MIAD Galleries Archive
View previous exhibitions hosted at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD). For information about MIAD’s galleries and current and upcoming exhibitions, visit miad.edu/galleries.
Past Exhibitions
Predecessor: Work from the Layton School of Art - 10/02/23 - 12/08/23
Dates: October 2 – December 8, 2023
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
In 1921, Charlotte Partridge and Miriam Frink opened an innovative art college in the basement of Milwaukee’s Frederick Layton Art Gallery. Despite facing challenges like the Great Depression and World War II, the school was able to adapt to wartime America and it played a vital role in nurturing Wisconsin’s creative workforce as well as shaping Milwaukee’s art scene as we know it today.
The Layton School of Art closed in 1974. However, its legacy lives on through the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD), which continues to preserve and showcase the Layton School of Art Collection—an invaluable resource comprising archival materials, drawings, paintings, various forms of design work, and more.
Predecessor is made possible with support from Anne H. and Frederick Vogel III, Michael Huibregtse ’74, Bruce ’63 and Judy Renquist and Eric Vogel.
Opening Reception
Thursday, October 5, 2023 | 6 – 9 p.m.
Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Gallery Night & Day
Friday – Saturday, October 20 – 21, 2023
MIAD Galleries, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
“Life Partners” Charlotte Partridge and Miriam Frink: Wisconsin Pride Screening and Panel Discussion
Thursday, October 26, 2023 | 7 – 9 p.m.
Community Hub Auditorium, Room 160, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Participants:
Josie Osborne: Childhood connection to Partridge and Frink.
Seth Ter Haar: Exhibit’s curator; will present Partridge and Frink’s Legacy beyond the Layton School.
Robyn Bayland: A researcher of Partridge and Frink for Wisconsin Pride.
Andy Soth: Reporter and producer for PBS Wisconsin.
Wisconsin’s Memory Keepers: A Local Archive and Collections Panel
Tuesday, November 7, 2023 | 6 p.m.
Community Hub Auditorium, Room 160, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Participants:
Mark Lawson: Moderator; MIAD Director of Galleries
Richard Hartman: Director of the Gallery of Wisconsin Art
Max Yela: Head, Special Collections UWM Library
Graeme Reid: Director of Collections and Exhibitions, MOWA
Derek S. Webb: Head of Archives, UWM Library
Layton Lived On: Interviews with Alumni and Faculty of the Layton School of Art
Thursday, November 16, 2023 | 6 – 8 p.m.
MIAD Union Auditorium, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Interviewees:
Joseph Mendla: Layton instructor, founder of MIAD
JoAnna Poehlmann: Layton alum (1954 graduate), respected Wisconsin artist
John Gruenwald: Layton Alum (1974 last graduating class), respected printmaker
Bruce Renquist: Layton alum and instructor (1964 graduate), respected Industrial designer. On the founding board of MIAD.
Here & Now: Work from MIAD Faculty - 10/16/23 - 11/18/23
Dates: October 16 – November 18, 2023
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
This biennial exhibition is an opportunity to experience the depth and diversity of talent possessed by MIAD’s art and design faculty. With over one hundred members, MIAD’s dynamic faculty pursue careers as artists, illustrators, graphic designers, product designers and architects, with clients and exhibition venues across the globe.
Reception
Thursday, October 19, 2023 | 6 – 8 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Gallery Night
Friday, October 20, 2023 | 5 – 9 p.m.
MIAD Galleries, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Faculty Reading Event
Wednesday, October 25, 2023 | 6 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Make Me Feel - 08/21/23 - 10/06/23
Dates: August 21 – October 6, 2023
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Curated + Supported by maker llc, Ryan Ramos ‘02 and Heidi Ramos ‘05
Being a maker is in the fabric of our DNA. As human beings we are driven to make, not just what once was but what could be. Our need to make is not dependent on race, religion, gender, or politics. The act of making is driven by our need to evolve, survive, and prosper. To make is an opportunity to create with both positive and negative ends, and many shades of grey in between.
The presented artifacts and art, sculpture and products, paintings and prints, narratives and text were made and contribute to the act of making themselves. To remove them from their original context allows us the opportunity to explore the complexity of how they can shape our lives, inspiring us to think and to feel. These artifacts will be placed in a capsule of a sort, which will provide a space to explore and ask yourself, “How does this make me feel and why?”
Experience objects industrially designed and curated that will challenge preconceived ideas and notions; hopefully inspiring reflection on each experience, pondering “How does it make me feel?”
Events
Reception
Thursday, September 21, 2023 | 6 – 8 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Friends, Neighbors, & Distant Comrades - 08/08/23 - 09/16/23
Dates: August 8 – September 16, 2023
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Friends, Neighbors & Distant Comrades: Selections from the Moore Collection of ’80s NYC Art
Curated by Alan Moore and Michael Flanagan, this ambitious show centers on relics from the raucous art movements of the late 20th century in New York City. The collection of artwork reflects the counterculture attitudes and creative approaches of a disparate group of bohemian makers living and working in New York City, especially those who united in a variety of co-ops, collectives and art groups. The exhibition includes paintings, prints, sculptures, multiples and video collected by the Moore family of Milwaukee over several decades.
Alan Moore himself was a participant in the art movements as a critic, artist and historian. He has written and published numerous essays and books about that time, as well as writing about the ‘squatting’ movements in NYC and Europe. His book, “Art Gangs: Protest & Counterculture in New York City” (2011), and recent memoir “Art Worker” (2022) are well-researched looks at the times. He is also an archivist by default, in the process of cataloging, preserving and disseminating this extensive collection.
Events
Artist Talk – Seth Tobocman and Susan Bietila
Thursday, August 24, 2023 | 6 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub, Room 160, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Film Screening of Make Me Famous and talkback with James Cornwell
Thursday, August 31, 2023 | 6 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub, Room 160, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Artist Talk – Robert Goldman (Bobby G) and Andrea Callard
Thursday, September 7, 2023 | 6 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub, Room 160, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Performance by Jack Waters and Peter Cramer
Thursday, September 14, 2023 | 11 a.m.
MIAD Union Auditorium, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Closing Reception and Lecture
Friday, September 15, 2023
5 – 6:30 p.m. | Alan Moore and Dr. Mysoon Rizk lecture
6:30 – 8:30 p.m. | Closing Reception
Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
At 5pm Mysoon Rizk, Professor of Art History, Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of Toledo, will speak about the art environment of the period, NYC in the 1970s and ’80s. Her talk is entitled “Politics of Refusal: Occupying ’Slothism,’ Lying ‘Down’”. She will touch on the ideology of Joseph Beuys, and the curatorial activism of artists, especially artist David Wojnarowicz. Alan W. Moore will respond. Jack Waters and Peter Cramer will also be in attendance, and will share their perspectives as central participants in events of the era. We expect a lively discussion.
