The Wolfsonian-FIU

The Wolfsonian-FIU A museum exploring the inventive and provocative character of the modern world
(430)

Dive bombers over Miami in 1941 👀 It’s Memorial Day weekend on South Beach—with fighter jets, bombers, helicopters, and ...
05/24/2026

Dive bombers over Miami in 1941 👀

It’s Memorial Day weekend on South Beach—with fighter jets, bombers, helicopters, and fireworks overhead. For those of us in the museum, we definitely hear them!

So, we thought it’d be interesting to find something in the collection related to this.. and sure enough, we found an amazing photograph of U.S. Navy student pilots testing bombers over Miami in 1941.

It’s amazing all the different ways history echoes & rhymes!

Happy Memorial Day Weekend! ✈️

Collection, Gift of Michael Hughes
📸 Photograph, “Dive bombers in flight,” c. 1941.

Treasure hunt in the museum! 🔎🏛️Tonight, starting at 6pm, we’re hosting Miami Beach Culture Crawl with cyanotype and pos...
05/21/2026

Treasure hunt in the museum! 🔎🏛️

Tonight, starting at 6pm, we’re hosting Miami Beach Culture Crawl with cyanotype and postcard-making workshops. To celebrate, we’ve hidden six original double-exposure photographs by New York artist Fred Cray throughout the museum.

Find one, and it’s yours. 📸

Cray has been giving away his film-based photographs since 2008—a project later featured in The New York Times. 📰 A longtime Wolfsonian visitor, he returns whenever he’s in Miami, and left these six blue-toned works with us during a recent visit. 🌀📬

Use the photos as clues to their locations. Then join us to make some fun blue photographs of your own during our cyanotype + postcard workshop!

✨ Miami Beach Culture Crawl | Make Your Own Postcard ✨
📅 Thursday, May 21
⏰ 6–9pm
📍 The Wolfsonian–FIU
🏛️ 1001 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach

Love museums? Go outside!Before The Wolfsonian–FIU was a museum, it began with founder Micky Wolfson collecting hotel ro...
05/18/2026

Love museums? Go outside!

Before The Wolfsonian–FIU was a museum, it began with founder Micky Wolfson collecting hotel room keys as a child—a perfect origin story for South Beach, where design history lives not just in the museum, but in hotel lobbies, restaurant menus, architectural flourishes, and all the curious details that often go unnoticed. Even The Wolfsonian was originally a storage company built nearly 100 years ago, as a fortress against hurricanes. These stories are everywhere.

So, this International Museum Day, we’re highlighting one of our favorite museums in the city: South Beach!

We’re beginning with an elegant example of postwar Miami Modern architecture—the former DiLido Hotel, built in 1955 and designed by Morris Lapidus.

Lapidus helped define the MiMo style, moving beyond Art Deco’s aerodynamic shapes toward theatrical glamour, sweeping curves, and dramatic entrances. He designed the iconic DiLido, Fontainebleau, and Eden Roc resorts, and Lincoln Road. He was also a patron of The Wolfsonian.

Today, the DiLido is The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach, just a few blocks from The Wolfsonian and directly across Lincoln Road.

As an official hotel partner of The Wolfsonian, The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach invites guests to make their stay in South Beach a little more interesting by taking a closer look at the many ways society is designed. Walk to The Wolfsonian and show your Ritz-Carlton room key for complimentary museum admission.

Painted in 1928 by Argentinian artist Jorge Larco, “Pareja” celebrates modern, cosmopolitan nightlife at the height of t...
05/17/2026

Painted in 1928 by Argentinian artist Jorge Larco, “Pareja” celebrates modern, cosmopolitan nightlife at the height of the Art Deco era. While U.S. Prohibition pushed cocktail culture underground, Buenos Aires—then known as the “Paris of South America”—embraced it freely. Here, Larco gives us a glimpse into a wondrous, moody world suspended in time by two Deco lovers. What cocktail do you think she’s making? 🍸

“Modern Design Across Borders” explores how life was redesigned around the world at the beginning of the 20th century through objects, materials, and ideas—with different galleries dedicated to streamlined transportation, the birth of Art Deco, coffee & tea design, plywood, and cocktail culture—which is where you’ll find this beautiful watercolor on view through June 28.

Collection, Gift of
🖼️ “Pareja” [Couple], 1928. Jorge Larco, artist. Watercolor on paper.

Some museum objects were made to be looked at closely. This one was made to ride.Manufactured by BMW in 1962, the R 60/2...
05/11/2026

Some museum objects were made to be looked at closely. This one was made to ride.

