Upcoming Exhibitions & Events

Winter 2024 Lectures

Lunchtime Lecture: Animator Molly Murphy Thursday January 25th at 2:30pm via Zoom (link to follow)

Ann Arbor Film Festival Screening w/ remarks by Deputy Director Scott Boberg Wednesday January 31st at 3pm in the Student Center Auditorium

Evening Lecture: Ceramicist Victoria Walton Tuesday February 6th at 5pm at Halle Library Auditorium

Lunchtime Lecture: Painter Lisa McLymont Wednesday March 13th at 2pm, location tbd

Lunchtime Lecture: VFX Artist, Matt Derksen Thursday March 21st, time and location tbd

Evening Lecture: Painter Jodi Hays Tuesday April 9th at 5pm at Halle Library Auditorium

 Winter 2024 Exhibition Season

FRESH LOOKS

January 10 through February 9 2024 in University Gallery and Ford Gallery

EMU Faculty Exhibition

February 23 through March 13 in University Gallery

Annual Juried Student Show

February 25 through March 22 in Ford Gallery and IGG Gallery

MFA Thesis Exhibition

April 3 through April 26 in University Gallery

Senior Capstone Exhibition

April 3 through April 19 in Ford Gallery

*Due to COVID-19, opening dates may fluctuate, due to health issues, campus closings and/or unforeseen events. Thank you in advance for your flexibility during this time.


Feb
8

Key speaker event for the King Kong At 90: Visualization in the Art of Stop Motion Animation art exhibit with a panel of guest speakers

Feb. 8, 7:00 PM- 8:30 PM: Key speaker event for the King Kong At 90: Visualization in the Art of Stop Motion Animation art exhibit with a panel of guest speakers: Greg Kulon (LA-based independent scholar and researcher of the history of Stop-motion animation), Connor Heaney (Collections Manager of The Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation, Edinburgh, UK.), and Ben Harry (Curator of Audiovisual Materials and Media Arts History of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections of  Brigham Young University). Auditorium, Eastern Michigan University Student Center, 900 Oakwood St, Ypsilanti


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Feb
7

“An Introduction to the Archive of The Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation.”

Feb. 7, 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM:  Connor Heaney (Collections Manager of The Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation),  “An Introduction to the Archive of The Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation.” The collection holds over 50,000 items related to the film career and personal life of Ray Harryhausen (1920 – 2013), the master stop-motion special effects artist for such classic films as The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953), The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958), Jason and the Argonauts (1963), and Clash of the Titans (1981).  This speaker event is held in connection with the King Kong At 90: Visualization in the Art of Stop Motion Animation art exhibit. Auditorium, Eastern Michigan University Student Center, 900 Oakwood St, Ypsilanti. 

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Feb
2

Double Feature Movie Night -King Kong (1933) and The Son of Kong (1933)

Feb.2, 5:00 PM - 8:45: King Kong (1933) and The Son of Kong (1933) Double Feature Movie Night with a gallery tour and light refreshments during the intermission. The first movie starts at 5:00 PM and the second at 7:30 PM. Co-Sponsored by EMU Campus Life and EMU Art Galleries.  This event is held in connection with the King Kong At 90: Visualization in the Art of Stop Motion Animation art exhibit. Auditorium, Eastern Michigan University Student Center, 900 Oakwood St, Ypsilanti. 

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Jan
23
to Feb 23

KING KONG AT NINETY

King Kong At 90: Visualization in the Art of Stop Motion Animation – runs January 23-February 23. University Gallery, Eastern Michigan University Student Center, 900 Oakwood St, Ypsilanti. This exhibit features original film production and concept art by Willis O’Brien (the creative genius behind King Kong), Ray Harryhausen, Jim Danforth, Mark “Crash” McCreery, and Tim Burton, among many others. Gallery Hours: M, Th, F 11-5 PM; T & W 11-7 PM; F & Sa 10-5 PM. Gallery hours may change for updates see the website for changes: https://emugalleries.org, 734-487-1268.


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Mar
10

Lecture: "Ludovico Carracci's Lamentation and the Body of Christ in 1582,” by Andrew Casper

Prof. Andrew Casper is a specialist of Renaissance and Baroque art of southern Europe, and particularly religious imagery in Italy in the late 1500s and 1600s. His recent research has examined the artistic conception of the Shroud of Turin, looking at how early-modern devotional manuals draw from contemporary art theory to portray the Shroud’s imprint of Christ’s body as a divine work of art. This has culminated in various published essays and a book titled An Artful Relic: The Shroud of Turin in Baroque Italy (Penn State University Press, 2021). He has previously researched the early career of Domenikos Theotokopoulos “El Greco” and religious art after the Counter Reformation in Italy. He is the author of numerous essays and articles on sixteenth-century icons and the religious paintings from El Greco’s Italian period. His book Art and the Religious Image in El Greco’s Italy (Penn State University Press, 2014) uses El Greco’s early paintings to advance new ideas concerning the conception of religious imagery after the Council of Trent.

