Just Below the Surface: 1896 (The Incorporation of the City of Miami)

Xavier Cortada, “Just Below the Surface: 1896 (The Incorporation of the City of Miami),” archival ink on paper, 2018.

Xavier Cortada, “Just Below the Surface: 1896 (The Incorporation of the City of Miami),” archival ink on paper, 2018. (Limited edition print: 16″ x 12″ series; edition of 5).

About the work
In creating the work,
Xavier Cortada used a microscope to photograph shells of diatoms preserved in sedimentary core samples.

#Diatoms harness the power of the sun to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. They are responsible for generating one-third of the oxygen on the planet. These single-celled aquatic organisms are studied by FIU #scientists to research what was as they address environmental concerns in the century to come.

The diatom depicted in the foreground was living on #BiscayneBay in 1896. It was creating the very air City of #Miami #Incorporators breathed as they stood in a pool hall on the North Bank of the #MiamiRiver and brought the city to life. 

The background utilizes imagery from Cortada’s “The Incorporators” mural that permanently hangs at the entrance of Miami #CityHall.

Special thanks to Dr. Evelyn Gaiser and her Fce Lter Florida Coastal Everglades LTER (Long Term Ecological Research) team at the Florida International University and FIU School of Environment, Arts and Society#

On exhibit
The work is on display at the Miami River Show through February 19th at the
Hibiscus Gallery in Pinecrest Gardens.
See http://cortada.com/event/2018/miamiriver