Field Work

Wynwood
Chronicles.

Chromatic Archaeology · Miami · May 2016

Before the doors closed.
Before the walls were repainted.

The Premise

My first time in Wynwood was May 2016 — I had no memory of the place before, only the photographs of what I found.

Twelve months earlier, the City of Miami had rezoned the corridor from light-industrial to mixed-use. Galleries — once close to seventy — began to thin. Studios were sold. Murals were painted over. Commerce moved in, then moved out again.

I did not come to celebrate the murals. I came to document what the city was preparing to erase: the storefronts that would close, the surfaces that would be repainted, the artists who signed in 2014 and were already being painted over by 2016.

This is an archaeology. Not a promotion.

Wynwood Chronicles is a two-tense project. May 2016 — what was there. 2024–2025 — what is no longer there. Between the two: the photographic record of a neighborhood becoming something else.

I photograph what the world is about to lose.

The Pivot · 2015 → 2016 → Now

2015.

City of Miami rezones Wynwood from Light Industrial to Mixed-Use. Vertical development becomes legal.

May 2016.

Twelve days on the ground. Three cameras. The walls as they stood, twelve months after the change.

Galleries thinned.

From close to seventy operating studios in the corridor between 2014 and 2016, to roughly fifteen by 2025. The trajectory is well documented.

2024–25.

Same coordinates, looked up via Google Street View and Apple Look Around. Different walls. Different commerce. Different city.

Four Chapters · One Survey

The corridor, organized by what it taught me.

01

Chromatic Monoliths

Single colors. Architectural surfaces. The wall as field.

Walls in one tone, encountered as Rothko encountered canvases. Yves Klein blue against a passing cyclist. Ultramarine geometries. Bougainvilliers against a pink cab. Color reduced to architecture; architecture reduced to color.

02

Monochrome Territory

Black, white, silver. Wynwood's other palette.

Beneath the chromatic surface, a quieter Wynwood: industrial doors, abandoned Cadillacs, railway crossings, numbered facades. The neighborhood as the Bechers might have read it — typology, not spectacle.

03

Urban Artifacts

Objects, fences, surveillance. The street's voice without the artist.

Empty parking lots, shoes hanging from wires, security cameras under stars, parking shutters, vehicles caught in light. The infrastructure that frames the murals and outlasts them.

04

Signs & Typography

The vernacular alphabet of the street. Walker Evans, refracted.

"BE WHAT YOU DREAM." "PARK AT YOUR OWN RISK." Numbers. Arrows. One-way signs collaged with stickers. The literal language of a neighborhood, recorded as it spoke before it was edited.

Chapter 01 · Chromatic Monoliths

Single colors. Architectural surfaces. The wall as field.

Walls in one tone, encountered as Rothko encountered canvases.

Yves Klein blue against a passing cyclist. Ultramarine geometries. Bougainvilliers against a pink cab. Color reduced to architecture; architecture reduced to color. These are the murals stripped of narrative — the chromatic ground on which everything else, in 2016, was still painted.

Three frames from the corridor.

Chapter 02 · Monochrome Territory

Black, white, silver. Wynwood's other palette.

Beneath the chromatic surface, a quieter Wynwood.

Industrial doors, abandoned Cadillacs, railway crossings, numbered facades. The neighborhood as the Bechers might have read it — typology, not spectacle. The infrastructure that the murals decorated, photographed without them.

Three frames from the quieter side.

Chapter 03 · Urban Artifacts

Objects, fences, surveillance. The street's voice without the artist.

Empty parking lots, shoes hanging from wires, security cameras under stars.

Parking shutters, vehicles caught in light. The infrastructure that frames the murals and outlasts them — the mute witnesses of a corridor in transition. What was there before the artists arrived. What remained after they left.

Three frames from the in-between.

Chapter 04 · Signs & Typography

The vernacular alphabet of the street. Walker Evans, refracted.

"BE WHAT YOU DREAM." "PARK AT YOUR OWN RISK." "PLACE 2 KISS."

Hand-painted invitations to behave — to dream, to park at your own risk, to kiss in the right place. Three voices speaking from three altitudes: the philosophical, the administrative, the intimate. The literal language of a neighborhood, recorded as it spoke before it was edited — before the language itself became a brand.

Three frames from the alphabet.

Then / Now

Same coordinates. Different city.

Each pair below sits at one set of GPS coordinates in Wynwood. The left frame is from May 2016 — my photographs from twelve days on the ground. The right frame was looked up via Google Street View and Apple Look Around in 2024–2025. The interval was not edited — every change you see happened on its own.

Some walls were repainted. Some commerce was replaced, then replaced again. One business, in 2024, painted "We Are Moving To Downtown Soon" on the very wall that, in 2016, belonged to a different business that had already moved away. Wynwood archives itself.

Scroll horizontally to walk the corridor →

Methodology · A Note

Documentary protocol, photographic chain of custody.

RAW

Native camera files preserved with timestamp metadata. Available for verification by acquiring institutions.

Consent

Bilingual EN/FR consent forms used for every recognizable person. Archived.

Attribution

Where signatures or tags identify a street artist, the work is presented as documentation of their authorship — not as appropriation. Catalog notes credit each visible signature where legible.

Lineage

This survey acknowledges Walker Evans, Bernd & Hilla Becher, Martha Cooper, and Henry Chalfant as documentary precedents. Wynwood Chronicles builds on, rather than repeats, that record.

Institutional Statement

Wynwood Chronicles is available for museum acquisitions, institutional exhibitions, and curatorial conversations.

Enquiries are welcome.

Ludovic Cazeba · Grimaud, France

For Galleries · Curators · Collectors

Request the Institutional Dossier

The full dossier — extended statement, image inventory, edition architecture, exhibition history, biography — is shared on a per-request basis with verified institutional and private interlocutors.

Request the Dossier

private@cazeba.com · Response within 72 hours

In Development · Companion Project

Wynwood Voices — a podcast in preparation.

A small series of recorded conversations with the people whose businesses, walls, and presence in the corridor shaped Wynwood between 2014 and today. Specifics will be announced when the first episodes are confirmed.

Coming · 2026

Recognition

International Photography Awards (IPA) — Honorable Mention, Advertising & People (2007). Recent IPA recognitions in Landscape and People. Eighteen years of continuous documentary practice.

Lineage

Walker Evans · Bernd & Hilla Becher · Martha Cooper · Henry Chalfant · Denise Scott Brown.

Enquiries

private@cazeba.com
Grimaud · France