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Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and

Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIAMI FIBER TRIENNIAL 2026

 
 

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIFAMI FIBER TRIENNIA_WhiteL.png
1.jpg
Untitled-4.png

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIFAMI FIBER TRIENNIA_WhiteL.png
1.jpg
Untitled-4.png

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and

Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIAMI FIBER TRIENNIAL 2026

 
 

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIFAMI FIBER TRIENNIA_WhiteL.png
1.jpg
DSC00763.jpg

MIAMI FIBER TRIENNIAL 2026
 

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIAMI FIBER TRIENNIAL 2026

 
 

Presented by Miami International Fine Arts (MIFA) in collaboration with FAMA and Threading the City and its flagship initiative Threading the City. 

MIFAMI FIBER TRIENNIA_WhiteL.png

About MFT 2026

The Triennial is a major institutional platform dedicated to contemporary textile, fiber, and expanded material-based practices.

America250 marks 250 years since the founding narratives of the United States—an anniversary that invites not celebration, but critical reflection. Through textile and fiber practices, the Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 examines how the American project has been built, repaired, controlled, protected, and resisted through material systems such as labor, migration, industry, domesticity, extraction, and care.

Textile becomes a lens through which America is read not as a singular history, but as a layered fabric—woven from multiple temporalities, geographies, bodies, and lived experiences.

In addition to exhibitions, the Triennial will feature a Didactic Room, hosting workshops, talks, and educational programs, alongside a curated program of film screenings addressing textile histories, labor, and material culture within the American context.

The Triennial is a major institutional platform dedicated to contemporary textile, fiber, and expanded material-based practices across interior, collective, and exterior spaces.

In recognition of America250, the program emphasizes the many cultural influences, stories, and artistic lineages that have shaped textile practices across generations.

Through textile and fiber practices, the Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 examines how the American project has been built, repaired, controlled, protected, and resisted through material systems such as labor, migration, industry, domesticity, extraction, and care.

Textile becomes a lens through which America is read not as a singular history, but as a layered fabric—woven from multiple temporalities, geographies, bodies, and lived experiences.

In addition to exhibitions, the Triennial will feature a Didactic Room, hosting workshops, talks, and educational programs, alongside a curated program of film screenings addressing textile histories, labor, and material culture within the American context.

About MFT 2026

About MFT 2026

The Triennial is a major institutional platform dedicated to contemporary textile, fiber, and expanded material-based practices across interior, collective, and exterior spaces.

America250 marks 250 years since the founding narratives of the United States—an anniversary that invites not celebration, but critical reflection. Through textile and fiber practices, the Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 examines how the American project has been built, repaired, controlled, protected, and resisted through material systems such as labor, migration, industry, domesticity, extraction, and care.

Textile becomes a lens through which America is read not as a singular history, but as a layered fabric—woven from multiple temporalities, geographies, bodies, and lived experiences.

In addition to exhibitions, the Triennial will feature a Didactic Room, hosting workshops, talks, and educational programs, alongside a curated program of film screenings addressing textile histories, labor, and material culture within the American context.

The Triennial is a major institutional platform dedicated to contemporary textile, fiber, and expanded material-based practices.

America250 marks 250 years since the founding narratives of the United States—an anniversary that invites not celebration, but critical reflection. Through textile and fiber practices, the Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 examines how the American project has been built, repaired, controlled, protected, and resisted through material systems such as labor, migration, industry, domesticity, extraction, and care.

Textile becomes a lens through which America is read not as a singular history, but as a layered fabric—woven from multiple temporalities, geographies, bodies, and lived experiences.

In addition to exhibitions, the Triennial will feature a Didactic Room, hosting workshops, talks, and educational programs, alongside a curated program of film screenings addressing textile histories, labor, and material culture within the American context.

About MFT 2026

Interior / Intimacy

The personal, domestic, and bodily scale of textile as memory, protection, labor, and care.

Curatorial Frame

 
 


Collective / Urban Fabric

Threading the City as a shared civic surface, where multiple voices converge into a collective narrative shaped by movement, exchange, and coexistence.

Exterior / Living Systems
 
The landscape as an active collaborator, where textile engages ecology, time, environmental responsibility, and non-human agency.

Together, these scales position textile as a critical, spatial, and embodied language operating across intimacy, architecture, ecology, and the urban experience.

Interior / Intimacy

The personal, domestic, and bodily scale of textile as memory, protection, labor, and care.

Curatorial Frame

 
 


Collective / Urban Fabric

Threading the City as a shared civic surface, where multiple voices converge into a collective narrative shaped by movement, exchange, and coexistence.