Don't Call Me Junior! - 06/05/23 - 07/22/23
Dates: June 5 – July 22, 2023
Gallery Night: Friday, July 21
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Showcasing works across all majors from the junior year at MIAD, Don’t Call Me Junior! focuses on the talent and vision of a new generation of emerging artists and designers. The exhibition reflects how MIAD’s 3rd year curriculum, through a broad range of experiences, prepares students for careers in their respective fields. The featured work covers 2D, 3D, and 4D projects from core and elective courses from Communication Design, Illustration, Interior Architecture and Design, Fine Arts/New Studio Practice and Product Design in the 3rd year, including collaborations with community partners on sponsored client projects.
The junior year is transformative. In the 3rd year, students hone their unique individual voices and set a direction for their professional focus in their senior year and beyond.
Boyfriend Material - 05/22/23 - 07/15/23
Dates: May 22 – July 15, 2023
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Curated by Milwaukee based artist LaNia Sproles ’17, the exhibition Boyfriend Material is a group show featuring queer identifying contemporary artists exploring diverse concepts of intimacy. Boyfriend Material focuses on the importance of queering our narrative of all types of connections and what that looks like. Artist are prompted with the quest of defining true love and what does it look and feel like to them while existing in a queer body. When we allow for our power to return back into the hands of our heart compass we can discover that even non-queer people can experience the freedom of genuine kinship. Queering our understanding of care, intimacy, sex and community can be exceptionally liberating and also restorative. Holding each other’s softness is a form of art we can find the blueprint to in our fellow LGBTQ+ beloveds.
Events
Opening Reception
June 2, 2023 | 6 – 9 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
QKE Event
June 9, 2023 | 5 – 9 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
MIAD 2023 Senior Exhibition - 04/21/23 - 05/06/23
Dates: April 21 – May 6, 2023
Location: MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition returns in 2023 featuring the innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways. The exhibit features student artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors. Learn more at www.miad.edu/seniorexhibition.
New Studio Practice: Fine Art Group Shows
Group Show 01: March 27 – 31, 2023
Closing reception Friday, March 31, 2023 6 – 8 p.m. in MIAD’s Community Hub & Gallery (room 160).
Group Show 02: April 3 – 7, 2023
Closing reception Friday, April 7, 2023 6 – 8 p.m. in MIAD’s Community Hub & Gallery (room 160).
Group Show 03: April 10 – 14, 2023
Closing reception Friday, April 14, 2023 6 – 8 p.m. in MIAD’s Community Hub & Gallery (room 160).
Art Against the Odds (Art of Incarcerated Individuals) - 01/16/23 - 03/11/23
Dates: January 16 – March 11, 2023
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: MIAD Layton Gallery, January 19, 6-8 p.m.
Art Against The Odds: Wisconsin Prison Art features more than 60 artists who turned to creative production to mitigate the dehumanizing conditions of incarceration. The exhibition was initiated two years ago by Portrait Society Gallery of Contemporary Art (PSG) in Milwaukee to give voice and visibility to individuals currently held in the state’s carceral system as well as to illustrate the potentially profound healing properties of an art practice. With limited instructional art programs offered in the prison system, these individuals teach themselves through various means, often working with a minimal range of materials.
Events
Film Screening
Master of Light
Tuesday, January 31 | 6 p.m.
Oriental Theater, 2230 N. Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee WI | Free Admission
Presented in conjunction with The Community, Represent Justice, and Milwaukee Film. Master of Light (2022) is a new documentary about George Anthony Morton, who spent 10 years in prison, and since his release, “is doing everything he can to defy society’s unlevel playing field and tackle the white-dominant art world.”
Panel Discussion
Correcting the Narrative: Realities and Reform In Our Prison System
Thursday, February 2 | 7 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub – Room 160, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Introductions: Peter Goldberg
Moderator: Shannon Ross, The Community
Participants:
Bill Lipscomb, assistant U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Wisconsin
Claude Motley, attorney, victim, and the focus of the documentary “When Claude Got Shot”
Cecelia Klingele, University of Wisconsin Law School
MIllie Lee, an aspiring public speaker connected to Jobs Work MKE, who was released recently from prison in Illinois after a lengthy sentence.
Panel Discussion
Narratives of Privilege: Dialogue about the Multi-Faceted Concept of Privilege
Wednesday, February 8 | 6 – 7:30 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub – Room 160, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Professor Zoe Darling with Research, Process & Connection FYE students
A thought-provoking dialogue about the multi-faceted concept of privilege in conjunction with Art Against the Odds.
Participants:
Kristin Belkofer, MS/LPC, Founder & Clinical Director, CLARA Healing Institute
Debra Brehmer, Director, Portrait Society Gallery of Contemporary Art
Takahiro Suzuki, Interdisciplinary Artist, Co-Founder of aCinema, Photography + Digital Media Lab Technician
Panel Discussion
Carceral Aesthetics: Making Art in Prison
Thursday, February 9 | 7 p.m.
MIAD Community Hub – Room 160, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Moderator: Sarah Demerath in discussion with John Tyson, Joshua Gresl, Joshua Rowe, Curtis Wilks and Scott Evans.
Photography ©Daniel McCullough
Closing Summary
- Attendance: 7,100 people visited over the seven-week run
- Audience response: 900 response cards written by attendees
- Tours: 27 groups toured the exhibition
- Media: 12 media outlets covered the exhibition
Wig Heavier than a Boot: Work by David Johnson and Philip Matthews - 01/16/23 - 03/11/23
Dates: January 16 – March 11, 2023
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: January 26, 6-8 p.m. with public Artist Talk at 5 p.m.
Wig Heavier than a Boot: Work by David Johnson and Philip Matthews brings together photography and video by David Johnson – an internationally exhibited lens-based artist, educator and curator – and poetry by Philip Matthews. Revealing Petal – a persona as whom Philip manifests to write, whom David photographs – the project crosses art-making rituals with isolated performances in domestic spaces and pastoral landscapes.
Events
Wig Heavier Than A Boot: A Poetry Reading and Talk Back with Philip Matthews
Thursday, March 2, 2023 | 6 – 7 p.m.
Hybrid; In-Person: 160 Community Hub Auditorium (encouraged for local audiences) | Google Meets (link)
Please join us for a poetry reading and discussion with poet Philip Matthews in conjunction with Wig Heavier Than A Boot, an exhibition of photographs by David Johnson and poetry from Matthews on view in Brooks Stevens Gallery from January 16th – March 11th. Matthews will read poems from Wig Heavier Than A Boot integrated with questions and conversation from the audience throughout the event. Matthews will attend virtually while the reading is broadcasted in-person on campus in the 160 Community Hub Auditorium. Questions from the audience will be moderated both through the online and in-person venues. Local audiences are encouraged to attend in person and view the exhibition of Wig Heavier Than A Boot while we extend our virtual space to remote audiences.
6:00-6:20 – Intro and first reading
6:20-6:30 – Questions + conversation
6:30-6:45 – Second reading
6:45-6:55 – Questions + conversation
6:55-7:00 – A last word
Philip Matthews is a poet from eastern North Carolina currently residing in rural Wisconsin where he directs programs at a nonprofit art and ecology center. Anchored by site-specific meditation and performance, his practice of the past decade has investigated spiritual queer power, questions of home and ecological shift.