Prof. Casper’s current research examines the artistic, sacred, and scientific portrayal of Christ’s body in Italian devotional painting of the late-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as well as the cult of the miraculous icon of Santa Maria della Consolata in Turin. At Miami he teaches courses in Renaissance and Baroque art in Europe and Latin America. He was a 2012 finalist for the E. Phillips Knox Teaching Award, the university’s highest recognition for innovative teaching, and is the winner of the 2014 Miami University Distinguished Teaching Award.

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Jan
23
to Mar 4

Fresh Looks 2022

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In an effort to continually enhance and expand dialog among emerging artists and regional institutions, Eastern Michigan University announces FRESH LOOKS 2022. This exhibition is designed to celebrate the creative accomplishments of emerging undergraduate art majors in the region, and showcase the diverse approaches to art making found within neighboring institutions in Michigan and Ohio.

Fresh Looks 2022 will be on view at University Gallery from January 23 to March 4. Reception TBD.

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Oct
14

Michael Perrone Artist Talk

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Michael Perrone is an American artist who graduated from Muhlenberg College with a degree in Russian Studies and Political Science. He went on to study art and art education at The School of The Museum of Fine Arts - Tufts, and received an MFA in Painting from The University of Pennsylvania in 2004. From 2004 - 2010, Perrone was an Assistant Professor of Painting and Drawing at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City, Iowa. He has mounted two solo exhibitions with Michael Steinberg Fine Art in Chelsea, New York City, and has participated in numerous group exhibitions internationally. Perrone’s work has appeared in: The New Yorker, Elle Decor, O at home, and Time Out New York. Since 2012, he has been an Assistant Professor of Painting with Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts. He is currently a member of the Painting + Printmaking faculty at VCUarts Qatar. Perrone, with his wife – painter Mariah Dekkenga – recently founded an artist residency and gallery  v_e_s_t_i_b_u_l_e  in Randolph, Vermont, USA.

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Oct
12

Lecture: "Detroit's Black Power Murals as Public Art," by Rebecca Zurier

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EMU: Detroit’s Black Power murals as public art

Inspiring in their time but not well-enough known today, Detroit’s Black Power murals—painted a year after, and in response to the urban uprising of 1967-- were some of the first to move the artistic ideals of the Black Arts movement into public space. Created by Chicago artists with the cooperation of Detroit painters and poets, they combined portraits of contemporary African-American “he-roes and she-roes” with historical scenes and the images of leaders of African anti-colonial movements, juxtaposed with everyman figures that spoke to viewers in the present at street level. 

This talk explores the way the murals functioned amidst Detroit’s racial geography in two ways: as an effort to enlist the nationalist ideas of the Black Arts movement in fostering creative identity and pride through images of African-American achievement and to generate spatially a “Black counterpublic sphere.” Their iconography offered an alternative or counter- history that encouraged Black Detroiters to imagine their place in a new version of the city.

Rebecca Zurier is Associate Professor, History of Art at the University of Michigan. Her teaching and research focus on art of the United States with special interests in urban studies, political art, and questions of realism and representation. Her book Picturing the City: Urban Vision and the Ashcan School won the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Charles Eldredge Prize. For many years she has taught a seminar titled "Made in Detroit: A History of Art and Culture in the Motor City.”

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Sep
13
to Oct 21

Harold Neal and Detroit African American Artists, 1945 Through the Black Arts Movement

Click to view the virtual exhibition.

Click to view the virtual exhibition.

The University Gallery, School of Art and Design, at Eastern Michigan University is pleased to announce the exhibition Harold Neal and Detroit African American Artists: 1945 through the Black Arts Movement. The exhibition will be shown at the EMU Art Gallery from Monday, September 13 through Wednesday, October 20, 2021. A closing reception will take place on Sunday, October 17 from 1:30-4:30 pm with a panel discussion to follow from 4:30 to 5:30 pm. Participants on the panel will be Allie McGhee, well-known Detroit artist, and Shirley Woodson, the 2021 Kresge Eminent Artist, both of whom are represented is in the exhibition. Additional participants are Dr. Samantha Noel, Associate Professor of Art History at Wayne State University, and Detroit Black figurative artist, Tylonn Sawyer, an EMU alum. The University Art Gallery is in EMU’s Center at 900 Oakwood St., Ypsilanti, MI 48197. The panel discussion will be held in a room adjacent to the gallery.