Exterior / Living Systems
 
The landscape as an active collaborator, where textile engages ecology, time, environmental responsibility, and non-human agency.

Together, these scales position textile as a critical, spatial, and embodied language operating across intimacy, architecture, ecology, and the urban experience.

Interior / Intimacy

The personal, domestic, and bodily scale of textile as memory, protection, labor, and care.

Curatorial Frame


Collective / Urban Fabric

Threading the City as a shared civic surface, where multiple voices converge into a collective narrative shaped by movement, exchange, and coexistence.

Exterior / Living Systems
 
The landscape as an active collaborator, where textile engages ecology, time, environmental responsibility, and non-human agency.

Together, these scales position textile as a critical, spatial, and embodied language operating across intimacy, architecture, ecology, and the urban experience.

Confirmed Solo Exhibitions
By Invitation

Patricia Calero — Suspended Time

Curated by Katherine Chacón

Using industrial seatbelts as material, Calero creates abstract and kinetic works that reflect on impact, protection, and duration. Her practice transforms systems of safety and restraint into tension-filled compositions in which time appears suspended.

Mayra Alpízar — Textile, Intimate Matter
 
Curated by Katherine Chacón

An exploration of textile as a tactile and emotional extension of the body. Alpízar’s work foregrounds intimacy, gesture, and material memory, positioning fiber as a site of vulnerability, presence, and embodied knowledge. 

Confirmed Solo Exhibitions
By Invitation

Patricia Calero — Suspended Time

Curated by Katherine Chacón

Using industrial seatbelts as material, Calero creates abstract and kinetic works that reflect on impact, protection, and duration. Her practice transforms systems of safety and restraint into tension-filled compositions in which time appears suspended.

Mayra Alpízar — Textile, Intimate Matter
 
Curated by Katherine Chacón

An exploration of textile as a tactile and emotional extension of the body. Alpízar’s work foregrounds intimacy, gesture, and material memory, positioning fiber as a site of vulnerability, presence, and embodied knowledge. 

Open Calls

MIFA invites artists working in textile, fiber, and expanded material practices to apply to the following Open Calls:

01 — Solo Exhibition (Room D)
America250: From a Single View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Solo Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, installation, mixed media

  • Application Fee: $60 USD

  • Applicants must become FAMA members to be eligible.
     

Description
This Open Call seeks one artist to present a cohesive solo exhibition that understands textile not as surface, but as a system—a structure tied to labor, protection, control, repetition, and resistance.
The selected artist will engage material histories embedded in everyday fibers—industrial, repurposed, or hybrid—and expand textile language into spatial, conceptual, and political territory.

Proposals are encouraged to explore:

- Textile as an infrastructure or mechanism - Abstraction rooted in material history - Repetition, tension, and time - Expanded textile practices beyond decoration

In relation to America250, proposals should critically engage with questions of labor, protection, migration, infrastructure, repetition, and resistance within the American context—historical or contemporary.

Collectives may apply, provided the proposal functions as a unified conceptual and spatial project and demonstrates a sustained history of collaboration.

Open Calls

MIFA invites artists working in textile, fiber, and expanded material practices to apply to the following Open Calls:

01 — Solo Exhibition (Room D)
America250: From a Single View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Solo Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, installation, mixed media

  • Application Fee: $60 USD

  • Applicants must become FAMA members to be eligible.
     

Description
This Open Call seeks one artist to present a cohesive solo exhibition that understands textile not as surface, but as a system—a structure tied to labor, protection, control, repetition, and resistance.
The selected artist will engage material histories embedded in everyday fibers—industrial, repurposed, or hybrid—and expand textile language into spatial, conceptual, and political territory.

Proposals are encouraged to explore:

- Textile as an infrastructure or mechanism - Abstraction rooted in material history - Repetition, tension, and time - Expanded textile practices beyond decoration

In relation to America250, proposals should critically engage with questions of labor, protection, migration, infrastructure, repetition, and resistance within the American context—historical or contemporary.

Collectives may apply, provided the proposal functions as a unified conceptual and spatial project and demonstrates a sustained history of collaboration.

Open Calls

MIFA invites artists working in textile, fiber, and expanded material practices to apply to the following Open Calls:

01 — Solo Exhibition (Room D)
America250: From a Single View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Solo Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, installation, mixed media

  • Application Fee: $60 USD

  • Applicants must become FAMA members to be eligible.
     

Description
This Open Call seeks one artist to present a cohesive solo exhibition that understands textile not as surface, but as a system—a structure tied to labor, protection, control, repetition, and resistance.
The selected artist will engage material histories embedded in everyday fibers—industrial, repurposed, or hybrid—and expand textile language into spatial, conceptual, and political territory.

