Live Performance

Joiri Minaya: Venus Flytrap

May 29, 2025 - June 1, 2025

A poster that reads "Joiri Manaya: Venus Flytrap, May 29–June 1, 2025, Bartram's Garden, Philadelphia, PA." The background is a red abstracted image of the shadows of leaves.
Courtesy of BlackStar Projects.

Experience Joiri Minaya: Venus Flytrap, a four-day performance series and summer-long installation at Bartram’s Garden. Presented by BlackStar and curated by writer and editor Dessane Lopez Cassell, the series reflects on the intertwined legacies of freedom, extraction, and ecology in North America’s oldest surviving botanical garden.

Much like a Venus flytrap, the plant this project is named for, Joiri Minaya’s practice often employs beauty before its bite, utilizing sensuality, lush florals and hues to invite deeper reflection on thornier aspects of history and the impacts of colonialism.

Established in 1728, Bartram’s Garden encapsulates the complexities of Philadelphia’s history and our relationships with land. From its earliest uses as a hub for Indigenous trade to the role of founder John Bartram in popularizing Eurocentric notions of “modern botany,” Bartram’s Garden can be understood as a microcosm for the ongoing colonial experiment.

With Venus Flytrap, Minaya extends her longrunning interest in foregrounding the histories and possibilities of local and Indigenous plant life. Together, Minaya and Cassell seek to reveal hidden histories of labor and anti-colonial resistance buried in the grounds of Bartram’s Garden and historic Kingsessing, and their echoes across the Americas.

Learn more via BlackStar Projects.

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Event Information

May 29, 2025 - June 1, 2025

Bartram’s Garden
5400 Lindbergh Blvd., Philadelphia, PA 19143

Maps

 

Thursday, May 29
Opening Performance and Reception: 7:00 pm

RSVP

 

Friday, May 30
Performance at 6:30 pm

Saturday, May 31
Performance at 2:00 pm

Sunday, June 1
Performances at 3:00 pm and 6:00 pm

Organizing Credit

Curated by Dessane Lopez Cassell
Produced by Farrah Rahaman
Choreographed by Jonathan González
Produced by BlackStar Projects

BlackStar Projects creates the spaces and resources needed to uplift the work of Black, Brown and Indigenous artists working outside of the confines of genre.

Fabric designed and printed in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia.


About the Participants

A portrait of the artist Joiri Manaya, an Afro-Latino woman wearing a blue apron over a long-sleeve black shirt. She is standing in front of printing tables in a studio, with colorful stretches of yardage laid out atop the tables.Joiri Minaya is an interdisciplinary artist who works in photography, digital media, film, performance, sculpture, textiles and painting. Born in New York and raised in the Dominican Republic, Minaya describes her multiculturally-informed work as ‘a reassertion of Self, an exercise of unlearning, decolonizing, and exorcizing imposed histories.’ Minaya has been part of exhibitions and screenings at the Guggenheim Museum and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, as well as international exhibitions like the Prospect 6 New Orleans Triennial, the Cooper Hewitt Triennial and the Sharjah Biennial 15. She is a recipient of the Latinx Artist Fellowship, NYSCA / NYFA Artist Fellowship, Jerome Hill Fellowship, Artadia award and has been an artist in residence at the International Studio & Curatorial Program, Light Work, Socrates Sculpture Park and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.

Learn more at joiriminaya.com


Support

Major support for Venus Flytrap has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, with additional support from the William Penn Foundation.