PURE DETROIT:

Nine Detroit Artists

exhibit their art

@

Art Channel Gallery - Beijing, China

February 14th through March 15th

selected by the Museum of New Art (MONA)

In the latest installment of its Changing Cities artist exchange, Detroit's Museum of New Art (MONA) is proud to send the artwork of nine selected artists from Detroit to Art Channel Gallery in Beijing, China. Changing Cities is a project initiated by Jef Bourgeau, director of MONA, in order to swap artists from the Detroit region with their counterparts in other cities around the world.

 

Previous exchanges have brought a show of Chicago artists to the Detroit museum in 2007. A companion exhibit was followed in February 2008 with a show of Detroiter’s works at ThreeWalls Gallery in Chicago. The exchange has continued throughout 2008 with Galerie Lisi Hämmerle in Bregenz (Austria), and Galerie Eva Bracke in Berlin.

 

        

 

 

A GLOBAL FIRST:

 

 

PURE DETROIT will be the first exhibition of Detroit artists in Beijing, and will be hosted by Art Channel Gallery from February 14th to March 15th, 2009.

 

[The first exhibition of contemporary Chinese artists in Detroit will be selected by Rose Jiang of Art Channel Gallery and follow shortly at Detroit's Museum of New Art, showing here April 25th to May 30th.]

PURE DETROIT artists:

Kyohei Abe

Ford Wallace Ford

Mary Fortuna

Kelly Frank

Cyrus Karimipour

Marla Karimipour

Corine Vermeulen-Smith

Vagner Mendonça Whitehead

Alison Wong

 

1.  Kyohei Abe

Kyohei Abe is always attracted to the eccentric elements and unsettling juxtapositions of natural and artificial elements. He is also fascinated by the unexpected errors that exist in the structure of order. Abe continuously is looking for juxtapositions and relationships that create new perceptions, which nurtures insight into the elementary nature of things. This tends to isolate the subject matter, and looks to the complexity in the simple structure of an image. The resulting intuitive images created tell a story, and become instructive.                       

A Japanese national, Kyohei has lived in the States since 1993. He earned a BFA in Photography from the College for Creative Studies in 1999, and was given CCS' Artistic Achievement Award. In 2002, Kyohei earned his MFA in Photography from Cranbrook Academy. Working in the medical field as a Retinal Angiographer by day, Kyohei is also an adjunct professor at local universities where he develops curricula and teaches all levels in photography.  Kyohei has been showing his works nationally and internationally.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008    Made in Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

           Changing Cities, Galerie Lise Hämmerle, Bregenz, Austria

           Moving Walls, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI

           Image & Text, Oakland University Biennial, Oakland University Art         

           Gallery, Rochester, MI

2006   SEARCH, Meadowbrook Art Gallery, Rochester, MI

           Michigan Now II, Michigan Institute of Art, Pontiac, MI

2005    Cipher’s Construct, International Festival of Photography, Lodz, Poland.

           Group Photo, Paint Creek Center for the Arts, Rochester, MI

2003   Biennial Actual Size, Detroit Contemporary, Detroit, MI

2002   Link, Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Detroit, MI

2001   Photographic Processes II, Period Gallery, Omaha NE

          Photography 2001, Nexus Gallery, New York, NY

 

 

2.  Ford Wallace Ford

Ford Wallace Ford was declared a ward of the state at the age of four. Ford's mother, unable to financially care for the child, had the young boy interned at the Pontiac State Hospital until he was legally of age, at which time he was released into a half-way house.

Although no proven relation to the automobile family, Wallace Ford’s mother had worked as a seamstress at that family’s Detroit mansion. She was released from the household when it was discovered she had become pregnant out of wedlock. Unwilling to place Ford in an orphanage where he might be adopted, she relinquished custody of her small son to the State Hospital Children's Ward with the hope that they would one day reunite. She died shortly after.

