Meet Andrea Sofia R. Matos | Art Administrator, Curator & Artist

We had the good fortune of connecting with Andrea Sofia R. Matos and we’ve shared our conversation below.
Hi Andrea Sofia, what led you to pursuing a creative path professionally?
I owe the beginning of my artistic/creative career entirely to my mother. She was the one, who besides all of my ignorance, decided to enroll me in the best specialized high school for the visual arts in Puerto Rico. She gave me an opportunity to begin an artistic career that surrounded me with wonderful peers and thoughtful professors all of which cemented my desire to become an artist, increased my passion for art history, and gave me a comprehensive entry into the contemporary art scene. I was lucky enough to realize early on that I wanted a career in the visual arts and so I went out of my way to search for ways to meet artists, curators, and cultural workers around me and eventually landed a volunteering opportunity at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Puerto Rico. This granted me an opportunity of being recruited by a local arts magazine, festivals, and art fairs. After all these experiences visiting artists’ studios, assisting workers at the museum, installing exhibitions, writing articles about recent shows, and making photo essays about my cultural encounters, I was convinced that I would someday become a leader in the arts. This is still my goal and is definitely still a work in progress but I am grateful now more than ever to that early humanitarian and artistic education I was given because it forged the path I am on now.

Let’s talk shop? Tell us more about your career, what can you share with our community?
My career began in the contemporary art scene in Puerto Rico, but once I moved to Miami to pursue my undergraduate education I quickly became enamored by the incredibly diverse local art scene and how the city was trying to make its mark in the global art scene and its success in doing so. My practice, both curatorial and artistic, focuses on the art and culture of the Caribbean and Latinx communities.
My journey here began at LnS Gallery, a local art gallery run by Luisa Lignarolo and Sergio Cernuda. I was brought in as an intern and was then offered a part-time job as a gallery assistant. My time here was valuable in many ways, especially for the connection I made with local artists, curators, and collectors. Their generosity gave me several opportunities to grow in different skills. By far the most rewarding experience was the ‘Carlos Alfonzo: Witnessing Perpetuity’ exhibition, where I was able to photograph the artwork and research the artist’s life and work. The pandemic was a definite surprise for us all, and after a couple of months of unemployment, I was able to begin an internship at the Margulies Collection of world-renowned art collector Martin Z. Margulies. In my short time there, I am proud of all the work I aided in the launch of the Photography Study Center, a space devoted to the education and research of contemporary and vintage photography. Simultaneously, I got an internship at The Women Photographers International Archive (WOPHA) a digital archive dedicated to promoting and researching, in partnership with other organizations, the plurality of female, trans, queer, and other non-binary voices in photography. One of the biggest challenges of my career has been tasked to work in the overall event planning, coordination, and production of the first-ever WOPHA Congress a two-day symposium with internationally recognized photographers and curators.

If you had a friend visiting you, what are some of the local spots you’d want to take them around to?
Art Spaces:
– Locust Projects
– Oolite Arts
– Bakehouse Art Complex
– Laundromat Art Space
– Spinello Projects
Private Art Collections:
– The Margulies Collection
– Rubell Museum
Art Galleries:
– LnS Gallery
– Mindy Solomon Gallery
– Fredrick Snitzer Gallery
As much as I love the visual arts, I adore music and cinema. Here are some spots to indulge in great live music and films.
Live Music:
– Gramps Wynwood
– The Anderson
– Center for Subtropical Affairs
– Las Rosas
– Kill Your Idol
Films:
– Coral Gables Art Cinema
– MDC Tower Theater
– O Cinema
– Cinema Paraiso

The Shoutout series is all about recognizing that our success and where we are in life is at least somewhat thanks to the efforts, support, mentorship, love and encouragement of others. So is there someone that you want to dedicate your shoutout to?

Website: https://www.andreasofiarm.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andreasofiarmatos/
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreasofiarm/
