Miami artists Ọmọlará Williams McCallister and Janae Hernandez work with South Florida’s nonnative plants, such as the snake plant and pothos, to explore themes of migration, immigration, and gentrification. For Oxford American, Alexandra Martinez examines how their art transforms these “invasive” species into community teaching tools. In a slow process, Williams McCallister uses snake plant pulp to make paper, “tending relationships one plot and one neighbor at a time.” Hernandez uses aerial pothos roots to create eco-sculptures and gathers discarded materials in the neighborhood to reuse, guided by her philosophy to “compost, rearrange, let the work keep working.”
In Miami, Williams McCallister and Hernandez turn to plants that persist in this heat and ask what they can teach about staying: how to be useful without taking over, how to make tenderness from discard, how to shift “care” from ornamental upkeep to mutual thriving. The artists don’t ask us to love every plant where it lands. They ask us to see the context we created and take responsibility for the landscapes we keep choosing.
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Ain’t It a Cold, Cold World?
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Gobsmacked! Supernatural Sightings After a Flood
“The mysterious wave of goblin-like creature appearances in Eastern Kentucky.”
Saving a New Orleans Banksy
“How a truck driver, a hotelier, and an art conservator brought a beloved street mural back into public view.”
Inside the Dollar General Workers’ Fight for Safety and Fair Pay
“These Louisianans are organizing to transform the stores their communities rely on.”
The Tangled Past and Unsettled Future of Greyhound Racing in West Virginia
“In the home of America’s last active tracks, tradition and uncertainty run neck and neck.”