Works featured in Philip’s reading can be purchased at the following links:
This engagement is supported by the Arts Midwest GIG Fund, a program of Arts Midwest that is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Then as Now: Woodland Pattern 1980-2022 - 10/10/22 - 12/3/22
Dates: October 10 – December 3, 2022
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: October 14, 5-8 p.m.
A visual history of Milwaukee’s Woodland Pattern Book Center featuring more than 100 artists who have exhibited there, Then as Now traces four decades of gallery curation that has consistently emphasized interdisciplinary practices, the permeable and ubiquitous nature of language, and the fluidity between poetry and other forms of art. Thematically diverse, the exhibition pursues intergenerational and interregional lineages and affinities, with domestic, ecological, and social justice issues often predominating.
Upcoming Events at MIAD
Thurs., Oct. 27, 8:30 – 11 a.m.: In Over One’s Head, a hybrid-genre workshop with Diane Glancy
Thurs., Oct. 27, 6 p.m.: Reading and Q&A with Diane Glancy
Thurs., Nov. 3, 6 p.m., MIAD Community Hub & Gallery, Room 160: Performance and artist talk with Douglas Ewart
Thurs., Nov. 10, 6 p.m., MIAD Community Hub & Gallery, Room 160: MIAD Creativity Series presents vanessa german, citizen artist. Free admission. Tickets are required due to limited seating. Register at miad.edu/creativityseries.
Sat., Nov. 12, 1 – 3 p.m., MIAD Frederick Layton Gallery: The Unthinking Mind – Writing from Art, a workshop with Marjorie Robertson
Tues., Nov. 15, 7 p.m., MIAD Community Hub & Gallery, Room 160: aCinema presents Kim Kielhofner, film screening and artist talk
Thurs., Nov. 17, 6 p.m., MIAD Community Hub & Gallery, Room 160: Tour of The New Art of Making Books with Max Yela
Related Events at Woodland Pattern Book Center
720 E. Locust St. Milwaukee, WI 53212
Sun., Oct. 23, 2 p.m.: Alternating Currents Live presents Jaap Blonk and Damon Smith in concert
Sun., Nov. 6, 7 p.m.: Alternating Currents Live presents Temple of Enthusiasm: The Bridge #2.3, featuring Marvin Tate, Erwan Keravec, Gerrit Hatcher, Lia Kohl and Gaspar Claus in concert
Relative Perception, a Veteran Print Project - 10/03/22 - 11/19/22
Dates: October 3 – November 19, 2022
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: October 6, 6-8 p.m.
Steamroller printing: October 14-15, 12-4 p.m.
Since 2010 the Veteran Print Project has fostered dialogue between artists and veterans that inspired the creation of fine art prints. The project continues to evolve from conversation catalyst to seeking new ways to commemorate and memorialize shared human experiences. This exhibit, Relative Perception, displays the latest approaches to this vision and includes three years of collaborative efforts with MIAD students, local veterans, and veteran organizations.
Relative Perception, a Veteran Print Project is supported in part by a grant from the Milwaukee Arts Board and the Wisconsin Arts Board with funds from the State of Wisconsin.
Tracing the Contemporary Italian Aesthetic - 08/20/22 - 10/01/22
Dates: August 20 – October 1, 2022
Location: River Level Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: August 25, 6-8 p.m.
MIAD’s Summer 2022 study abroad program in Florence, Italy allowed students to study the contemporary Italian aesthetic in-depth by tracing its development over history through art and design from both the art history and studio perspective. Students across all of MIAD’s majors participated in the program, and their work in response to this experience is on view in MIAD’s River Level Gallery.
Thresholds: The Photography-Based Work of Tomiko Jones and Elizabeth Claffey - 08/08/22 - 09/17/22
Dates: August 8 – September 17, 2022
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: September 8, 6-8 p.m. with Artist Talk at 5 p.m.
Thresholds is a two-person exhibition that addresses memory, identity, labor,
and death. Elizabeth M. Claffey and Tomiko Jones aim to hold public space
for experiences and emotions that are often expected to remain private. Both
artists emphasize their own labor and ritual as an activism that shapes identity
and strengthens their bond to place and family.
The Unbroken Line: Korean Landscape Painting Through the Teaching Lineage of Contemporary Masters - 08/08/22 - 09/24/22
Dates: August 8 – September 24, 2022
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Public Reception: August 25, 6-8 p.m.
Public Lecture: September 14, 7 p.m.
Join us for a public lecture by Dr. Hilary Snow, UWM Faculty: “Soaring Mountains, Flowing Streams: A Brief History of Korean Painting.”
MIAD Community Hub, Room 160
This exhibition brings together recent landscape paintings of a specific connected line of contemporary
South Korean brush painters, visually illustrating the transmission of ideas and methods of the ancient,
East Asian tradition of ink painting through the lifelong master/pupil model.
At the head of this selected lineage is the work of Bang, Ui-Geol, an internationally recognized
contemporary painter. Known by his artist name, Mokjung, he himself inherited the tradition of
landscape ink painting from a long line of artists. He is represented in this exhibition by a large-scale,
multi-paneled vast landscape painting. Lim, Sub Soo, known by her artist name Mokwon, studied under
Mokjung and is well-represented in this exhibition with numerous landscape paintings. Some of her
paintings were created specifically for this show and reflect her interpretation of the midwestern
landscape; her new home since moving to Milwaukee from South Korea several years ago. Mokwon has
also become an internationally recognized master painter and teacher.
The exhibition concludes with work created by a select group of Mokwon’s students in South
Korea, Chicago, and Milwaukee, many of whom have also become celebrated professional painters and teachers in
their own right. Each artist continuing and interpreting the ancient traditions in unique, contemporary
works.
Exhibiting these paintings at MIAD, a Western learning and teaching institution, gives the viewer
an opportunity to contemplate other systems of learning and a rare opportunity to view work by Korean
master painters.
Modern Icons: Celebration of Women Cycling - 08/12/22 - 09/15/22
Dates: August 12 – September 15, 2022
Location: Community Hub & Gallery, Room 160, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
In Spring 2022 MIAD’s junior-level illustration students collaborated with Trek, the Wisconsin-based bicycle and cycling product manufacturer, on a series of posters celebrating the achievements of women cyclists who have been breaking new ground in this legacy sport. Bicycle racing began as early as 1868 and posters to commemorate the races followed soon after that. The history of bicycle posters reflects all that was happening in current art and design movements of the eras and has employed many famous poster artists such as Mucha, Chéret, and Toulouse-Lautrec. These posters have now become highly collectable works of art.
The illustration students worked with their faculty and Trek’s branding and design team to develop new and unique solutions that addressed both the long tradition of vintage bicycle poster design as well as the contemporary successes of women cyclists. Trek selected 12 winning designs which were honored with a prize stipend. The four 1st prize winners will be on display at Trek offices and retailers throughout the world. The exhibition features a selection of the 79 student submissions.
Steadfast, Unbound II - 05/31/2022 – 07/16/2022
Dates: May 31 – July 16, 2022
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
MIAD presents Steadfast, Unbound, an exhibition of work by MIAD New Studio Practice: Fine Art junior students.
