Broad Art Museum Reception

May 3, 2012, 5:30-8:00 pm

Continuing our mission to catalyze community development through quality arts programming, MICA invites you to a reception at MICA Gallery to introduce and welcome the distinguished Broad Art Museum team. Enjoy music by Elden Kelly and Bobby Bringi, poetry by Sam Mills, and hors d’oeuvres and drinks. This event is free of charge, but RSVPs are requested.

Introductions and Remarks at 6:30 pm

Terry Terry, MICA President

Mayor Virg Bernero

Michael Rush, Broad Founding Director

Min Jung Kim, Deputy Director

Alison Gass, Curator

Marcia Crawley, Development Director

Dan Hirsch, Curator of Performances, Public Programs

Dr. Wang Chunchen, Adjunct Curator

Rachael Vargas, Registrar

Brian Kirschensteiner, Preparator

Jayne Goeddeke, Exhibitions & Projects

The event is sponsored by Foresight Group and MessageMakers.

April-May 2012 Show: Grant Guimond

If you seek beauty, you will find it at the MICA Gallery April-May exhibition, works on canvas by one of Lansing’s truly great artists, Grant Guimond. The First Sunday opening, April 1, features an artist’s reception from noon to 4 pm, your chance to see the artist together with his most recent work. The show runs through Monday, May 30, 2012.

In the classic still-life pictured here, Guimond builds a light-filled interior of creamy peach and yellow walls. Flickering shadows and gently angled strokes of black frame the central motif, a stacked base, stem, and bowl of blue fruit. But which is the fruit and which the bowl? Is that a reflection under the vase: are we looking into a mirror? And is that a window in the background, or another painting? This is a kind of Cubism, inviting us to determine the point of view–not splintering the objects, but opening up an airy, rhythmic space. This ample room to breathe is new in Guimond’s recent work, and the clarity and elegance of his composition shows how we still live in the abstract moment of Cézanne and Picasso, a moment likely to last as long as the Italian Renaissance.

Guimond’s work reminds us of the early Modern masters in this way too—his visions transform the objects of our daily lives into uncommon opportunities for beauty. He offers these visual archetypes: a woman’s body, a musical instrument, a bowl of fruit on a table, a window, a distant landscape, a painting within a painting, or the maker’s choric gaze. Whether a vibrant still-life with grapes or a woman bather, her thighs burning pink against the bright blue sky, each image reminds us of reality, and stubbornly asserts its own reality.

Guimond favors blocks of color subtly modulated, laid down just thickly enough for us to see their texture and the sureness of his hand. In other works in the show, the artist creates mysterious spaces from opaque washes of paint barely concealing patches of gold, mauve or other jewel-like forms, here hard-edged, there vanishing into a sea of color. The color-forms are gestures, often fraught with emotional resonance: “Moods from anxiety to repose come naturally from my state of being,” the artist notes. Whimsy, ferocity, curiosity, or simmering sensuality, all aspects of the artist’s consciousness are laid out for us to discover and name.

The choice of paintings reflects Guimond’s discipline as a painter. Each grouping represents a steady stream of experiment in visual ideas. Luckily, he has agreed to show a couple of his large white paintings, which he calls “sexy,” I think because they are so daringly bare of paint. A few zen sculptures, constructed from the stuff of every day—a stopper out of the sink, a magnifying glass, a wire with tape hanging down for legs—also adorn the show.

A debonair 60-something, Guimond is wonderfully free of regret, maintaining a steady sense of humor about himself and about life, and his good will shows in passages of every single work of art here at MICA. He paints and always has strictly for art’s sake, nothing else. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t buy his paintings, which are decorative in the very best sense of the word. Each one is a gem; in pairs, they instantly define a space. If you are an art collector, or aspire to be one, this is the time to come and get your new Guimond!

Dr. Leslie Cavell, Oakland University

Kathleen Coe: A Retrospective

Experience this retrospective of the work of Kathleen Coe. The show will be open March 2-28, with the First Sunday Gallery Walk reception held Sunday, March 4 from 12-4 pm. Download the show poster here.

Kathleen Coe was born August 25th, 1925. This lifelong resident of Lansing believed in lifelong education, and received her BA in Communication Arts from Michigan State University when she was in her early 50s. She continued on to receive an MA in Public Administration from Western Michigan University. Kathleen spent most of her working career with the State of Michigan and retired as a federal grants manager for the Department of Mental Health in 1989.

After retiring, Kathleen traveled to Europe and the Far East. She also created a studio on South Washington Square, where she pursued her interests in watercolor painting and handweaving. Continuing her passion for learning, she began taking fine art classes at Lansing Community College. It’s believed that she took every art class that LCC had to offer. She focused primarily on painting the human figure.

Her proudest achievement was becoming an ordained minister in the Fellowship for Today’s Church at the age of 80.

Kathleen died on September 25th, 2011, and is survived by her husband Milton; her daughter Julie and grand-daughter McCauley Finnegan of Park City, Utah; and son and daughter-in-law, Alan and Dawne Coe of Lansing.

Kathleen did not display her work in one-person or group shows, choosing to paint for her own personal fulfillment and not to sell. Thus, MICA Gallery is proud to present Kathleen’s inaugural one-person show.

Here is what her friend and art teacher Margaret Meade-Turnbull had to say about her work:

Kathleen and I had many conversations about her art over the twenty odd years that she took my class. Most of the talk was about how to improve the piece that she was working on at the time, but she also talked about what she wanted to achieve in her work. Her goal was simplicity and clearness of color but she also wanted to use a closely observed figure in its space. Her method was to draw with line and then paint the shapes.

Early on, in life drawing, I had the class draw with their paper on the floor using a long stick with charcoal attached (a technique that Dave Kleis taught me) in order to get better proportions. This worked with all of the class but Kathleen decided to keep using the stick to draw with. Of course she gave up control, but she achieved a sensitive line and good proportions.

Kathleen was concerned about the number of paintings that she had to store. I can’t remember if I suggested working smaller or if it was her idea, which doesn’t really matter because she liked the result and it became her trademark. I recall seeing her pieces hung in the LCC student art show with the gallery lighting and they jumped off the wall like little jewels.

Kathleen’s “zingers” kept my class laughing, giving us a chance to relax when things got too serious. Thank you, Kathleen!