Paradoxically, Alfonzo made the decision to leave Cuba just 8 months before the opening of the pivotal
Volumen 1 (
Volume 1) exhibition that heralded a new international direction in contemporary
Cuban art, and where Alfonzo was slated to exhibit among those who would later become known as the 1980s generation. Within the decade following his exile from Cuba, the young artist and political refugee was awarded a
Cintas Fellowship in the visual arts in 1983 and a visual artist fellowship in Painting from the
National Endowment for the Arts in Washington D.C. in 1984. His work has been exhibited in solo and group shows on a national and international scale including the
1991 Whitney Biennial, the exhibition entitled
Hispanic Art in the United States, which traveled to seven prominent American institutions, and the
41st Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting at Corcoran Gallery. "His work was represented in the
Outside Cuba exhibition and the
Cuba-USA: The First Generation traveling exhibition." The exhibition included two studies for large murals in Miami. According to César Trasobares, the curator of
Carlos Alfonzo: Clay Works and Painted Ceramics at PAMM: “For Alfonzo, works in clay and ceramic were an integral part of his evolving pictorial expression.”Carlos Alfonzo was the subject of several solo exhibitions in institutions including the
Miami Art Museum, the
Bass Museum of Art in
Miami Beach, the
Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in
North Carolina, and the
Hal Bromm Gallery in
New York. His work was featured in Triumph of the Spirit: Carlos Alfonso, A Survey 1975–1991, published by the Miami Art Museum.
Solo exhibitions • 1990, Greene Gallery, Coral Gables, Florida • 1990, Osuna Gallery, Washington, DC. • 1990, Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, Florida • 1989, Lannan Museum, Lake Worth, Florida • 1989, McMurtey Gallery, Houston, Texas • 1988, Hal Bromm Gallery, New York • 1977, Museo Nacional, Havana, Cuba • 1976, Galeria Amelia Pelaez, Havana, Cuba
Group exhibitions • 1991, "Whitney Biennial", Whitney Museum of American Art, New York • 1990, "The Decade Show" MoCHA (Museum of Contemporary Hispanic Art), New York, traveled to The New Museum of Contemporary Art and The
Studio Museum in Harlem, New York • 1990, "The 11th International Art Exposition", Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois • 1987, "Hispanic Art in the United States" Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas ==Collections==