MIAD 2022 Juried Senior Exhibition - 05/31/2022 – 07/16/2022
Dates: May 31 – July 16, 2022
Location: MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
The MIAD 2022 Juried Senior Exhibition is an annual exhibition showcasing the best work of MIAD seniors, as selected by faculty in their major area of study. This exhibition features the art and design work of students in the Class of 2022.
The MIAD Senior Exhibition is generously sponsored by BMO Harris Bank.
MIAD 2022 Senior Exhibition - 04/22/2022 – 05/07/2022
Dates: April 22 – May 7, 2022
Location: In-person at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Events:
- April 20, Preview Night, 4 – 8 p.m.
Preview Night is open to family and friends, business representatives and community members, friends of MIAD, gallery owners, and design agency and creative incubator professionals. - April 22, Gallery Night public opening, 5 – 9 p.m.
Meet the seniors! Join us to celebrate Milwaukee’s emerging creative professionals! - April 23, Gallery Day, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition returns to campus in-person featuring the innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways. The exhibit features student artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors. The MIAD 2022 Senior Exhibition is generously sponsored by BMO Harris Bank.
Learn more at miad.edu/seniorexhibition.
Presence and Persistence: Visions of American Blackness, 01/17/2022 - 03/12/2022
Dates: January 17, 2022 – March 12, 2022
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
In-person programming events:
- Jan. 27, 4:30 – 6 p.m. Black Art on My Mind: Panel Discussion. Moderated by Jody Alexander, Milwaukee Art Museum’s African American Art Alliance. The panel discussion features three of the exhibition’s artists – Sandra Bridges, Chrystal Denise Gillon and Jerry Jordan – and MIAD faculty member Brad Bernard. In-person event at MIAD. A reception will follow the discussion.
- Feb. 4, 3:15 – 5:30 p.m. Assemblage Workshop with Chrystal Denise Gillon. Capacity is limited. In-person event at MIAD.
- Feb. 10, 7 – 8:30 p.m. Black Art: In the Absence of Light Film Screening. Inspired by the late David Driskell’s landmark 1976 exhibition, “Two Centuries of Black American Art,” this documentary offers an illuminating introduction to the work of some of today’s foremost Black visual artists. Learn more about the film here. In-person event at MIAD.
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
Sandra Bridges, David Anderson, Chrystal Denise Gillon ’98 and Jerry Jordan each depict Black life in America from their own perspectives, with work ranging from black-and-white renderings to paintings and assemblage collage work. The essential humanity and spirit embodied in these artworks celebrate the trials, triumphs, and history of Black people in the United States and speaks out in opposition to the continued marginalization and racism that continues to plague our country in the 21st century.
The collective exhibit showcases views of the Black American diaspora as a result of the Great Migration from the rural south to urban cities across America. The influences of those experiences remain relevant, indicating that the past is still very present and critical to this work. One might ask, “What does it mean to be Black in today’s America?” These artists provide insights through the lenses of their own lives and the artwork they have created.
Embracing the truth about history in the era of critical race theory is articulated in the intentions of the featured artist Sandra Bridges. Bridges says, “I’m not trying to shock you, scare you, or entertain you. I’m not trying to recreate a caricature or trying to rewrite history. I just want you to look at what you see and accept it. Delve deeply into it and connect in order to face who we are, in order to move on to a better tomorrow.”
Special thanks to our community partner: the Milwaukee Art Museum’s African American Art Alliance
Note: Event locations and dates are subject to change. Check here for the most up-to-date details or sign up to receive email updates at miad.edu/joinourlist.
Great Ideas of Humanity: Posters for Thought, 01/21/2022 - 03/05/2022
From 1950-1975, Chicago-based Container Corporation of America ran a campaign heralded as one of the best in advertising history, Great Ideas of Western Man. The world has changed since 1975, but great ideas are timeless. The Design Museum of Chicago has brought the series into the 21st century and commissioned contemporary artists and designers to create visual responses to Great Ideas of Humanity. Like the original series, the contemporary work does not advertise a product, but an ethos to make the world a better place via thoughtful design. The exhibit features posters and art objects by 60+ artists and designers, alongside reproductions of the original advertising campaign.
Dates: January 21, 2022 – March 5, 2022
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Programming events:
- Feb. 3, 6 – 8 p.m. Reception. In-person at MIAD.
- Feb. 17, 7 p.m. Great Ideas of Humanity: Posters for Thought Virtual Artist Panel Discussion. Join us for a virtual panel discussion organized by the staff of the Design Museum of Chicago, moderated by Liesl Olson, Director of Chicago Studies, Newberry Library. This event is free and open to the public. Panelists include: Renata Graw, Founder and Creative Director, Normal; Nick Adam, Design Principal, Span; James Goggin, Partner, Practise; and Pouya Ahmadi, Assistant Professor of Graphic Design, UIC School of Design.
Register Now!
Reimagining the Global Village, 10/11/2021 - 12/04/2021
Dates: October 11 – December 04, 2021
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Artist’s reception: October 14, 6 – 8 p.m. (In-person event)
Gallery Night MKE: October 15, 5 – 9 p.m. and October 16 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. (In-person event)
Virtual events: Click here to learn more about events and how to pre-register.
- October 28, 6:30 p.m. Climate Change & Sustainability: Transnational Perspectives in Art.
- November 11, 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Working with Communities Transnationally.
- December 2, 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Landays: Poetery of Afghan Women
Throughout the pandemic, the ability to connect and work with someone beyond our immediate reach has brought us closer to creating a global community while acknowledging our varied situations. Artists have always found ways to subvert barriers and distill the importance of human connection through their work and words – reimagining the world as an interdependent network. Technologies enable artists and collectives to circumvent political boundaries and network in unprecedented ways. The objects they create together translate key issues that go unnoticed in everyday channels of information.
“Reimagining the Global Village” features work by more than 30 artists and collectives, created collaboratively between artists and between artists and communities in more than 18 different countries. Their work reveals the importance of human connection and showcases strategies artists have adopted to create a more connected and caring world. The work addresses issues currently weighing down on our planet and the global community: refugees at borders, ruptures in cross-cultural communication and climate change. These issues are of great magnitude, often too intimidating for any one person, community or country to address. Internationalism might just be the key to finding a solution to the world’s problems. This exhibition provides tools to break away from isolationist thinking, acknowledging artists as points of connection and the work they produce through collaboration as bridges.
Curated by Nirmal Raja ‘08 (Painting). This exhibition is generously sponsored by Fiserv.
Constant Practice: New Work From MIAD Faculty, 10/05/2021 - 12/04/2021
Dates: October 5 – December 04, 2021
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Artist’s reception: October 7, 6 – 8 p.m. (In-person event)
Gallery Night MKE: October 15, 5 – 9 p.m. and October 16 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. (In-person event)
Faculty Off the Wall: Readings & Presentations: November 3, 6 – 8 p.m. (In-person event)
Faculty at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) are accomplished, practicing artists and designers in communication design, fine arts, illustration, interior architecture and design and product design. In this biennial exhibition, MIAD faculty showcase their ongoing explorations in their fields.
Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Exhibition, 08/09/2021 - 09/25/2021
Dates: August 9 – September 25, 2021
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
Reception: September 9, 2021, 6 – 8 p.m.