The artist’s name quickly took on the double Ford appellation due to a lifetime in institutions, where each morning’s roll call began “Ford, Wallace?”, and was responded to by the youth: “Present, Wallace Ford”. It was only at the age of forty-one, while spending hobby time at a drug rehabilitation center, that Ford taught himself to paint.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2009     Change, Project Gallery, Ann Arbor, MI

 

2008     Made in Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

 

Changing Cities: Bregenz, Galerie Lisi Hämmerle, Bregenz, Austria

 

Moving Walls, ThreeWalls Gallery, Chicago, IL

2007     Lost & Found, Brick Lane Gallery, London, England

            Black & Black, UFO Factory, Detroit, MI

Intelligent Design, Silvermine Guild Art Center, New Canaan, CT

            F*ck You/Commentary-Criticism, Polish Yacht Club, Hamtramck, MI

            Bedroom Photography, Jane Austen Book Club, Los Angeles

Silence, Paint Creek Art Center, Rochester. MI

            A Retrospective for the Artist, Oakland University Art Gallery, Rochester, MI

2006     Picasso’s Camera, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI

Quantum Circus (with Michael Zansky, Kiki Smith), Soo Arts Center, Minneapolis, MN

            RE: The D, Wayne State University, Detroit

2005     Double Vision, The District Gallery, Birmingham, MI

            New Work, The White Room, Los Angeles

            FiftyFifty, C-Pop Gallery, Detroit, MI

2004     Photography Now, Urban Institute for the Contemporary Arts, Grand Rapids, MI

            Life Over Again, The Majlis Cultural Center, Mumbai, India

            In Flux, Marygrove College Gallery, Detroit

            Untitled, 555 Gallery, Detroit

2003     Paradise Lost, Musee d'Art et d'Industrie, Roubaix, France

A Day in the Life, Cranbrook Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, MI 

Actual Size, Detroit Contemporary, Detroit 

           The Sea, Peace Festival, La Braderie, France

 

 

 3.  Mary Fortuna

 

Mary Fortuna graduated from Wayne State University with a BFA in 1992. She has exhibited her work extensively in Michigan and elsewhere. Over a period of many years, she has served on the Forum for Contemporary Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts, and on the Exhibition Committees for the Detroit Artist Market, Detroit Focus and Paint Creek Center for the Arts. She is currently employed as Exhibitions Director at Paint Creek Center for the Arts. When she’s not at work she sews and knits and plays with dolls.

Fortuna has concentrated almost exclusively on suspended sculpture for several years. Her works might incorporate hand stitched leather, carved wood, cast aluminum or resins, rubber, found objects, human and horse hair, fiber, or other materials. She says, “I’m always looking for a seamless, organic logic, something to laugh at, and a covert erotic tingle. My main purpose as an artist is to scare myself.”

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2009         Year of the Weasel, Scarab Club, Detroit, Michigan

2008         Made in Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

                Changing Cities: Detroit – Bregenz, Galerie Lisi Hämmerle. Bregenz, Austria

                Changing Cities, Museum of New Art. Pontiac, Michigan

                Moving Walls, ThreeWalls, Chicago, Illinois

                Slippery Weasel Society Exhibition, Bohemian National Home, Detroit, Michigan

                Material Matters, Anton Art Center, Mount Clemens, Michigan

2007         Azutunarasharedo, Zeitgeist Gallery, Detroit, Michigan

                Harvest, Alley Culture, Detroit, Michigan

2006         New Work, Flatlanders Gallery, Blissfield, Michigan

2005         Wall to Wall , Flatlanders Gallery, Blissfield, Michigan

                Actual Size, CAID, Detroit, Michigan          

2004         Group Show, Street Level Gallery. Highwood, Illinois

2003         DAM Members Invitational, Detroit Artist’s Market, Detroit, Michigan

Recent Works – Mary Fortuna and Jo Powers, Birmingham Bloomfield Art Center, Birmingham, Michigan

