All posts by MICA_Admin

Broad Old Town Show: Resituating

Kristin Cammermeyer: Resituating, a special free exhibition of the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University, will be open to the public from June 22 to July 22. The exhibition will be housed in the Broad MSU’s Summer Annex, located at 226 East Grand River Avenue in Lansing’s Old Town neighborhood.

Kristin Cammermeyer has moved away from the use of traditional and highly valued materials typical of painting and sculpture. Her objects are made from the stuff of urban construction: shards of found and bought plywood and two-by-fours, garish industrial paint, spray foam insulation, and staples, all now resituated into the structure of her artworks. Read more in the Lansing City Pulse.

Exhibition hours are 12-9 pm Thursdays and 12-6 pm Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Enjoy the opening reception Thursday, June 21, 6-8 pm (free, registration required).

Chris Clark Fellowship & Workshop

A free, informational workshop will be held today, Thursday, June 7 at 3 p.m. in 1210 Turner St., Old Town, Lansing about the Chris Clark Fellowship Program for Creative Professionals. Please RSVP to katie@lansingarts.org.

The program was established through a legacy gift from Lansing area native, Chris Clark, to the Arts Council of Greater Lansing, with the goal of supporting creative capacity building for individuals such as artists, arts administrators, arts business owners, and arts instructors in greater Lansing.  The Fellowship provides access to professional development opportunities and business resources through a cash grant reimbursement of up to $1,500. The guidelines and application can be found on the Grants page of the Arts Council’s website, www.lansingarts.org. Proposals are due to the Arts Council office by 5 p.m. on July 1, 2012.

June-July 2012: Boundaries

A body of work by Kaye Krapohl is on display June 1-July 30, 2012 at MICA Gallery! Join us Sunday, June 3, 12-4 pm for the opening reception—or come view “Boundaries” anytime in June or July.

Download the show poster.

[tabs slidertype=”images” fx=”slide” auto=”yes”] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”900″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/blue-sky_550-x-900-px.png[/imagetab] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”900″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/consumerable_550-x-900-px.png[/imagetab] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”900″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/exposed_550-x-900-px.png[/imagetab] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”900″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/pushbutton550-x-900-px.png[/imagetab] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”900″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/subconscious_550-x-900-px.png[/imagetab] [imagetab width=”550″ height=”520″]http://www.micagallery.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/digital-girl_550-x-520-px.png[/imagetab] [/tabs]

“All the fingerprint paintings are done without a grid.”
Chuck Close

This Body of Work:

This show is intended to provoke individual opinions about the consequences of the pervasive creation of boundaries in today’s world. Not just governmental and economic boundaries, but also the boundaries we choose for ourselves, such as where we live and how we use technology. The institutionalized creation of a disconnect from each other and from ourselves. People might look at this work and see the content as figurative art, abstract, or sexual. I can’t control how people view it; that is my boundary. What are yours?
Kaye Krapohl

More on Boundaries:

The combination of juxtaposing body prints with elements of modern grid/technology is meant to be raw and sometimes beautiful, but it is intended to provoke individual opinions. People might look at this work and see the content as figurative art, abstract, or sexual.

This work is a response to the consequences of boundaries that exist in today’s world: Not just governmental and economic boundaries, but also the boundaries we choose for ourselves—such as where we live and how we use technology—iPhones, Facebook, and computers. Making life easier for ourselves through the use of technology actually creates a boundary from ourselves and our resourcefulness. We have cars that now “park for us.” We don’t have to ask anyone for directions; a voice on a GPS unit has replaced that person. We can “friend” and “unfriend” people in one click. Roads have become boundaries that dictate where we can and cannot cross to the other side, or the “other side of the tracks.” Towns are cut into sections based on economic status with less and less priority given to interpersonal accessibility. UPC and QR codes allow us to scan our own purchases and eliminate any need for human interaction with cashiers. This automation has contributed to a loss of jobs, widening the fissure between the “haves” and “have nots.” We are grouped into categories of consumers rather than individuals. Our private information is harvested, then bought and sold without our knowledge or consent. Ironically, this work is reproduced digitally, providing yet another layer of disconnect from the visceral textures of the paint and paper.