In the heart of Napa Valley, the Louis M. Martini Winery is quietly redefining what a vineyard can be. While its Cabernet Sauvignon has drawn wine lovers for nearly a century, the winery is now turning heads with bold, site-specific contemporary art. Abraham Cruzvillegas’s Two Abstract Maps (An Alchemical Self Portrait) transforms both the tasting room and the building’s façade, weaving together salvaged terra-cotta tiles and subtle carvings to evoke Napa’s layered history. Inside, a relief map marks Indigenous sites and wine landmarks; outside, local plants and animal paths are etched into the walls. The art isn’t just decoration—it’s physically and conceptually woven into the winery’s architecture, inviting visitors to experience wine through all their senses. Each piece, from kinetic sunlit poems to abstract maps, blurs the line between tasting and seeing, memory and place. Over time, the winery itself becomes a living gallery, where art and wine ferment new meanings together. #NapaValley #ContemporaryArt #WineryCulture #Culture