This biennial exhibition at MIAD showcases Milwaukee area emerging and established visual artists who have received the Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Travel Award in the preceding two years. The exhibition features the diversity and depth of local talent who are creating new work.
The Bradley Family Foundation, in collaboration with the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, administers the Mary L. Nohl Fund Suitcase Export Fund for Individual Artists. To date, the Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Travel Award has supported 341 artists and 20 artist collectives exhibiting throughout North America, Europe, the former Soviet Union, Africa and Asia. The latest awardees represent the first wave of travellers since the COVID-19 pandemic began.
Curated by Bruce Knackert and Mark Lawson.
Somewhere Along the Line: Photographs by Joshua Dudley Greer, 08/09/2021 - 09/18/2021
Dates: August 9 – September 18, 2021
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery at MIAD, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee, WI
From 2011 to 2017 Joshua Dudley Greer traveled over 100,000 miles by car, focusing his camera on the massive network of superhighways in the United States. Rather than moving quickly through these spaces, he slowly and deliberately dwelled within them, looking at the road as a stage where narratives play out and opposing forces intersect. He examines the boundaries that line these roadways, whether real or imagined, by looking at the separations between public and private space, privilege and need, the individual and the collective, and the countervailing ideas of home and escape. The resulting compilation of photographs depicts the state of America’s infrastructure as a physical manifestation of its economic, social and environmental circumstances in unforeseen moments of humor, pathos and humanity.
Joshua Dudley Greer is a photographer based in Atlanta. His work has been highlighted by the Washington Post, Wired magazine and The Atlantic, among other publications. Greer’s work is in the permanent collections of the Harvard Art Museums, the Museum of Contemporary Photography, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, the New York Public Library, the Do Good Fund and the High Museum of Art.
MIAD 2021 Juried Senior Exhibition - 06/01/2021 - 07/24/2021
Dates: June 1 – July 24, 2021
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Hours: Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Free admission. Open to the public. Please note: For the health and safety of our community, all visitors to MIAD are required to wear face masks.
The MIAD Juried Senior Exhibition is an annual exhibition showcasing the best work of MIAD seniors, as selected by faculty in their major area of study. The posters in this exhibition feature the art and design work of students in the Class of 2021.
The MIAD Senior Exhibition is generously sponsored by BMO Harris Bank.
Virtual MIAD 2021 Senior Exhibition - On view now
MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition features innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways. This year’s exhibit features nearly 160 artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors.
The virtual MIAD Senior Exhibition is on view now. Visit seniorexhibition.miad.edu to view the exhibition.
Vision & Voice - 01/23/2021 - 03/13/2021
Vision & Voice: MIAD Alumni Exploring the Current and the Imminent – An Invitational Exhibit
Dates: January 23 – March 13, 2021
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery (View in person by appointment only. Contact Mark Lawson at marklawson@miad.edu or 414-847-3350 to schedule an appointment.) View the virtual exhibition.
The world is in the grips of a deadly pandemic and communities across the globe are on a quest for more equitable human rights and economic fairness. This exhibit features a few of the many Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design alumni who have made contributions through their art and design work to the current dialogue on the many pressing social issues of our time. These artists and designers represent the various majors at MIAD, including Communication Design, Illustration and New Studio Practice: Fine Arts. The conceptual and visual languages that they use reflects this diversity.
TYPE Portrait – Tangible TYPE - 01/15/2021 - 03/05/2021
Dates: January 15 – March 5
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery (View in person by appointment only. Contact Mark Lawson at marklawson@miad.edu or 414-847-3350 to schedule an appointment.) View the virtual exhibition.
Programming Events: To be determined
TYPE Portrait – Tangible TYPE, featuring the work of Yeohyun Ahn and Teokyeom Lee, explores the symbiotic relationship of technology, design and typography. Typography, often an invisible art form behind human language, dates back to the birth of written language. Today, digital cameras, 3D printing and other emerging technologies provide new opportunities for innovation and exploration.
Yeohyun Ahn presents a series of generative typography as self-portraits, which convey her response to her sense of invisibility as a woman of color. Ahn started this project in 2015 to raise awareness of Asian female faculty being isolated and marginalized in a predominantly white institution of America. Ahn’s work uses diverse typefaces to convey feelings and thoughts, and shows possibilities for using the personality of each typeface for expressive and visually appealing generative selfies.
Teokyeom Lee explores groundbreaking developments of 3D printing in many fields, including typography. Lee’s work aims to orchestrate innovative and unique typographic experiences with 3D printing technology.
We Hold These Truths - Fall 2020 (Virtual Exhibition)
Dates: Opens October 16, 2020
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery (View in person by appointment only. Contact Mark Lawson at marklawson@miad.edu or 414-847-3350 to schedule an appointment.)
Programming Events: To be determined
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
The opening lines from the Declaration of Independence serve as an entry to think about the world and the state of democracy at this moment. With the U.S. Presidential Election this year, MIAD is exhibiting its first juried faculty and staff exhibition showcasing work that explores the idea of political truth: What are political truths? Is political truth possible?
This exhibition is juried by Hank Willis Thomas, Emma Nuzzo and Evan Walsh through their organization, For Freedoms, co-founded by Hank Willis Thomas and Eric Gottesman in 2016. For Freedoms is a national platform that uses art to deepen public discourse on political and community issues. It is an artistic collective of over 700 artists and 250 institutions in all 50 States, Washington D.C., and Puerto Rico that inspires civic engagement through creative thinking and action. This exhibition is a component of For Freedoms’ Great Awakening 2020 project.
Work by the following individuals is on view in the exhibition: James Barany, Joe Boblick, Jamál Currie, Jon Horvath, Mark Lawson, Melissa Mursch-Rodriguez and Haerim Lee.
2020 [Virtual] MIAD Senior Exhibition - On view now
The innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways at MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition is on view in a virtual MIAD Senior Exhibition. The exhibit features 130+ artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors. The exhibition is generously sponsored by BMO Harris Bank.
Mrs. Lincoln, what did you think of the play?, 01/27/2020 – 03/14/2020
Dates: January 27 – March 14, 2020
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Community/Public Programming:
- Opening Reception: January 31, 6 – 8 p.m.
- Panel Discussion: March 6, 6 – 7:30 p.m.
Curator Danny Volk uses a collection of antique typewriters, eyewitness videos, archival documents, recorded interviews, photographs and other artifacts to share one man’s tragic experience of a natural disaster and invite viewers to reflect on how truth is documented and represented.
New Deal Utopias, 01/27/2020 – 03/14/2020
Dates: January 27 – March 14, 2020
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Community/Public Programming:
- Opening Reception: January 31, 6 – 8 p.m.
- Panel Discussion: February 21, 6 – 7:30 p.m.
“New Deal Utopias” features photographs by Jason Reblando that explore the three “Greenbelt Towns” of Greendale, Wis., Greenbelt, Md., and Greenhills, Ohio. Greenbelt Towns were planned communities built by the US government during the Great Depression, designed to be model cities to address the social and economic discrepancies brought on and accentuated by the Depression. The photographs depict the towns’ built environments and landscapes, evoking utopia both as an idea and a place in the American mind. These photographs emphasize that Greenbelt Towns are an overlooked, but crucial part of the American landscape, as we continue to grapple with shifting roles of housing, nature and government in American life.