Proposals are encouraged to explore:

- Textile as an infrastructure or mechanism - Abstraction rooted in material history - Repetition, tension, and time - Expanded textile practices beyond decoration

In relation to America250, proposals should critically engage with questions of labor, protection, migration, infrastructure, repetition, and resistance within the American context—historical or contemporary.

Collectives may apply, provided the proposal functions as a unified conceptual and spatial project and demonstrates a sustained history of collaboration.

02 — Group Exhibition (Room E)
Threading the City: America250

 

  • Exhibition Type: Group Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, video, performance (wall-based), mixed media

  • Application Fee: $30 USD

  • Open to FAMA members only

Technical Parameters
Please note:

Only wall-based works are accepted

No sculptural or freestanding installations

Works must be suitable for standard gallery wall installation 

Description
In alignment with America250, Threading the City foregrounds textile as a shared surface—one that carries layered histories of migration, labor, tradition, and adaptation within the American context.
 
The exhibition prioritizes works that engage fiber as narrative, abstraction, or cultural memory within a collective framework, emphasizing the city as a woven space shaped by multiple voices and material histories.
 

02 — Group Exhibition (Room E)
Threading the City: America250

 

  • Exhibition Type: Group Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, video, performance (wall-based), mixed media

  • Application Fee: $30 USD

  • Open to FAMA members only

Technical Parameters
Please note:

Only wall-based works are accepted

No sculptural or freestanding installations

Works must be suitable for standard gallery wall installation 

Description
In alignment with America250, Threading the City foregrounds textile as a shared surface—one that carries layered histories of migration, labor, tradition, and adaptation within the American context.
 
The exhibition prioritizes works that engage fiber as narrative, abstraction, or cultural memory within a collective framework, emphasizing the city as a woven space shaped by multiple voices and material histories.

02 — Group Exhibition (Room E)
Threading the City: America250

 

  • Exhibition Type: Group Exhibition

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, video, performance (wall-based), mixed media

  • Application Fee: $30 USD

  • Open to FAMA members only

Technical Parameters
Please note:

Only wall-based works are accepted

No sculptural or freestanding installations

Works must be suitable for standard gallery wall installation 

Description
In alignment with America250, Threading the City foregrounds textile as a shared surface—one that carries layered histories of migration, labor, tradition, and adaptation within the American context.
 
The exhibition prioritizes works that engage fiber as narrative, abstraction, or cultural memory within a collective framework, emphasizing the city as a woven space shaped by multiple voices and material histories.

03 — Exterior Interventions 
America250: An External View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Exterior Interventions

  • Location: Trees, gardens, and landscaped areas at MIFA

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, natural, or hybrid materials

  • Application Fee: $20 USD

Description
This Open Call invites artists to create textile- and fiber-based interventions specifically designed for trees and garden spaces. Textile is approached as a gesture of coexistence, care, and attentiveness—responding to living systems rather than dominating them.

Works may wrap, hang, rest, or suspend from branches and garden structures, engaging wind, light, shade, humidity, and time.

In the context of America250, these interventions reflect on the relationship between American expansion, land use, extraction, and ecological responsibility—proposing textile as a counter-gesture of care, repair, and coexistence.

Key considerations:
Non-invasive and non-damaging installation
Respect for living organisms
Natural, recycled, or biodegradable materials are encouraged
Temporary and time-based works welcome
No nails, staples, or permanent attachments permitted

03 — Exterior Interventions 
America250: An External View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Exterior Interventions

  • Location: Trees, gardens, and landscaped areas at MIFA

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, natural, or hybrid materials

  • Application Fee: $20 USD

Description
This Open Call invites artists to create textile- and fiber-based interventions specifically designed for trees and garden spaces. Textile is approached as a gesture of coexistence, care, and attentiveness—responding to living systems rather than dominating them.

Works may wrap, hang, rest, or suspend from branches and garden structures, engaging wind, light, shade, humidity, and time.

In the context of America250, these interventions reflect on the relationship between American expansion, land use, extraction, and ecological responsibility—proposing textile as a counter-gesture of care, repair, and coexistence.