                Selecti, Detroit Artist’s Market, Detroit, Michigan

                Alumni Exhibition: Sandra Cardew, Mary Fortuna and Catherine Peet

                Wayne State University Community Arts Gallery, Detroit, Michigan

                8 Mile – Detroit Relics from the Future, Street Level Gallery, Highwood, Illinois

                Actual Size, Detroit Contemporary, Detroit, Michigan

 

 

4.  Kelly Frank

Kelly Frank’s work stems from a personal quest: looking for signs in the everyday, objects that seem to hold some coded mystical knowledge. The images become meditation symbols. Her work questions the making of meaning in visual life and the constructed nature of reality. She attempts to draw attention to the significance of subjective experience.  Interpretation, uncertainty, and the search for meaning come into focus. 

Kelly Frank was born in Wisconsin and grew up in Traverse City, Michigan. She moved to Detroit to study art at The College For Creative Studies and pursued photography with mentor John Ganis, earning her BFA in 2007. Frank is an MFA candidate at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and has worked in the photography department under the guidance of David Hilliard, and currently Liz Cohen. Her work has been shown at galleries throughout the Metro Detroit area including The Detroit Artists Market, The Anton Art Center, Forum Gallery, The Tiffany Room, and The Museum of New Art in Pontiac. As apart of the Changing Cities collective her work has also been featured in Bregenz, Austria and Berlin, Germany.  Kelly is a recipient of a Daimler Financial Award as an artist working with The Museum of New Art.  Her work also appears in collections throughout the United States including the Center Galleries of The College For Creative Studies. 

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions 

2008     Made In Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

Changing Cities, Galerie Lisi Hämmerle, Bregenz, Austria

Industrious, Cave, Detroit, MI

Ephemeral Sensuality, Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI

Sweetened and Condensed, Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI 

Moving Walls, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI 

Process, Anton Art Center, Mt. Clemens, MI

            Side By Side, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI   

Untidy Task, Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI

Transmorphicationalshiftolution, Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI

2007     Speak, Talk, Tell, White Wall Gallery, Hamtramck, MI

Exquisite Narratives, Forum Gallery, Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI

Detroit Artists Market and Center Street Lofts Show, Royal Oak, MI 

Stubbed Toe, U245 Gallery, Detroit, MI      

75th Anniversary Mixed Media Show, Detroit Artists Market, Detroit, MI 

2006     Uline, The Tiffany Room, Detroit, MI 

Thunderbird Art Show, Boll Family YMCA, Detroit, MI 

2005     Seductive Structures, U245 Gallery, Detroit, MI 

 

 

5.  Cyrus Karimipour

 

Cyrus Karimipour’s photographs illustrate the liquid nature of memory through the combination of the familiar with the unfamiliar. He breaks his negatives down into character and setting, and rearranges the fragments to create new, often discordant, narratives. He directs unknowing subjects, throwing them into situations in which he determines where they belong. The scenes that emerge from this process become invented memories that encourage the seamless and spontaneous migration between the real and the imaginary, the authentic and the artificial, the explicit and implicit.

Memories are not static, but change a small amount each time we remember them, contaminated with each and every new experience we have. Anytime a memory is recalled, it is reassembled from fragments dispersed throughout the brain, and differs slightly from every other time it was summoned. As we change, so do our memories. It is not necessary that one’s memories be based solely on actual events, but rather, Karimipour affords himself the opportunity to tailor them to meet the feeling that recreates his encounter with those whom he has photographed. He sets up scenarios of how he chose to remember, or interpret his memories. He is able to take those with whom he has come in contact, if even briefly passing on the street, and create a grieving widow, a man paralyzed with the loneliness of old age, a predator, a peddler, a pervert.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008     Made in Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany.

Changing Cities, Galerie Lisi Hämmerle, Bregenz, Austria.

Tracing Memory, Light Work, Syracuse, New York.

People's Festival, Russell Industrial Center, Detroit, Michigan.