Ossuary: A Project by Laurie Beth Clark, 01/13/2020 – 03/07/2020
Dates: January 13, 2020 – March 7, 2020
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Community/Public Programming:
- Jan. 17, 5 – 9 p.m. Opening Reception (Artists’ reception begins at 7 p.m.)
- Feb. 26, 7 – 8 p.m. Curator Talk: “OSSUARY: A Repository of Bones”
This exhibition brings together a cohesive installation work comprised of individual works made from or themed around bones, inspired by artist Laurie Beth Clark’s research at the repository of bones that have accrued in countries like Cambodia and Rwanda where mass violence has occurred. The exhibition showcases the work of 34 Wisconsin artists and more than 340 total works.
Artworks explore bones visually, thematically and metaphorically. While the exhibition inspiration stems from traumas, the exhibit celebrates resilience and the ways artists create counter images that are hopeful or poignant rejoinders. Artworks are political statements and personal elegies, memorials to individuals or statements about mortality. Some are serious, and some use bones in a completely playful manner.
Story & Craft - A Magic: The Gathering Exhibition, 11/11/2019 – 01/11/2020
Dates: November 11, 2019 – January 11, 2020
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Community/Public Programming:
- Nov. 14, 7 p.m.: Artist Talk: “Making a Career of Diversity in Fantasy Art” presented by Winona Nelson. Nelson’s fine art often focuses on the stories and history of her tribe, the Ojibwe of Minnesota, and on the experiences of women and minorities.
- Nov. 15, 6 – 8 p.m. Opening Reception
- Nov. 16, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.: Magic: The Gathering Game Day
If you like science fiction, fantasy art, Dungeons & Dragons or TV shows like Game of Thrones, then you may want to check out Story & Craft – A Magic: The Gathering Exhibition.
Since its debut in 1993, artists have designed more than 20,000 game cards and its fan base has grown to more than 20 million players worldwide. The exhibition at MIAD is the first of its kind in the Midwest, and only the second in the game’s history in North America.
The exhibition examines the game card design process and gaming culture. It features rare original Magic: The Gathering artwork and cards, plus concept drawing and models from different periods of the game’s history – taking visitors on a journey through the design process from sketches to design to final art creation. The fans and players of Magic literally invent the rules and methods of play, and this exhibition also highlights the evolution of the many differing ways of playing.
View the complete schedule of exhibition events for MIAD students.
In this body of mine, 10/18/2019 - 12/07/2019
Dates: October 18 – December 7, 2019
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Reception: Fall Gallery Night, Friday, October 18, 5 – 9 p.m.
This group exhibition (formerly titled “Reclaiming Our Time”) by the Strange Fire Collective features primarily photography and focuses on social justice themes that critically question the dominant social hierarchy and engages the community in meaningful dialogue about art, gender, race and equity, politics, history and more. Works are presented in traditional and digital formats. This exhibition is generously supported in part by the Mary L. Nohl Fund of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation.
The Strange Fire Collective, which comprises more than 120 artists, is dedicated to highlighting work made by diverse people, including women, persons of color, and queer and transgender artists. Participating artists include:
- Nydia Blas
- Andre Bradley
- Ria Brodell
- Widline Cadet
- Kei Ito
- Rachel Jessen
- Tarrah Krajnak
- Natalie Krick
- Birthe Piontek
- Kalen Na’il Roach
- Gabriel García Roman
- Leonard Suryajaya
- Paula Wilson
- American snapshots from the collection of Robert E. Jackson
Society for Photographic Education Midwest Juried Exhibition, 09/20/2019 - 10/27/2019
Dates: September 20 – October 27, 2019
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: Friday, October 25, 4:30 – 5:30 p.m.
The SPE Midwest Juried Exhibition brings together professional and student members of this photographic organization. The exhibited works are loosely tied by the photographic medium itself and highlight the various approaches and concerns of artists working with photography today. Works by professional members are selected by Jennifer Murray, executive director of Filter Photo and student works are selected by Alejandro Cartagena, a photographer and educator based in Monterrey, Mexico.
Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Exhibition, 08/19/2019 - 10/05/2019
Dates: August 19 – October 5, 2019
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Reception: Thursday, September 5, 6 – 8 p.m.
This biannual exhibition at MIAD showcases award-winning local artists who have received the Mary L. Nohl Suitcase Travel Award in the preceding two years. The award program gives Milwaukee-area artists financial support to travel around the world and exhibit their artwork. Participating artists include:
James Barany
Kelly Bronikowski
Cecelia Condit
Santiago Cucullu
Paul Druecke
Sally Duback
Hannah Hamalian
Thad Kellstadt
Katie Martin
Colin Matthes
Kevin Miyazaki
Shannon Molter
Allen Morris
Joseph Mougel
Nirmal Raja
John Riepenhoff
Sara Risley
Pacia Sallomi
Kyle Seis
Anja Notanja Seiger
Roy Staab
Takahiro Suzuki
Gabrielle Tesfaye
Janelle VanderKelen
Jason Vaughn
Melissa Wagner-Lawler
Shane Walsh
Jordan Waraksa
Della Wells
Rina Yoon
Body of Work, 06/19/2019 - 09/07/2019
Dates: June 19 – September 7, 2019
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: Wednesday, June 19, 5 – 8 p.m.
Through large-scale works by women artists, Body of Work engages the community in a conversation about the relationship between the body and artmaking. The exhibition is a witness to women artists laboring to unchain themselves from patriarchal stereotypes. The artworks focus on the physicality of making large-scale works. The body is representational, conceptual or inherent in some work, but not apparent in other work. The exhibit is curated by Kate Schaffer and MIAD alumna Melissa Dorn.
MIAD 2019 Juried Senior Exhibition, 06/01/2019 - 08/03/2019
Dates: June 1 – August 3, 2019
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
View the best of the 2019 Senior Exhibition in the annual juried exhibition, showcasing MIAD art and design works selected by MIAD faculty.
High School Invitational: Teachers' Selections, 05/25/2019 - 06/08/2019
Dates: May 25 – June 8, 2019
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: Saturday, June 1, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m.
High School Invitational: Teachers’ Selections is a group exhibition celebrating local high school art students and their Visual Arts programs. Each school is asked to contribute five pieces from a variety of class levels and media. Participating schools include Germantown, Cristo Rey, St. Joan Antida, Brookfield East, Greenfield, Cedarburg, Homestead, South Division, Ronald Reagan and Oconomowoc High School and Milwaukee High School of the Arts.
MIAD 2019 Senior Exhibition, 04/19/2019 - 05/11/2019
Dates: April 19 – May 11, 2019
Location: All MIAD galleries
Preview Night: Wednesday, April 17, 2019, 4 – 8 p.m.
Opening Reception: Friday, April 26, 5 – 9 p.m.
Technology meets creativity at MIAD. See the innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways at MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition. MIAD’s Senior Exhibition, Wisconsin’s largest exhibition of its kind, features 130+ artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors. See more information about the MIAD 2019 Senior Exhibition.
