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“From the Ashes of the Old”: Works by Dylan AT Miner

MICA Gallery’s September 2011 show, “‘From the Ashes of the Old’: Works by Dylan AT Miner,” presents the activist, hand-made, “intentionally unrefined” artwork of Dylan Miner.

The show opens Sept. 2, and the opening reception is Sept. 10, 12-4pm. MICA Gallery’s hours are Monday-Friday, 9 am-5 pm, and the gallery is also open 12-4 pm on Sept. 3 for the first of two September First Sunday Gallery Walks.

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Dylan at Miner is a border-crossing Métis with roots in the historic Indigenous communities of Slave Lake, Alberta; Red River, Manitoba; Drummond Island, Michigan; and Penetanguishene, Ontario. In 2010, he was awarded an Artist Leadership Grant from the National Museum of the American Indian (Smithsonian) and had five solo exhibitions across North America. In 2011, he will hang solo exhibitions at Urban Shaman Gallery in Canada, University of Notre Dame, Michigan Institute for Contemporary Art, and Fort Lewis College, a university that once served as an Indian boarding school. As a member of Justseeds, he was awarded the Grand Prix at the 28th Biennial of Graphic Arts in Slovenia and, as a result, the collective will have a solo exhibition at the 29th Biennial this fall. In 2012, he will travel to Norway for a solo exhibition, as well as work with the Sami people.

Dylan has published extensively and lectured globally on contemporary Native and Latino art, Indigenous sovereignty, and the relationship between art and anti-capitalist activism. He has published in Third Text, Aztlán, CR: The New Centennial Review, amongst others, and has forthcoming books from University of Arizona Press and IB Tauris. As a professor, he has led indigenous-centered courses in the Great Lakes, US Southwest, California, and Latin America. Currently, Dylan coordinates the Michigan Native Arts Initiative and is a professor at Michigan State University. Born and raised in Michigan, he holds a Ph.D. in the history of art from The University of New Mexico, USA. He lives with his wife and two daughters between Anishinaabewaki (Michigan) and Aztlán (New Mexico).

Miner explains, “In a never-ending world of late-capitalist consumption, where mass-produced commodities and highly designed products are naturalized, the creation of hand-made objects becomes an overt act of resistance. By using the language of anti-capitalist activism and indigenous visuality, I make intentionally unrefined objects that, if nothing else, challenge the ambiguity of the elite visual art world by operating within a tradition of political didacticism. Through the production of print-based installations, I evoke the tangibility of the printed form in an attempt to narrativize a particular anti-colonial and anti-capitalist desire. As an artist, I have become a storyteller whose images narrate stories in a uniquely visual fashion based in an anti-authoritarian tradition.

“Incorporating found materials, such as re-used grocery sacks and cardboard, I see my artmaking practice as the embodiment of my own radical politics and everyday experiences as a human being. The printed image and the materials that I work with remain a quotidian expression of the day-to-day realities in which I find myself. While society has moved toward a consumer-based model, the print becomes a small (yet productive) expression against the daily alienation I feel. My objects mark my existence and declare that I am alive. Just like ancestral petroglyphs and cave paintings, these small printed acts make similar marks on the worlds. As Métis martyr Louis Riel so powerfully articulated on the eve of his state-sanctioned assassination: ‘My people will sleep for 100 years, and when they awake, it will be the artists who give them back their spirit.'”

MICA Gallery is dedicated to featuring artists whose work represents a mix of progressive styles, social commentary, experimentation, and innovation, the gallery provides exhibition opportunities for visual artists, musicians, poets, and performance artists. Its sponsoring organization, Michigan Institute for Contemporary Art (MICA), is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that serves as a catalyst for community development through quality arts programming. For more information about the MICA Gallery, call 517-371-4600 or email info@oldtownarts.org.

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Retrospective in Loving Memory of Clif McChesney: July 2011

Lansing, Mich. – MICA Gallery’s July and August show presents the artwork of the late Clif McChesney, distinguished MSU faculty in art. This show extends from Creole Gallery (1218 Turner St.) to MICA Gallery (1210 Turner St.).

The show opens July 5, and the opening reception is 1-5 pm, Sunday, July 10. MICA Gallery’s hours are Monday-Friday, 9 am-5 pm.

McChesney passed on March 17, at the age of 82. At that time, McChesney was a retired Michigan State University professor of art, awarded the Distinguished Faculty Award for the College of Art and Letters in 1985. His work has been shown across the country and in Japan.

McChesney’s wife, Jane, has arranged this showcase of his work.

MICA Gallery is dedicated to featuring artists whose work represents a mix of progressive styles, social commentary, experimentation, and innovation, the gallery provides exhibition opportunities for visual artists, musicians, poets, and performance artists. Its sponsoring organization, Michigan Institute for Contemporary Art (MICA), is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that serves as a catalyst for community development through quality arts programming. For more information about the MICA Gallery, call 517-371-4600 or email info@oldtownarts.org.

Bruce Thayer & Ilene Curts: June 2011

The June art show at MICA Gallery (1210 Turner St., Lansing) will feature artists Bruce Thayer and Ilene Curts. The show opens Wednesday, June 1, featuring special hours on Saturday, June 4 for “Be a Tourist in Your Own Town” and an artist reception on Sunday, June 5 from noon until 4pm for First Sunday Gallery Walk.

Bruce Thayer’s work has evolved over time to touch on social issues, word play, and figurative abstraction. He works in printmaking, watercolor and acrylic on paper, sometimes collaged, from his home studio in Michigan.

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Thayer has a BFA from Central Michigan University, did printmaking and belonged to the Both Up Co-op Gallery in Berkeley, Calif., and completed a MFA at The School of The Art Institute of Chicago. He studied under such artists as Karl Wirsum, Christina Ramberg, Phil Hanson, and Ray Yoshida, becoming interested in figurative work influenced by cartoon, narrative, and humor. He has been associated with Printworks Gallery Chicago and Sonia Zaks Gallery Chicago.

Ilene Curts is a still life artist based in Michigan. She studied life drawing in Cambridge, Mass., where she belonged to the Boston Visual Artist’s Union – but it was a move to a studio on a farm that inspired her to take up still life painting. Curts follows in the steps of contemporary realism.

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She explains, “I enjoy the abstract nature of painting, and the quality of the paint itself. I use a lot of objects from the forties and fifties for their design. Objects carry on them potent bits of color, wear, memory, and character. I like to paint familiar objects in a non-traditional setting to challenge myself to find visual ideas but continue to explore tradition as well.”

MICA Gallery is open 9 am to 5 pm, Monday through Friday, with special hours for Saturday, June 4 and Sunday, June 5.

Michigan Institute for Contemporary Art (MICA) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization serving as a catalyst for quality arts programming. See www.oldtownarts.org or call 517-371-4600 for more information.

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