 A lecture titled "Detroit's Black Power Murals as Public Art," by Rebecca Zurier, Associate Professor, History of Art, University of Michigan, will take place on Tuesday, October 12 from 6-7 pm in EMU’s Halle Library Auditorium.

 Detroit African American painter Harold Neal created some of the most forceful artistic statements of the Civil Rights, Black Power and Black Arts Movements. Focusing on Neal, Harold Neal and Detroit African American Artists: 1945 through the Black Arts Movement explores the efflorescence of Detroit African American art in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s and the impact of the aforementioned movements on Detroit art.

Over the last twenty years, numerous scholarly publications have treated the work of African American artists of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. At that time, Detroit was the fifth largest city in the country with a large African American population and a vibrant Black arts scene. Nevertheless, the aforementioned publications fail to discuss Detroit African American artists. This exhibition focuses on the life and work of Memphis born Harold Neal, among the most talented and thoughtful of these artists. It also explores other Detroit African American artists, including Neal’s predecessors Hughie Lee Smith and Oliver LaGrone, who greatly influenced his career; his contemporaries Glanton Dowdell, Charles McGee, Jon Onye Lockard, Henri Umbaji King, LeRoy Foster and Shirley Woodson, and his successors Aaron Ibn Pori Pitts and Allie McGhee, who were greatly impacted by his work. Additionally the book addresses the rift in the Detroit African American art community in the wake of the Black Power/Black Arts Movements. Neal, like other artists of the Black Arts Movement, felt that art should speak directly to the experience of African Americans using African American figurative subjects, while others artists, like Charles McGee, sought to compete in the white art world, working in the abstract, non-objective styles then dominant in New York galleries.

The result of some ten years of research, this exhibition and its accompanying fully illustrated catalogue presents a view of post-World War II African American art history essentially unknown to other scholars. It expands our understanding of Detroit African American art first set forth in the author’s 2009 publication Energy: Charles McGee at Eighty Five. For this later project, Dr. Myers conducted extensive interviews with artists, scholars, friends and family members of the above mentioned artists. Most of their works remain in private collections, and Dr. Myers surveyed many of these, some in states outside of Michigan, in order to select the highest quality works. The exhibition and catalogue are based on hundreds of contemporary articles, published in Michigan Chronicle, Detroit’s African American newspaper and in other local newspapers, as well as on other hard-to-locate archival materials. Dr. Myers assesses these Detroit artists in relation to their peers in other major metropolises such as New York, Chicago, Los Angeles/San Francisco, thus establishing that Detroit artists were significant contributors to African American art in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.

Following the closing of the exhibition at EMU, it will then travel to Wayne State University's Elaine Jacobs Gallery, where it will be shown from November 4 through Jan. 20, 2022, and then onto the Marshall Fredericks Museum at Saginaw Valley State University from February 1 through April 14.

The exhibition and catalogue are supported by Michigan Humanities.

For more information, contact Julia R. Myers, jmyers@emich.edu or 609-903-8418 or Greg Tom, University Art Gallery Director at gtom@emich.edu

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Feb
25

Artist Talk by Dr. Antje Gamble: “Not So Totalitarian: The Many Styles of Italian Fascist Art"

Thursday, February 25th at 5:30pm via Zoom

Antje K. Gamble is an art historian of Italian modernist sculpture and trans-Atlantic exhibition practices at mid-century. She is currently an assistant professor of Art History in the Department of Art & Design at Murray State University. From Fascism to the Cold War, her work examines the exhibition, sale, and critical reception of Italian art and how it shaped and was shaped by national and international socio-political shifts. Dr. Gamble’s scholarship was

included in the recent volume Postwar Italian Art History Today: Untying ‘the

Knot’ (Bloomsbury Press, 2018), where her chapter titled “Buying Marino Marini: The American Market for Italian Art after WWII” looks at politicized collection practices during the early Cold War. She also has a number of forthcoming essays: two on the 1949 exhibition “Twentieth Century Italian Art” at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), one in a book due this year (The

First Twenty Years at MoMA 1929-1949, Eds. Sandra Zalman and Austin Porter. London: Bloomsbury Press.) and another in a special issue on the exhibition in Italian Modern Art our February 2020; and a third essay on the 1947-48 ceramic Crocifisso by Lucio Fontana for an upcoming Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) exhibition catalogue Material Meanings: Selections from the Constance R. Caplan Collection. Dr. Gamble is currently working on two monographs, one

on the 1950-53 American exhibition Italy at Work: Her Renaissance in Design Today and another on the sculptor Marino Marini, for which she received the CIMA-Civitella Affiliated Fellowship at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation for Spring 2020.

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