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Ximena Caminos is an Argentine art curator,[1]visual artist cultural entrepreneur, and environmental activist recognised for integrating public art with marine conservation and sustainable urban development.[2][3] Founder of the ocean-centric nonprofit BlueLab Preservation Society,[4] CCO of HoneyLab Creative and founder of The ReefLine, a 7-mile underwater sculpture park and marine sanctuary in Miami Beach, and played pivotal roles in establishing cultural districts in Buenos Aires and Miami through Faena Art and The Underline.[2][5][6]. She is a regular collaborator of the Cultural Affairs Management of the City of Miami, for whom she has curated several exhibitions and art installations.[7]
In 2004, Caminos co-founded Faena Art, a nonprofit platform for interdisciplinary art, with developer Alan Faena. She spearheaded the Faena Prize for the Arts, one of Latin America's largest art awards, and transformed Buenos Aires' Puerto Madero district into a cultural hub.[9] She later expanded Faena Art to Miami Beach, curating large-scale installations by artists such as Leandro Erlich and Refik Anadol.[10]
The ReefLine Project
In 2019, Caminos launched The ReefLine, a $5 million citizen-approved artificial reef system off Miami Beach designed to combat coastal erosion and promote marine biodiversity through submerged sculptures. The project, developed with scientists from Coral Morphologic, includes works by Erlich and OMA.[2][11]
Other Key Projects
The Underline: As Artistic Visionary Planner, Caminos integrated public art into a 16-km linear park beneath Miami's Metrorail, addressing urban "scars" through community-focused design.[12]
HoneyLab Creative: Founded in 2018, this agency merges art, sustainability, and urban planning, collaborating with institutions like Claridge's and Faena Hotels.[10]
Awards and Recognition
Knight Foundation Arts Champion Award (2024) for community impact through art.[5]
^Goldemberg, E. (2022). Reef Architecture: Bio-diver City and Submerged Cosmological Infrastructures. In: Carta, M., Perbellini, M.R., Lara-Hernandez, J.A. (eds) Resilient Communities and the Peccioli Charter. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-85847-6_24
^Wakefield, S. (2025). Miami in the Anthropocene: Rising Seas and Urban Resilience. Estados Unidos: University of Minnesota Press.