Vered Shamir Pasternak
Miami, FL
Miami‑based visual artist examining memory, displacement, and the search for home.
MessageBio – Vered Shamir Pasternak
Vered Shamir Pasternak is an Israeli‑born artist whose early life in the rural landscape of Hod Hasharon shaped her sensitivity to place, belonging, and identity—themes that continue to anchor her artistic practice. After completing two years of military service, she pursued formal training at the Kalisher School of Art in Tel Aviv, graduating in 1989. Her education immersed her in the vibrant Tel Aviv art scene, where she began developing the visual language that would later define her work.
In 2001, Pasternak relocated to Miami, Florida, a move that profoundly influenced her creative direction. Navigating the challenges of immigration—including cultural dislocation, loneliness, and the search for community—became central to her artistic inquiry. Her work explores the emotional terrain of “home,” examining the tension between memory and reinvention, displacement and rootedness. This ongoing exploration has shaped a body of work that is both deeply personal and universally resonant.
Since 2015, Pasternak has presented three solo exhibitions and participated in numerous group shows in the United States and abroad. Most recently, her work was featured in the 2024 Venice Biennale as part of the group exhibition America: Land of Dreams, curated by Dr. Milagros Bello. Her pieces are held in private collections, reflecting a growing recognition of her distinctive voice and her commitment to examining the immigrant experience through contemporary art.
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Statement
My work is an ongoing investigation into the idea of HOME — a concept that is both deeply personal and universally human. I am drawn to the emotional spaces that exist between belonging and displacement, memory and present reality, rootedness and uprootedness. As an immigrant, I inhabit these in‑between spaces daily, and my art becomes the place where I can question, rebuild, and redefine what HOME means.
I approach this theme through portraiture, symbolism, and material experimentation. Whether I am painting a face, constructing a nest, or layering cyanotype with woven threads, I am searching for the emotional architecture of belonging. I am interested in the fragile structures we build to feel safe — the internal shelters we carry, the memories we return to, and the identities we reconstruct when the familiar is lost.
My three major series — Stop Homelessness, Nests, and Childhood Memories — each explore a different facet of this search. In one, I confront the visibility and invisibility of those who live without physical shelter. In another, I examine the instinctive human need to create a place of safety. In the third, I revisit the sensory world of my early life, where the first definitions of HOME were formed. Together, these bodies of work map the emotional terrain of migration: the longing, the resilience, the grief, and the quiet hope.
I work across watercolor, oil, charcoal, ink, and watercolor pencil, and in recent years I have expanded my practice to include cyanotype and weaving. These techniques allow me to physically layer time, memory, and identity — to weave together fragments of past and present, light and shadow, loss and reconstruction. The process itself becomes a metaphor for the immigrant experience: assembling a sense of self from pieces that do not always fit neatly together.
Ultimately, my work is an invitation to reflect on the universal human need for belonging. Through the lens of my own journey, I hope to create space for viewers to consider their own definitions of HOME — and to recognize the shared vulnerability and strength that connect us across cultures and borders.
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