Our Neighborhood
Gallery - The Rubell Family Collection
Established in 1964 in New York City, shortly after its founders Donald and Mera Rubell were married. It is now one of the world’s largest, privately owned contemporary art collections.
The collection is constantly expanding and features such well-known artists as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Cindy Sherman, Kara Walker and Andy Warhol. In addition to displaying internationally established artists, the RFC actively acquires, exhibits and champions emerging artists working at the forefront of contemporary art.
Each year the Foundation presents thematic exhibitions drawn from the collection with accompanying catalogs. These exhibitions often travel to museums around the world. Recent exhibitions have been presented at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Palm Springs Art Museum in California and the North Carolina Museum of Art. Sponsors for recent exhibitions have included Bank of America, Puma, Audi, Lanvin and Dedon.

Wynwood Kitchen and Bar
Part of an artistic campus where guests can enjoy great food and drinks, while they lose themselves in the best of contemporary urban art, Wynwood Kitchen and Bar offers a hip, yet comfortable indoor/outdoor setting, with a pop of artistic glamour and color.



O Cinema
Cutting-edge independent cinema located in Miami’s Wynwood Arts District, that specializes in showing first-run independent, foreign, art, and niche market films.






Plant the Future
Art and design gallery where the plants are the stars.
The future is green, the future is in our hands, it is time to Plant the Future. Plant The Future utilizes only live plants (no cut flowers) in its creations, offering a “green” alternative to traditional floral arrangements.

Panther Coffee
It’s hard to miss the coffee house with colorfully painted walls and orange patio chairs in graffiti-splashed Wynwood.
Inside, the industrial space percolates with camaraderie as neighborhood artists and professionals stop in for a caffeine fix.
Owner Joel Pollock was working as a roaster in Portland, Ore.,
when he met his wife, Leticia, at a coffee convention in Minneapolis. She grew up in the coffee region of Serra da Mantiquera in Brazil, and was employed by an Italian espresso machine company.








