
Miami/Cuban artist Luis Saldaña will present the exhibition in Miami Resonancesan exhibition conceived around memory, water and the emotional traces left by coastal landscapes. Organized by Gato Gordo Gallery and hosted at the Miami Marriott Biscayne Bay hotel, the exhibition proposes a visual journey where marine textures and organic shapes function as metaphors of memory, displacement and dialogue between nature and human experience.
The title of the exhibition refers to the idea of persistent echoes: that which remains vibrating even after having disappeared. The phrase that accompanies the poster: “Where the water preserves memory and the shore whispers back” summarizes the poetic tone of the project and advances a work marked by references to the sea, the currents and the emotional ties with the territory.
The artist explains that this exhibition “explores water as a sensitive territory of memory, transit and transformation. The works are situated in that liminal space where matter does not remain fixed, but vibrates, moves and leaves invisible traces that persist beyond its form.”
In this way “the coastline functions here as a metaphor: a contact zone between opposing forces, between permanence and disappearance, between memory and present. On these surfaces, water not only flows; it remembers. The pictorial material acts as a transmission system where the visible suggests that which remains hidden but active.”
More than describing an environment, Resonances “it proposes a perceptual experience: an invitation to visually listen to the echoes of time, movement and the invisible relationships that shape our way of inhabiting the world.”
Luis Saldaña has developed a line of work focused on photorealism and the creation of atmospheres where natural elements and contemporary abstraction come together. His pieces usually dialogue with movement, light and the transformations of the environment, integrating influences from the Caribbean landscape and the migratory experience.













