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Gabriela García D'Alta: Leftovers


  • Walgreens 2300 Collins Avenue Miami Beach, FL, 33139 United States (map)

THE BASS X BAKEHOUSE ART COMPLEX WINDOWS PROJECT

Located at 23rd Street and Collins Avenue in the Walgreens storefront.

Leftovers is a site-specific installation by architect and multi-disciplinary artist Gabriela García D’Alta. This work builds upon her long-standing visual and aesthetic exploration of everyday objects, prompting viewers to reconsider their function and value. The display features a collection of found objects made from polystyrene or plastic #6—commonly referred to by the brand name Styrofoam—that García D’Alta has sourced from friends and family, trash bins and street corners. The installation is a testament to a moment of increasingly unbridled consumption, placing a spotlight not only on what is consumed, but also on what remains.

In Leftovers, García D’Alta presents ready-made, free-standing polystyrene sculptures in various configurations on shelves, stacked like colorful building blocks, and overflowing from commercial one ton bulk bags traditionally used in construction. She also juxtaposes a formal photograph of a polystyrene object with another, taken more casually using an iPhone, of the same object overflowing from a waste container. In doing so, García D’Alta accentuates how a piece of Styrofoam can go from a discarded item to an elevated art object, leading not only to a reassignation of value, but also to a personal and collective reassessment of how one generates less waste.

In the artist’s words:

“The window display as a form allows me to question and challenge the notions of value and materiality that inspire much of my work. It gives me insight into the things that I collect, while allowing me to remain open to unexpected exchanges and surprising outcomes. For me, it’s not only about how we relate to objects after they are discarded or forgotten, but also how we can reimagine their hidden potential. This ignites new questions and conversations that allow me to explore how we might consume more responsibly and reduce our carbon footprint.” 

For García D’Alta, the window display functions as a form to challenge preconceived notions of disposability, inviting the passerby to pause and reflect on their relationship with the material, a tangible reminder of how readily consumers discard things. When an object ceases to serve its intended purpose – in the case of Styrofoam, as a material used to encase or protect – it no longer has any value. When seen within our urban and suburban landscape, Styrofoam, like other single-use plastics that do not disintegrate or cannot be easily recycled, is an undesirable byproduct. Nevertheless, when showcased in a vitrine, a display case, it is recontextualized as an artifact, a human-made object that in the not too distant future, García D’Alta hopes will serve as another kind of reminder – a relic of our time.

About the artist

Gabriela Garcia D'Alta (b. 1982, Boston, MA) is an artist and architect currently based in Miami, Florida. Raised in Caracas, Venezuela, she studied architecture at the Universidad Santa Maria and photography at the Roberto Mata Taller Fotografía. Recently, she participated in the group exhibition Song of Simple Things (2023) presented by Mahara+Co and Art Space 305 and had her first solo exhibition in the US, Disposability Disrupted (2022), at Bakehouse Art Complex, where she has been a resident since 2018.


About The Bass x Bakehouse Art Complex Windows Project

The Walgreens Windows Project is a collaboration between The Bass and Bakehouse. Featuring site-specific projects by emerging and local artists on a rotating basis, the projects represent the shared missions of the Miami-based arts organizations to support art that engages, challenges, and educates. The project is supported by Walgreens.

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Breadbytes: Artmaking for the “Next Generation”

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November 30

BAC: Beyond Any Connotation