Twin icon of Miami Beach art and party scene dies

Haydée Scull, half of the colorful Cuban twin-sister act who created fanciful mixed-media artwork and spiced up the Miami Beach party scene in over-the-top matching outfits, died suddenly Tuesday at her Collins Avenue apartment, probably of a heart attack, said her daughter, Elizabeth Blandino.

Haydée and her sister, Sahara, are of deliberately indeterminate age, born in Havana on Dec. 5 ''in the 1930s,'' Blandino said.
Haydée once told The Miami Herald that she did the backgrounds and faces, Michael did the bodies and Sahara did streetlights and other details. ''It's like an orchestra,'' Haydée said. "Always we have the same inspiration, always the same idea. Always we work together and always smile when working because we love our art.''

--> It's rather easy to sit here and acknowledge the Scull sisters undisputed influence on the South Florida art world. It's easy to be filled with pride that these two Cuban exile ladies, coming here with very little, followed their passion and made a name for themselves. To rightfully call them legends in their own right, easy. What's not so easy is to grasp the void she leaves in the lives of her family. To that family, and to one granddaughter in particular, we send our thoughts and prayers. Rest assured, she's making Heaven a little more colorful.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Thank you Jerry that's so sweet and thoughtful of you. I really appreciate the comment you left in my grandmothers honor it really warmed my heart.

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