation with live instrumentation as the hotel’s iconic Orb bridge becomes a luminous public screen for one night only. Don’t miss this unique celebration of art, technology, and storytelling in the heart of South Beach. For more details contact The Betsy Hotel, concierge@thebetsyhotel.com

  • Miami City Ballet Presents: Jewels

    Enter a world of glamour, elegance and pure delight in George Balanchine’s Jewels, a three-part visual feast of color, light and musicality.

    Emeralds shimmers with French romanticism, set to the dreamy melodies of Fauré. Rubies crackles with jazzy energy and wit, driven by Stravinsky’s bold rhythms. And Diamonds dazzles with sweeping Tchaikovsky, bringing the evening to a radiant and refined close.

    Three distinct gems. One legendary masterpiece. This is Balanchine brilliance at its most radiant.

  • 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.