            Elements, Detroit Artists Market, Detroit, Michigan.

            Uneasy, Paint Creek Center for the Arts, Rochester, Michigan.

            Moving Walls, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, Michigan.   

            14th Annual Juried Show, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, Massachusetts. 

2008 Edgy Exhibition, The Center for Fine Art Photography, Fort Collins, Colorado.

            27th Annual Michigan Fine Art Competition, BBAC, Birmingham, Michigan 

            Changing Cities: Detroit, ThreeWalls, Chicago, Illinois

            Michigan Annual XXXIV, The Art Center, Mount Clemens, Michigan, 

2007     Pin-up, Here Gallery, Pontiac, Michigan

            Blood Bath City, Anton Art Center, Mount Clemens, Michigan

             Actual Size Biennial, Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan 

            Intelligent Design, Museum of New Art (MONA), Pontiac, Michigan 

            Focus [+] Photo, Robert Kidd Gallery, Birmingham, Michigan (solo) 

            Shoot!,  Anton Art Center, Mount Clemens, Michigan

26th Annual Michigan Fine Art Competition, BBAC, Birmingham, Michigan

 

 

6.  Marla Karimipour

 

All of the scenarios Marla Karimpour paint are real places.  She begins with a photo reference and then works in oils or pastels.  Since the photos are taken from a moving vehicle, she makes instant assessments of a place and a scene.  She enjoys using the long process of painting with oils to thoroughly investigate the fleeting moment of the snapshot.  While she paints, she loses herself in the scene, and imagines she is actually living in that house, working that farm, occupying that space.  Sometimes she becomes so lost that she can actually feel the sun on her face, the wind on her neck, hear the rustling of the trees, and smell the dirt and the green of the fields.

This series is an exploration of imagination.  Marla finds such comfort in these narratives, almost like a return to something she has always known.  They are unspectacular, every day scenes and places that we might just pass by without a second thought.  Every once in a while, she likes to take a break and leave her own head to see what life might be like from a different perspective.

Marla Karimipour (b. 1971) was born and raised in metro Detroit.  She received her BA in Psychology from the University of Michigan and has had no formal painting instruction.  Since beginning to paint seriously 12 years ago, Karimipour has exhibited in Nebraska, New Jersey, Florida, Wisconsin, and throughout the state of Michigan.  She has also shown abroad in Bregenz, Austria and Berlin, Germany.  Her work has been published in 2004 in “How to Paint Flowers and Gardens”, a book published by International Artist Magazine, and in a feature article in the December 2004 issue of American Artist.  Karimipour has placed numerous works in private collections in Michigan, Wisconsin, New York, and Berlin.  She continues to live and work in metro Detroit with her husband and daughter.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008     Changing Cities, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI

All Area/All Media Statewide Exhibition, The Art Center, Traverse City,

Traverse City, MI

27th Annual Michigan Fine Arts Competition, Birmingham Bloomfield Art 

Center, Birmingham, MI

2007     Our Town Show and Sale, The Community House, Birmingham, MI

            26th Annual Michigan Fine Arts Competition, Birmingham Bloomfield Art

Center, Birmingham, MI

2007-2005  Cameron Scott Gallery, Birmingham, MI

2006     25th Annual Michigan Fine Arts Competition, Birmingham Bloomfield Art

Center, Birmingham, MI

2005     Holiday Mini Masterpiece Collection, Cameron Scott Gallery, Birmingham, MI

Gallery 167, Birmingham, MI

 24th Annual Michigan Fine Arts Competition, Birmingham Bloomfield Art

Center, Birmingham, MI

2005-2001 Tvedten Fine Art, Harbor Springs, MI

2003     Efflorescence, John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI

2002     Goldfish Galleries, Sarasota, FL

2001     National Juried Competition, Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts &

Sciences, Loveladies, NJ

            2-3-4 Dimensional International Juried Art Exhibition, Period Gallery, Omaha,

 

 

7.  Corine Vermeulen-Smith

Like a number of photographers before her, Corine Vermeulen-Smith is using photography to examine the city of Detroit, but in her series Your Town Tomorrow she doesn’t focus on its notorious—and well documented—urban blight, or its landscape of neglected lots and shuttered factories. Instead she documents community gardens, urban prairies, the personalized spaces of the homeless, and new plantings on abandoned properties. Additionally, Vermeulen-Smith also photographs some of the people who are coordinating and participating in these efforts, in some instances including their commentary or biography as accompanying text.