I Contain Multitudes, 01/18/2019 - 03/09/2019
Dates: January 18 – March 9, 2019
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Opening Night – Winter Gallery Night Friday, January 18, 5 – 9 p.m.
Opening Reception & Artists’ Discussion Saturday, January 19, 2 p.m. Meet the 10 artists participating in the exhibit and view a documentary created about the making of this exhibition.
Navigating Cultures: Artists’ Talk and Panel Discussion Thursday, February 7, 7 p.m. Fawzia Khan and Hend Al-Mansour lead a discussion on challenges of simultaneously being part of two cultures.
Talking Suitcases Wednesday, February 27, 7 p.m. Susan Armington discusses her project and workshops to fill a suitcase with a handmade objects that tell stories and help participants gain insights about themselves, touching on topics such as immigration, racism, grief, personal loss and life transition.
The paintings, drawings, mixed media objects and installations from 10 artists from diverse heritage and artistic backgrounds invite viewers to examine how multiculturalism and navigating between different social norms affects the artists, as well as how it relates to the issues of immigration and diversity in our contemporary society. The work of the artists explores living a multicultural life and examines concepts of cultural negotiation, memory and nostalgia. The artists’ work showcases juxtapositions of visual languages, cultural icons or symbolism and gender inequalities.
The exhibition is curated by Nina Ghanbarzadeh. In addition to Ghanbarzadeh, artists featured include:
- Hend Al-Mansour, a former cardiologist from Saudi Arabia, she now makes prints in Minneapolis.
- Painter and mapmaker Susan Armington lives in Minneapolis and spent time teaching in Japan.
- Visual artist Nida Bangash, born in Iran and raised in Pakistan, creates miniatures in McKinney, Texas.
- Roya Farassat, an Iranian painter/sculptor, lives and creates in New York City.
- Farida Hughes, an American abstract artist of Asian-Indian/American descent, explores community engagement and movement in her mixed media work.
- Fawzia Khan, a Pakistani-American abstract artist born in Nigeria and living in Minneapolis, works in the visual arts after a career in obstetrics/gynecology.
- Ifrah Mansour was born in Saudi Arabia and raised in Somalia, Kenya and the United States. The Muslim Somali refugee is now a multimedia artist and educator in Minnesota.
- Kimberlee Joy Roth, a former physics and science teacher who has spent time in several European countries and Israel, is a ceramic artist living in Minneapolis.
- Helen Zughaib, a native of Beirut, Lebanon, currently lives and works in Washington, D.C.
The exhibition is generously supported in part by the Mary L. Nohl Fund of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation.
Spectacular Vernacular, 11/03/2018 - 03/02/2019
Dates: November 3, 2018 – March 2, 2019
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: Thursday, November 8, 6 – 8 p.m.
Special programming: Curators Panel Discussion moderated by Monica Obniski of the Milwaukee Art Museum, Tuesday, November 27, 7 p.m.
Besides being useful, and perhaps even beautiful, what else should designed objects do? Spectacular Vernacular takes you on a journey through observation, experimentation and speculation to reveal how the creators mix their craft and industrial design backgrounds with influences from fiction, science and the arts. Explore the rhetorical and practical opportunities of designed objects, encouraging a broadening of the conventional definition of the designer’s role.
The exhibition features work by the design studio Parsons & Charlesworth, founded by British husband and wife Tim Parsons and Jessica Charlesworth.
Steel Genesis: Sandra Gould Ford, 10/19/2018 - 12/08/2018
Dates: October 19 – December 8, 2018
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Reception: October 19, 2018, 5 – 9 p.m. (Fall Gallery Night)
Special programming: “The Mill as Metaphor: Art, Storytelling and Change,” a panel discussion featuring Sandra Gould Ford and guests including Ariel Pate, associate curator of photography at the Milwaukee Art Museum, and Bill Breihan form the United Steelworkers, Monday, November 26, 6 p.m. in the Frederick Layton Gallery.
Through the photographs, writings and documents of artist and writer Sandra Gould Ford, this exhibition explores the history, memory and experiences of the industrial working class as well as the economic and social loss suffered when an area’s defining industry declines. Ford’s photographic work, which she produced during and after her employment at one of the Pittsburgh area’s oldest and largest steel mills, creates a vibrant conversation with her subject, capturing the nuanced links between place, time, memory, work and creativity. The exhibition also features several works by LaToya Ruby Frazier, produced during a recent collaborative exhibition project between the two photographers.
Mathew Hintz: Spirit of the Open Road, 08/08/2018 - 10/20/2018
Dates: August 8 – October 20, 2018
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: August 23, 2018, 6 – 8 p.m.
Special gallery hours: Harley-Davidson Motor Company’s 115th Anniversary Celebration in Milwaukee is during Labor Day weekend. During this celebration, MIAD’s Galleries are open to the public Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 1, 10 a.m. – 7 p.m. and Sunday, Sept. 2, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. The exhibit will be closed on Labor Day (Monday, Sept. 3).
Mathew Hintz ’98 (Painting) is a MIAD alum who died unexpectedly in December 2017. His passion for motorcycles and transportation design was sparked in 1998 during an internship in Styling & Graphic Design at the Harley-Davidson Motor Company. Hintz was one of only a few licensed Harley-Davidson Artists worldwide, producing works sold through Harley-Davidson dealerships and original cover art featured on Harley-Davidson Owner Manuals. Throughout his career, Hintz also was licensed to produce artwork for Ford Images and created original work for Steiner Sports. His works in the exhibition are for sale. Proceeds will help support his family. Harley-Davidson Motor Company celebrates its 115th Anniversary Aug. 29 – Sept. 3, 2018.
MIAD Faculty Exhibition, 08/20/2018 - 10/06/2018
Dates: August 20 – October 6, 2018
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Reception: September 6, 2018, 6 – 8 p.m.
This biannual exhibition showcases the accomplished and highly respected art and design faculty from all disciplines – Communication Design, Illustration, Fine Arts, Industrial Design and Interior Architecture and Design – at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design.
MIAD 2018 Juried Senior Exhibition, 06/02/2018 - 08/04/2018
Dates: June 2 – August 4, 2018
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
View the best of the 2018 Senior Exhibition in the annual juried exhibition, showcasing MIAD art and design works selected by MIAD faculty.
MIAD 2018 Senior Exhibition, 04/20/2018 - 05/12/2018
Dates: April 20 – May 12, 2018
Location: All MIAD galleries
Receptions: April 18 (Preview) & April 20 (Spring Gallery Night)
See the innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways at MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition. MIAD’s Senior Exhibition, Wisconsin’s largest exhibition of its kind, features more than 100 artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors, including:
- Communication Design (Graphic + Web)
- Illustration
- Industrial (Product) Design
- Interior Architecture and Design
- New Studio Practice: Fine Arts (Drawing, Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture, Photography, Animation + Digital Video)
Cultural heritage and identity, acceptance and inclusion, innovation, women’s empowerment and improving wellness are themes featured in this year’s exhibition.
