![]() Delivery time morning 08:00 am to 07:00 pm.Maximum after making your product we use only external delivery partners, We don’t have any own delivery team, so the delivery side sometimes happened delayed, so better please place your order minimum of 10 to 15 days space for avoiding last-minute delay emergency issues.Mentioned days are calculated by only working days exclude of Sundays and Holidays.Maximum making time takes 2 to 4 Days, after making delivery takes 4 to 10 Days based on your location.Delivery time based on your location and product availability location. ![]() ![]() In case you forget to send the required details within 24 Hours, your order will be canceled automatically after 24 hours and the cancellation amount will be charged (Transaction fee).Please don’t call mentioned number, You can use chat support on WhatsApp.Once send forward to the manufacturing team, then changes are not possible. Send High-Quality images and before sending the image once verify all send the required details.After placing your order on our website, If you ordered customized products, Please send the required details to mentioned WhatsApp number Along with your Order ID within 24 Hours.The title for the show is “Absence Revealed.” It’s about revealing that absence and that loss of someone so dear to me.Please read our delivery process and policy before placing your order. It’s not about revealing the dress completely. If you think about it, very much like archaeology, you start moving the ground and suddenly the optics start coming out. It became a subtraction technique of sorts, of removing and allowing something to come up. I took very light sandpaper and started sanding it, and the pattern of the dress started to show. I glued them in and then decided to glue one of the original wallpapers right on top of the dress. The way that the work was made was by layering a piece of fabric that she took out of Cuba in the 1960s, and her bedsheets from Cuba, which are in pristine condition. The work is a collage of linen, bedding and even some of her personal materials. I found original wallpaper in my home that was covered in flowers. We weren’t expecting for her to pass away. MMC: In December of 2020, I lost my mother suddenly. MW: How does collage appear in your latest work at The Bass Museum? Photography by Maria Martínez-Cañas, courtesy of private collection. Maria Martínez-Cañas, Absence Revealed 003, 2021. If you really look at a photo, if you study a photograph, you’re able to know so much about the people in the image and about the things inside the photograph. I see photography, in many ways, as the ability to tell a story. Suddenly this photo tells me a story of who I am. So I never saw an image of him until much later, maybe not even until I was in my 20s. MMC: I always heard my entire life that I looked like my paternal grandfather, but he passed away when my father was only 15 years old. MW: Your work regularly uses archives to make something new and modern with someting old. MMC: And what’s even more amazing is that he actually said yes! Artist María Martínez-Cañas in her “A Room for Eden (To Ana)” installation at the Frost Museum of Art in Miami. And it just happened that me and this other young girl, we were 17 years old, just walked into a photo gallery and told the guy that we wanted to have a show there. Because I opened my first exhibition in Puerto Rico the night before taking them. MMC: When I knew? The night before taking the SATs. When did you know that would be your career? MW: You had a fascination for your mom's camera from a young age. And to us kids, even though we weren’t able to grow up in Cuba, we’re still able to feel extremely Cuban. Every time there was a Cuban that left Cuba, you would get a phone call that said, “I was able to take your wedding pictures out,” or, “I was able to take these pictures out.” I did not realize it then, but I realize now the importance that photography had for them as a way to introduce our heritage and our roots. could introduce family members or even show us who our family was. Being Cuban exiles-I was only three months old when my parents left Cuba-for my parents, photography was very important. There were musicians, visual artists I think that was a really strong influence in my life. My parents were art collectors, and in Puerto Rico, there was an extraordinary energy of artists Latin American, Puerto Rican, Cuban. MMC: I never imagined that I would end up becoming an artist. MW: You were born in Cuba and grew up in Puerto Rico-how did your childhood and upbringing influence you as an artist? Photography by Maria Martínez-Cañas, courtesy of the artist and Fredric Snitzer Gallery. Maria Martínez-Cañas, Absence Revealed 004, 2021. Maria Martínez-Cañas: Yes, my studio is in my home, so I’m also in my home in the area of Miami called Little Havana. Molly Wilcox: Are you in your studio right now?
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