Key considerations:
Non-invasive and non-damaging installation
Respect for living organisms
Natural, recycled, or biodegradable materials are encouraged
Temporary and time-based works welcome
No nails, staples, or permanent attachments permitted

03 — Exterior Interventions 
America250: An External View

 

  • Exhibition Type: Exterior Interventions

  • Location: Trees, gardens, and landscaped areas at MIFA

  • Medium: Textile, fiber, natural, or hybrid materials

  • Application Fee: $20 USD

Description
This Open Call invites artists to create textile- and fiber-based interventions specifically designed for trees and garden spaces. Textile is approached as a gesture of coexistence, care, and attentiveness—responding to living systems rather than dominating them.

Works may wrap, hang, rest, or suspend from branches and garden structures, engaging wind, light, shade, humidity, and time.

In the context of America250, these interventions reflect on the relationship between American expansion, land use, extraction, and ecological responsibility—proposing textile as a counter-gesture of care, repair, and coexistence.

Key considerations:
Non-invasive and non-damaging installation
Respect for living organisms
Natural, recycled, or biodegradable materials are encouraged
Temporary and time-based works welcome
No nails, staples, or permanent attachments permitted

04 — Activations
Performances, Workshops & Public Programs

 

  • Application Fee: $10 USD

Description
This Open Call invites artists, educators, and collectives to propose performances, workshops, and participatory activations that expand the Miami Fiber Triennial beyond the exhibition space.

Proposals may include:
Textile-based performances
Community workshops
Participatory actions
Artist talks or demonstrations
Experimental or time-based activations

Projects should engage textile as a social, embodied, and pedagogical tool, and may respond to themes of America250, labor, migration, care, and material knowledge.
Selected activations may take place in the Triennial’s Didactic Room, conceived as a space for learning, dialogue, and embodied knowledge exchange.

04 — Activations
Performances, Workshops & Public Programs

 

  • Application Fee: $10 USD

 
 

Description
This Open Call invites artists, educators, and collectives to propose performances, workshops, and participatory activations that expand the Miami Fiber Triennial beyond the exhibition space.

Proposals may include:
Textile-based performances
Community workshops
Participatory actions
Artist talks or demonstrations
Experimental or time-based activations

Projects should engage textile as a social, embodied, and pedagogical tool, and may respond to themes of America250, labor, migration, care, and material knowledge.
Selected activations may take place in the Triennial’s Didactic Room, conceived as a space for learning, dialogue, and embodied knowledge exchange.

04 — Activations
Performances, Workshops & Public Programs

 

  • Application Fee: $20 USD

Description
This Open Call invites artists, educators, and collectives to propose performances, workshops, and participatory activations that expand the Miami Fiber Triennial beyond the exhibition space.

Proposals may include:
Textile-based performances
Community workshops
Participatory actions
Artist talks or demonstrations
Experimental or time-based activations

Projects should engage textile as a social, embodied, and pedagogical tool, and may respond to themes of America250, labor, migration, care, and material knowledge.
Selected activations may take place in the Triennial’s Didactic Room, conceived as a space for learning, dialogue, and embodied knowledge exchange.

Jury Panel

 

All applications will be reviewed by a professional jury composed of curators, artists, and cultural leaders with extensive experience in contemporary textile and fiber practices:

Pit Brant - 

Artist and Educator

Curatorial Panel

 

Katherine Chacón

Marco Caridad

Shirley Moreira

Olga Garcia-Mayoral

Maria Alcala Barcelo

Monica Czukerberg - 
Artist and Educator

Bernice Steinbaum - 

Gallerist

Jury Panel

 

All applications will be reviewed by a professional jury composed of curators, artists, and cultural leaders with extensive experience in contemporary textile and fiber practices:

Pit Brant - 

Artist and Educator

Curatorial Panel

Katherine Chacón

Marco Caridad

Shirley Moreira

Olga Garcia-Mayoral

Maria Alcala Barcelo

Monica Czukerberg -

 
Artist and Educator

Bernice Steinbaum - 

Gallerist

Evaluation Criteria

 

Applications will be evaluated based on:

Conceptual strength and relevance

Engagement with textile and fiber as a critical language

Artistic coherence

Spatial awareness

Professional readiness and feasibility

Application Fees

 

Exterior Interventions: $20 USD

Fees are non-refundable and support jury honoraria, administrative coordination, and the Triennial's sustainability.
Artists may apply to more than one Open Call. Each application requires a separate fee.

Application Fees

 

Exterior Interventions: $20 USD

Fees are non-refundable and support jury honoraria, administrative coordination, and the Triennial's sustainability.
Artists may apply to more than one Open Call. Each application requires a separate fee.

Application Fees

 

Exterior Interventions: $20 USD

Fees are non-refundable and support jury honoraria, administrative coordination, and the Triennial's sustainability.
Artists may apply to more than one Open Call. Each application requires a separate fee.

