 Everything is on the walls. The walls have become the news. I think it's important to lift up women right now. It's my duty to keep raising their voices. I'm always discovering new murals. It's the best when I discover them running. I love finding the details, especially on the pavement. There's so much art underneath your feet. Sometimes I have to stop running to read something. Just get your attention. It's something about Miami, all these cultures and all these colors. The mural speaks so much of a moment, of a place. You can always go back to history and to see what was going on when that mural was there. I started documenting around 2010. And just little by little, I started knowing the artist. Each artist has a story. Each artist comes from a different place. I'm actually painting this girl Lily in the image she's looking at herself in a mirror. So it's kind of like seeing yourself in color in a more vibrant way. Sometimes you feel like black and white, but you wish you could see yourself in color. Yeah. For people who battle a depression, in a sense, it's like another way of self-reflection. We're trying to actually have an archive. Just like an archives of history. History of the neighborhood, how it changed, how it looked before. Everywhere we're hearing more, the voices of women who are finally helping each other. Now I think, yeah, women are having their place in the art world. If I can do a little bit here in Miami to help that, if I can portray how hard they work for what they want, then I think I'm doing a little bit for everybody.