Manufactured by BMW in 1962, the R 60/2 has instant old-movie magic: black paint, bright chrome, red leather, and a very tempting sidecar—evoking images of a cartoon chase scene or a very stylish European road trip.

Artist and motorcyclist Robert Chambers was one of the rare people lucky enough to ride it, driving the motorcycle from the home of its donors, Dr. David and Linda Frankel, to The Wolfsonian–FIU.

Now on view in “Modern Design Across Borders,” our iconic BMW motorcycle invites a different kind of ride: a closer look at how modern design movements emerged between the world wars and influenced every part of our daily lives.

🏍️ “Motorcycle, BMW R 60/2,” 1962. Bayerische Motoren Werke, Munich, Germany, manufacturer.

🏍️ “Sidecar, Steib S500,” c. 1955. Steib, Nuremberg, Germany, manufacturer.

Falling down the rabbit hole… 🕳️🐇Made for the Federal Art Project in 1935 under the direction of Edris Eckhardt—a pionee...
04/05/2026

Falling down the rabbit hole… 🕳️🐇

Made for the Federal Art Project in 1935 under the direction of Edris Eckhardt—a pioneering female artist who led its ceramics and sculpture division—this figurine brings “Alice in Wonderland” into the world of American design.

Born Edythe Eckhardt, she later changed her name to Edris as she navigated the art world during a time when women were often passed over for opportunities.

Like the Cheshire Cat, she reshaped how she appeared and moved through the world—did you notice the one hiding here?

Collection, Gift of
🏺 Figurine, “Alice in Wonderland series,” 1935–36. Edris Eckhardt, artist. Federal Art Project, maker.

04/01/2026
The painted floral decorations of this desk created 125 years ago show the pictorial talent of Alberto Issel, a well-kno...
03/29/2026

The painted floral decorations of this desk created 125 years ago show the pictorial talent of Alberto Issel, a well-known Italian landscape artist whose career was interrupted around 1880 due to an eye illness.

His decorative arts workshop in Genoa became one of the most successful in Italy by the turn of the century, employing over 70 skilled artisans to create Liberty Style (or Stile Floreale) furniture—the Italian variant of Art Nouveau.

And if you look at the space below the desk, there’s another surprise: a beautiful scene depicting fairies, cherubs, and classic Art Nouveau floral forms printed on soft velveteen, almost like a hidden painting built into the furniture.

Currently on view in our exhibition “La Superba: Genoa and The Wolfsoniana” through June 28, 2026.

Collection, Gift of
🪑 Desk for a lady, 1901. Alberto Issel, designer. Alberto Issel Workshop, Genoa, manufacturer.

The Wolfsonian is not an Art Deco museum. But we do love Art Deco!In our collection spanning the century from 1850 to 19...
03/26/2026

The Wolfsonian is not an Art Deco museum. But we do love Art Deco!

In our collection spanning the century from 1850 to 1950, many of our objects come from the decade or 2 known as the Art Deco era—like the ones currently on view in our exhibition “Modern Design Across Borders.”

🎟️Hint: You should check it out!

But if you’re not in Miami Beach this weekend and happen to be near Sarasota instead (yes, this is a very specific scenario), check out “Art Deco: The Golden Age of Illustration” at Sarasota Art Museum. The exhibition spotlights rare Art Deco posters and illustrations, displayed alongside Wolfsonian objects on loan from our collection.

Among them: an orange vinyl sofa from Cincinnati Union Terminal and a propeller-shaped table designed to hold magazines, both from the 1930s. We’ve also loaned a handful of other Deco-era curiosities that help bring the everyday Art Deco aesthetic to life.

This weekend is your last chance to see Sarasota’s show.

🎟️Second hint: You should check that out too, why not? Museums are fun

02/13/2026

🧸✨Jellycat plush toys escape our Design Store and explore our world’s fairs exhibition after hours—courtesy of social media intern (and stop-motion artist!) Sophia Monteiro.

The Wolfsonian is many things—a museum, library, event space, and a perfect gift shop.

One of the many cool things we carry in the Design Store are Jellycats, and in Sophia’s reel, two of our plush pals sneak out for a little adventure… then wind down with a movie.

Cozy ending guaranteed.

Address

1001 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach, FL
33139

Opening Hours

Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 9pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm
Sunday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

+13055311001

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Wolfsonian-FIU posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Museum

Send a message to The Wolfsonian-FIU:

Share

Category