Rezime
Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams is the South Florida-based artist’s reimagining of what it means to build and preserve a sense of home. Drawing from her Afro-Dominican and Indigenous Quechua Peruvian heritage, Eusebio uses natural dyes and textiles to tell stories about memory, migration, and belonging. This first solo museum exhibition features hand-dyed fabrics and digital works that pay tribute to those places the artist calls home: the Dominican Republic, Peru, and Miami, Florida. Field of Dreams reminds us of ancestral traditions and celebrates nature and wisdom passed down through generations.
The exhibition takes its title from the 1989 baseball film which focuses on themes of faith, belief, and second chances. For Eusebio, this title reflects the Dominican immigrant experience: the act of building a new home in a new land.
Field of Dreams takes the viewer on a historical journey. Eusebio creates a variation of vibrant colors found in the natural world throughout the Americas and the Caribbean, with a palette that incorporates seven dyes: avocados and cochineal (cochinilla) for red and pinks; annatto (bija), Spanish moss (itla-okla), and marigolds for yellows and oranges; Palo de Campeche (logwood) for purple; and indigo for blue. These seven core dyes are central to her practice, connecting her work to centuries-old dyeing traditions, from harvesting to boiling the plants and immersing the fabric within the dyes.
This exhibition transforms the gallery into an ethnobotanical garden of art, filled with suspended Spanish moss and soft muhly grass, family portraits communicatively representing layered memories. Visitors are invited to move through this living environment that celebrates heritage, community, and the enduring bond between people and the natural world.
Curated by Kimari Jackson

Diana Eusebio: Field of Dreams is the South Florida-based artist’s reimagining of what it means to build and preserve a sense of home. Drawing from her Afro-Dominican and Indigenous Quechua Peruvian heritage, Eusebio uses natural dyes and textiles to tell stories about memory, migration, and belonging. This first solo museum exhibition features hand-dyed fabrics and digital works that pay tribute to those places the artist calls home: the Dominican Republic, Peru, and Miami, Florida. Field of Dreams reminds us of ancestral traditions and celebrates nature and wisdom passed down through generations.
The exhibition takes its title from the 1989 baseball film which focuses on themes of faith, belief, and second chances. For Eusebio, this title reflects the Dominican immigrant experience: the act of building a new home in a new land.
Field of Dreams takes the viewer on a historical journey. Eusebio creates a variation of vibrant colors found in the natural world throughout the Americas and the Caribbean, with a palette that incorporates seven dyes: avocados and cochineal (cochinilla) for red and pinks; annatto (bija), Spanish moss (itla-okla), and marigolds for yellows and oranges; Palo de Campeche (logwood) for purple; and indigo for blue. These seven core dyes are central to her practice, connecting her work to centuries-old dyeing traditions, from harvesting to boiling the plants and immersing the fabric within the dyes.
This exhibition transforms the gallery into an ethnobotanical garden of art, filled with suspended Spanish moss and soft muhly grass, family portraits communicatively representing layered memories. Visitors are invited to move through this living environment that celebrates heritage, community, and the enduring bond between people and the natural world.
Curated by Kimari Jackson

.png)



.png)


.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)