The title of this series comes from a passage in the autobiography of Coleman Young—Detroit’s mayor from 1973 to 1994—which he published after his last term. Young writes, “In the evolutionary urban order, Detroit today has always been your town tomorrow… [It] remains a surpassingly purposeful place, as important to the nation right now as it has ever been–maybe more so, because right now it is telling us that the cities are in trouble.” In contrast to Young’s grim prophecy of a “catastrophic urban meltdown” on a national level however, presaged by Detroit’s decline, Vermeulen-Smith’s photographs are more hopeful. Without denying Detroit’s ailments, she directs our attention to new kinds of urbanism and attempts at revitalization on a grass-roots level.

Born in Gauda, the Netherlands, Smith now lives and works in Southwest Detroit. She completed an MFA in Photography at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, Cranbrook, Michigan, and a BFA at the Design Academy Eindhoven, The Netherlands. Her photographs have been exhibited at the Museum of New Art, Pontiac, Michigan; the Wainger Gallery, Cranbrook Museum of Art, and other venues. She has twice been the recipient of project grants from the Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008     Diorama's, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI, USA

Your Town Tomorrow, Design 99, Hamtramck, MI, USA

Detroit - In Focus Image Festival, YArts - Boll YMCA, Detroit, MI USA

2007     6x6, Motor City Brewery, Detroit, MI, USA

2005     You Are Here, Ruby Green Contemporary Art Center, Nashville, TN, USA

2004     Landcruising, The Future Perfect, Brooklyn, NY, USA

            Gifted, The Future Perfect, Brooklyn, NY - USA

            Neverland, audioEngine, New York, NY - USA

            Cultural Radar, the Richard M.Ross Art Museum, OH - USA

2003     Landcruising, Wainger Gallery, Cranbrook Museum of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI, USA

            Printed Matter, Forum Gallery, Cranbrook Academy of Art, MI, USA

2002     Ogata Shumpei and Fellows, X-Gallery, Hiroshima - Japan

 

 

8.  Vagner Mendonça Whitehead

This series of drawings utilizes letters and other orthographic marks to form diverse representations. The emoticon phenomenon has expanded beyond being merely facial expressions to aide interpretations in digital exchanges (email, IM, text messaging, et cetera). They now personify things and beings, by creating resemblance via symbolic sequencing, spacing and organizing. 

Rendered with color pencil on seventeen by fourteen inches paper, this ongoing series aims to emulates children's drawings commonly found in refrigerators across the nation. In times when mediated experiences may outnumber imediate ones, one supposes that what sparks one's imagination may originate in the screen, not the in mind or from actual contact.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008     Made in Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

Changing Cities: Bregenz, Galerie Lise Hämmerle, Bregenz, Austria

The Mirror Stage: International Video Art Exhibition, NeMe: Lanitis Foundation,  Limassol, Cyprus

Multicultural Caucus: Society for Photographic Education, Northlight Gallery, Tempe, AZ

Moving Walls, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI,

All Hot and Bothered, Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, New Palz, NY

IV International Festival of Contemporary Art: The Body Navigation, Gallery Etazhi, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 2008.

17 days, Atrium Gallery, Kalamazoo, MI,

Center for the Arts, Buffalo, NY

CEPA Gallery, Buffalo, NY

Open-ended Festival of Time-based Media, Richmond, VA, 2008.

