Pérez Art Museum Miami Announces Acquisition of Artwork by Lubaina Himid at 13th Annual Art + Soul Celebration

February 10, 2026

Evening Honored Fab 5 Freddy and Raised $1.5 million in support of the Fund for Black Art

(MIAMI, FL — February 10, 2026) — On Saturday, February 7, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) welcomed more than 600 artists, philanthropists, and museum supporters to the 13th annual Art + Soul party, the museum’s premier social and fundraising event in celebration of the PAMM Fund for Black Art, which supports the purchase and showcase of contemporary art by Black artists for the museum’s permanent collection. The museum raised more than $1.5 million in support of the Fund.

Event Images: Available for download here.
Photo Credit: Designated in folder names.

During the celebration, Sandra and Tony Tamer Director Franklin Sirmans announced the Ambassadors for Black Art’s newest acquisition, Horn Seller (2023) by Lubaina Himid. Past acquisitions for the museum’s permanent collection include works by Lauren Halsey, Willie Cole, Carrie Mae Weems, Dawoud Bey, Terry Adkins, Romare Bearden, Kevin Beasley, Ed Clark, Theresa Chromati, Ebony G. Patterson, Isaac Julien, Lorraine O’Grady, Faith Ringgold, Tschabalala Self, Vaughn Spann, Juana Valdes, Nari Ward, Kennedy Yanko, and more.

Installation view of Lubaina Himid, Horn Seller, 2023. Credit Morgan Sophia Photography.

Himid is the winner of the 2017 Turner Prize and this year’s representative of Great Britain at the Venice Biennale. A pioneer of art and activism in the Black British Arts Movement of the 1980s, Himid’s Horn Seller (2023) comes from her 2024 exhibition Street Sellers at Greene Naftali, a series of large-scale figurative paintings that foreground the dignity of street laborers. Rendered in vibrant acrylics, the figure of the horn seller stands poised, elegantly dressed, and equipped with the tools of trade. Himid’s composition resists anonymity: the seller is not a generic type, but a subject imbued with agency, presence, and grace. By drawing upon historical prints of merchants and peddlers while infusing them with contemporary resonance, Himid bridges temporalities, situating the act of selling within broader narratives of migration, survival, and cultural exchange. The painting’s scale and chromatic intensity elevate the everyday into the monumental, affirming the seller’s role as both worker and bearer of history. In Horn Seller, Himid continues her lifelong project of rewriting the gaps of the historical record, insisting that the overlooked lives of street vendors are brought to the foreground of economic prosperity, community, and growth.

Himid’s Horn Seller resonates with works in PAMM’s permanent collection that interrogate identity, labor, and cultural history. It dialogues with artists who, like Himid, insist on the visibility of those excluded from dominant narratives. The painting’s scale and vibrancy align with PAMM’s holdings of contemporary figurative practices, while its historical grounding expands the museum’s engagement with diasporic histories and postcolonial critique.

The evening honored Fab 5 Freddy, an artist and seismic cultural figure who helped shape the street art movement and who led the charge of early graffiti artists moving into galleries. The original host of the groundbreaking show Yo! MTV Raps, Fab 5 Freddy’s work in film and television also includes co-producing, starring in, and composing music for the cult classic film Wild Style. This March, Fab 5 Freddy is publishing “Everybody’s Fly,” a memoir with Penguin Random House, which will help retell the history of that cultural moment from his uniquely powerful perspective.

“Fab 5 Freddy’s work has consistently dissolved boundaries between so-called high and popular culture, creating space for under-recognized creativity to be seen, heard, and valued on a global stage. To many, he is a household name—the face of the groundbreaking Yo! MTV Raps and a visionary director for icons like Snoop Dogg and Queen Latifah. But to the art world, he is the bridge between punk and hip hop; graffiti made for public space and made for the private gallery; and the proverbial worlds of uptown and downtown… We are honored to celebrate an artist whose influence continues to reverberate across generations,” said Franklin Sirmans, Sandra and Tony Tamer director.

Guests enjoyed cocktails, music by Deep Fried Funk and DJ Aya, and dancing, as well as a curated dinner by Chef Raheem Sealey.

Attendees also had the opportunity to view the museum’s current exhibitions which include: Elliot & Erick Jiménez: El Monte, the first major museum show by the identical twin brothers and photography duo; Shadows and Traces: Selections from PAMM’s Collection, which presents work by women artists across photography and printmaking exploring memory, identity, and the lasting imprints of lived experience; and Woody De Othello: coming forth by day, the artist’s first solo museum exhibition in his hometown, presenting sculptural works that examine the relationship between body, earth, and spirit through material, form, and ancestral reference.

Proceeds from Art + Soul presented by Baldwin Richardson Foods Co. benefit the PAMM Fund for Black Art. Art + Soul 2026 is made possible by Founding Support from the Knight Foundation and Jorge M. and Darlene Pérez, Platinum Sponsor Miami-Dade County Commissioner Keon Hardemon, and Gold Sponsor J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Additional sponsors include Lincoln Financial Group, CW Advisors, BankUnited, NA and Hennessy.

ABOUT THE PAMM FUND FOR BLACK ART

The PAMM Fund for Black Art was established in 2013 as the Fund for African American Art with a $1 million donation, funded equally by Jorge M. Pérez and the Knight Foundation, for the purchase of contemporary art by African American artists for the museum’s permanent collection. In 2021, PAMM renamed the fund to the Fund for Black Art, to more inclusively describe the various identities represented by the fund, including from Latin America and the Caribbean in addition to the African Diaspora. Through the Fund, the museum first acquired works by Al Loving, Faith Ringgold, and Xaviera Simmons, which joined other significant pieces in the museum’s collection by African American artists such as Leonardo Drew, Sam Gilliam, Rashid Johnson, Lorna Simpson, James Van Der Zee, Carrie Mae Weems, Kehinde Wiley, and Purvis Young.

ABOUT PAMM

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), led by Sandra and Tony Tamer Director Franklin Sirmans, promotes artistic expression and the exchange of ideas, advancing public knowledge and appreciation of art, architecture, and design, and reflecting the diverse community of its pivotal geographic location at the crossroads of the Americas. The 41-year-old South Florida institution, formerly known as Miami Art Museum (MAM), opened a new building, designed by world-renowned architects Herzog & de Meuron, on December 4, 2013 in Downtown Miami’s Maurice A. Ferré Park. The facility is a state-of-the-art model for sustainable museum design and progressive programming and features 200,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor program space with flexible galleries; shaded outdoor verandas; a waterfront restaurant and bar; a museum shop; and an education center with a library, media lab, and classroom spaces.

Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture. Support is provided by the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners. Additional support is provided by the City of Miami and the Miami OMNI Community Redevelopment Agency (OMNI CRA). Pérez Art Museum Miami is an accessible facility. All contents ©Pérez Art Museum Miami. All rights reserved.