Joiri Minaya, on view from July 25, 2026 through May 2, 2027 in the Lower Level Gallery at the Henry Art Gallery, presents an expansive exploration of the Tropics as both a lived reality and a manufactured idea. Drawing from her experiences growing up between New York City and the Dominican Republic, Minaya interrogates how tropical geographies have been historically shaped by colonial desire, fantasy, and erasure. Her work resists these imposed visions, offering instead a space for complexity, self-definition, and cultural agency.
At the center of the exhibition is Minaya’s distinctive use of textiles, a medium she employs as both material and metaphor. Through vividly patterned fabrics, altered garments, and large-scale installations, she exposes how the global image of the Tropics has been constructed, marketed, and consumed. Familiar motifs—lush florals, ornamental prints, and decorative surfaces—are repurposed to disrupt expectations, transforming symbols of leisure and exoticism into tools of critique and reclamation.
Engaging the architectural openness of the Henry’s double-height gallery, the exhibition unfolds through gestures of concealment and revelation. Draped fabrics and suspended forms invite visitors to move through the space, prompting reflection on what is hidden, what is displayed, and who controls these narratives. Seattle serves as a critical point of reference, allowing Minaya to draw connections between distant geographies and shared histories shaped by trade, migration, and colonial exchange.
Minaya’s practice spans photography, performance, sculpture, digital media, and painting, yet remains grounded in a commitment to Afro-Indigenous knowledge systems and regenerative traditions, particularly those rooted in botanical practices. Her work challenges viewers to reconsider how histories are written onto bodies and landscapes, and how art can act as a site of resistance and healing.
Rather than offering a singular definition of the Tropical, this exhibition embraces multiplicity. It invites audiences to question inherited myths, recognize the persistence of colonial frameworks, and imagine new ways of understanding place—ones shaped by resilience, memory, and the ongoing process of decolonization.
Image:
Joiri Minaya (U.S., b. 1990). Container #7, 2020. Archival pigment print. Courtesy of the artist. © Joiri Minaya.