Made in Woodstock IV, Center for Photography at Woodstock, Woodstock, MI, 2008.

Image & Text, Oakland University Art Gallery, Rochester, MI

2007     Persoentage,  Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI

Halloweentown, ARC main street, Pontiac, MI

TERGLOBA, Oakland University Art Gallery, Rochester, MI

Homewrecker, Tesuque Village Market, Tesuque, NM

We Are All Photographers Now! Tous Photographes!, Musée de l’Elysee, Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland

2006     Text-Body-Language, Tuska Center for Contemporary Art, Lexington, KY

Optica 2006: The Gijón International Festival of Video Art, Centro de Cultura Antiguo Instituto de Jovellanos, Gijon, Asturia, Spain

Renters: an Aesthetic Insertion, varied public sites, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Members Exhibition 2006, Detroit Artists Market, Detroit, MI

Michigan Now III, MIA, Pontiac, MI

Embodiment: Gender + Culture + Action, The Women’s Studies Biennial Art Exhibition, Loranger Architecture and Art Gallery, Detroit, MI

            The Body Eclectic, Lawrence Street Gallery, Ferndale, MI

            Search, Meadow Brook Art Gallery, Rochester, MI, 2006. Invited.

 

 

 9.  Alison Wong

 

Alison Wong is a first generation Chinese American, born and raised in Illinois. She received her BFA from The Maryland Institute, College of Art and MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Wong has exhibited in the United States, Europe and Asia. Since completing her Masters Degree, Wong has curated a number of exhibitions in the Metro Detroit Area and is currently the Exhibitions and Education Coordinator at The Art Center in Mount Clemens, Michigan.

Wong’s work focuses on romance, relationships and love. Within each piece, the work finds balance or rather flickers between two independent ideas. The imagery has both masculine and feminine connotations. Opposing ideas are dealt with aesthetically, in the handling of medium as well as setting hard-edged objects upon soft atmospheric grounds, or representing objects with a feathery touch. Both imagery and content are light hearted and sugary sweet but are executed in a slow, painstakingly serious manner. An attempt at subverting the harsh realities of adult love, the works speak of innocence and fantasy. Each piece is a romantic love story. It’s the kind of love that sweeps you off your feet.

 

Selected Solo and Group Exhibitions

2008     Made In Detroit, Galerie Eva Bracke, Berlin, Germany

Changing Cities: Bregenz, Lisi Hammerle, Bregenz, Austria         

            People’s Art Festival,  Russell Industrial Center, Detroit, MI

            Moving Walls, Museum of New Art, Pontiac, MI

Souvenir, Gescheidle Gallery, Chicago, IL

HatchBack, Gallery 1923, Hamtramck, MI

Changing Cities: Chicago, ThreeWalls Gallery, Chicago, IL

2007     Pin Up, Here Gallery, Pontiac, MI

            Art Execution, The Art Center, Mount Clemens, MI

            Actual Size Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Detroit, MI

Mi Casa es Su Casa VCU Residency Studio, Richmond, VA

2006     n-tûrprt Northville Art House, Northville, MI

            Just a Squirrel Tryin’ to Get a Nut, Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI

Cheap Trick, Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI

A Real Allegory, Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Detroit, MI

2005     Beggars Can’t Be Choosers, Berkley Front, Berkley, MI

Actual Size, Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Detroit, MI

Tiny Billboards Forum Gallery, Bloomfield Hills, MI

Summer Love, Zolla-Lieberman Gallery, Chicago, IL

2004     Valentines Exhibition, OXOXO Gallery, Baltimore, MD

2003     Holiday Invitational OXOXO Gallery, Baltimore, MD

International Exhibition Center for Art and Culture, Aix-En-Provence, France

            Mobility. Meyerhoff Gallery, Baltimore, MD

            Painting, Woodward Gallery, Baltimore, MD

 

 

PRESS

PURE DETROIT - Oakland Press

 

 

 

opening reception