Evaluation Criteria

 

Applications will be evaluated based on:

Conceptual strength and relevance

Engagement with textile and fiber as a critical language

Artistic coherence

Spatial awareness

Professional readiness and feasibility

Evaluation Criteria

 

Applications will be evaluated based on:

Conceptual strength and relevance

Engagement with textile and fiber as a critical language

Artistic coherence

Spatial awareness

Professional readiness and feasibility

How to apply

 

All applications must be submitted online via Google Forms.
Incomplete or late applications will not be considered.

Applicants will be asked to provide:

  • Basic contact information

  • A short artist statement and project proposal

  • A brief biography or CV

  • Up to 5 images of relevant work (with captions)

  • For time-based or performative proposals: video links (Vimeo or YouTube)

  • Installation requirements and technical notes

  • A brief statement addressing the relationship of the proposal to America250

Each Open Call requires a separate application form and corresponding fee. 

How to apply

 

All applications must be submitted online via Google Forms.
Incomplete or late applications will not be considered.

Applicants will be asked to provide:

  • Basic contact information

  • A short artist statement and project proposal

  • A brief biography or CV

  • Up to 5 images of relevant work (with captions)

  • For time-based or performative proposals: video links (Vimeo or YouTube)

  • Installation requirements and technical notes

  • A brief statement addressing the relationship of the proposal to America250

Each Open Call requires a separate application form and corresponding fee. Fees are non-refundable and support jury honoraria, administrative coordination, and the Triennial's sustainability.
Artists may apply to more than one Open Call. Each application requires a separate fee.

How to apply

 

All applications must be submitted online via Google Forms.
Incomplete or late applications will not be considered.

Applicants will be asked to provide:

  • Basic contact information

  • A short artist statement and project proposal

  • A brief biography or CV

  • Up to 5 images of relevant work (with captions)

  • For time-based or performative proposals: video links (Vimeo or YouTube)

  • Installation requirements and technical notes

  • A brief statement addressing the relationship of the proposal to America250

Each Open Call requires a separate application form and corresponding fee. 

Application Forms

 

By submitting an application, artists confirm that the proposed work is available for the Triennial dates and that they are able to comply with installation, deinstallation, and conservation requirements.

Application Forms

 

Group Exhibition (Room E)

By submitting an application, artists confirm that the proposed work is available for the Triennial dates and that they are able to comply with installation, deinstallation, and conservation requirements.

Application Forms

 

Group Exhibition (Room E)

By submitting an application, artists confirm that the proposed work is available for the Triennial dates and that they are able to comply with installation, deinstallation, and conservation requirements.

Transparency and Conflict of Interest

 

Jury members recuse themselves in cases of conflict of interest

Selection is based solely on merit

Application fees do not influence outcomes

Due to volume, individual feedback cannot be provided

Important Dates

 

Open Call Launch/ March 1, 2026

Application Deadline/ March 31, 2026

Jury Review Period/ April 1–15, 2026

Selected Artists Announced/ April 20, 2026

Triennial Opening/ Thursday, June 11, 2026

Closing/ July 24, 2026

Final Notice

 

The Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 establishes a long-term institutional platform for textile and fiber practices that are thoughtful, experimental, and deeply connected to material intelligence, space, and lived experience.

Transparency and Conflict of Interest

 

Jury members recuse themselves in cases of conflict of interest

Selection is based solely on merit

Application fees do not influence outcomes

Due to volume, individual feedback cannot be provided

Important Dates

 

Open Call Launch/ March 1, 2026

Application Deadline/ March 31, 2026

Jury Review Period/ April 1–15, 2026

Selected Artists Announced/ April 20, 2026

Triennial Opening/ Thursday, June 11, 2026

Closing/ July 24, 2026

Final Notice

 

The Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 establishes a long-term institutional platform for textile and fiber practices that are thoughtful, experimental, and deeply connected to material intelligence, space, and lived experience.

Transparency and Conflict of Interest

 

Jury members recuse themselves in cases of conflict of interest

Selection is based solely on merit

Application fees do not influence outcomes

Due to volume, individual feedback cannot be provided

Important Dates

 

Open Call Launch/ March 1, 2026

Application Deadline/ March 31, 2026

Jury Review Period/ April 1–15, 2026

Selected Artists Announced/ April 20, 2026

Triennial Opening/ Thursday, June 11, 2026

Closing/ July 24, 2026

Final Notice

 

The Miami Fiber Triennial 2026 establishes a long-term institutional platform for textile and fiber practices that are thoughtful, experimental, and deeply connected to material intelligence, space, and lived experience.

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