Generously sponsored by:
Animals in Space: A Collective Memoir, 06/30/2018 - 07/28/2018
Dates: June 30 – July 28, 2018
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Special programming:
- June 30, 1 – 4 p.m. – Chicago & Milwaukee Art Scenes: A Dialogue with Emerging Artists & Curators (Opening)
- July 20, 2018, 6:30 – 8:25 p.m. – Not Your Mama’s Sunset Walk (Summer Gallery Night)
Through a mixture of media, emerging artists Malika Bukhari, Anna Foran, Zoe Greenham, Natasha Mijares and Rebecca Nakaba investigate similarities and differences between humans and animals in processing information, material and memory, as well as explore the relationships to space for humans and animals. The exhibition is curated by Natasha Mijares and Rebecca Nakaba.
High School Invitational: Teachers' Selections, 05/29/2018 - 06/16/2018
Dates: May 29 – June 16, 2018
Location: Brooks Stevens Gallery
Reception: June 2, 2 – 4 p.m.
High School Invitational: Teachers’ Selections is a celebration of local high school art students and their Visual Art programs. The exhibition features teachers’ selections of student work from 10 area high schools including Brookfield Central, Golda Meir, Grafton, Milwaukee High School of the Arts, Pius XI, Port Washington, Ronald Reagan, Rufus King, St. Thomas More, and Wauwatosa East. This work serves as a sampling of diverse projects created over the past school year and the 28 students employ a variety of media including painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, illustration, fibers, metalworking, and mixed media.
MIAD 2018 Senior Exhibition, 04/20/2018 - 05/12/2018
Dates: April 20 – May 12, 2018
Location: All MIAD galleries
Receptions: April 18 (Preview) & April 20 (Spring Gallery Night)
See the innovative work of emerging creative professionals who passionately contribute to the world and meet universal challenges in new ways at MIAD’s annual Senior Exhibition. MIAD’s Senior Exhibition, Wisconsin’s largest exhibition of its kind, features more than 100 artists and designers representing all of MIAD’s Bachelor of Fine Arts majors and minors, including:
- Communication Design (Graphic + Web)
- Illustration
- Industrial (Product) Design
- Interior Architecture and Design
- New Studio Practice: Fine Arts (Drawing, Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture, Photography, Animation + Digital Video)
Cultural heritage and identity, acceptance and inclusion, innovation, women’s empowerment and improving wellness are themes featured in this year’s exhibition.
Generously sponsored by:
Humanly Possible: The Empathy Exhibition, 01/12/2018 - 03/10/2018
Dates: January 12, 2018 – March 10, 2018
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Reception: January 19 (Winter Gallery Night), 5 – 9 p.m.
Empathy is possible because we are human. Because we are human we can choose whether to exercise it or not. It is this human potential that we hope to encourage by bringing together the artists and their work in this exhibition. The current polarized political and cultural landscape we live in has created an urgency and relevance for the consideration and understanding of this human trait that represents the best of what we can aspire to. This exhibition brings together over a dozen artists of diverse perspectives from around the country to create a dialogue on this general topic. “Humanly Possible: The Empathy Exhibition” is sponsored in part by the Mary L. Nohl Fund of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation.
Special programming:
- February 1, 6 p.m.: Empathy Through the Visual Arts: An Artist’s Discussion
- February 15, 7 p.m.: Empathy, Connections and Borders: An Evening of Poetry and Storytelling
- March 1, 7 p.m.: 100 Lullabies (Lullaby Songs for Refugees)
Learn more about the exhibition programming.
- Download the Educational Material for Humanly Possible: The Empathy Exhibition
Chair 5: Perspectives on Form, Function and Innovation, 10/20/2017 - 03/03/2018
- February 21, 7 p.m. – Guest Speaker: Michael Puryear
- February 22, 7 p.m. – Panel Discussion: Markets for Furniture Makers and Collectors
- March 7, 7 p.m. – Guest Speaker: Mollie Ferguson
- April 24, 7 p.m. – Guest Speaker: Glenn Adamson, “Make or Break: Inside and Outside the Rules”
All programming is generously sponsored by the Caxambas Foundation. Learn more about each of the programming events.
The exhibition offers opportunities for physical interaction and considerations of each chair’s function, design and concept. Highlights include:
- an opportunity to sit in a series of seating forms to explore how posture has evolved.
- a period room where chairs hang on the wall as they did in Shaker times, and where visitors can take a seat off the wall—literally—to try it out.
- chairs by contemporary furniture designers and builders—including Mike Jarvi, Peter Opsvik, Herman Miller, Gustav Stickley, Gerritt Rietveldt and Jennifer Anderson—who take the concept of the chair beyond form and function.
This multidimensional approach to thinking about chairs is integral to MIAD’s new Furniture Design program, including an innovative furniture design class taught by Chair5 primary exhibit designer Brent Budsberg.
- Download the Educational Material for Chair5
FANTASTIC: Four Contemporary Illustration Artists, 10/01/2017 - 12/02/2017
Dates: October 20 – December 2, 2017
Location: Frederick Layton Gallery
Opening reception: October 20, 2017, 5 – 9 p.m.
Special programming: Public talk <by Henrik Drescher and Frances Jetter, November 9, 7 p.m. Extra-terrestrial. Political. Animalistic. Festive. While the illustrations in the newest exhibition on view at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (MIAD) cover divergent themes across a range of platforms, their exploration of media connects them and enriches their messages. “FANTASTIC: Four Contemporary Illustration Artists” features the work of renowned artists Henrik Drescher, Frances Jetter, Katherine Streeter and Carl Dunn. While their work has been commissioned for newspapers and magazines for years, these artists have proven themselves equally adept at responding to assignments from clients and initiating their own projects to express their unique visions through painting, book arts, printmaking, collage, sculpture and digital animations.
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- Download the Educational Material for FANTASTIC
User Experience: Products that Shape Our Lives, 10/21/2016 – 02/25/2017
Some say life is what you make of it. The newest exhibit at MIAD asserts that, more simply, life is what you make.
User Experience: Products That Shape Our Lives, on view in the Brooks Stevens Gallery October 21 – February 25, focuses on the devices we use and how their design has evolved from inception through today.
The Opening Reception is Fall Gallery Night, Friday, October 21, 5 – 9 p.m.
Many devices were difficult and even dangerous to operate during the Industrial Revolution. With advancements in engineering, ergonomics and greater emotional awareness, products today are safe, user-friendly and powerful.
“This exhibit traces the history of how humanity has improved the tools it uses to make our lives easier, and our work safer and more successful,” said co-curator Mark Lawson.
Using MIAD’s extensive product design collection and in collaboration with Milwaukee Tool, User Experience highlights the ways in which a design-centric approach has transformed many products into the ones we love and rely upon today.
Visitors see devices ranging from Thomas Edison’s wax cylinder phonograph to iPods, General Electric’s first production monitor-top refrigerator to a new stainless steel Electrolux and much more.
The exhibit is co-curated by James Wiemer and Mark Lawson with art direction by Dale Shidler. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., Monday – Saturday.
Schedule a free gallery tour here.
Keep up with MIAD exhibit and event news.
Image: Lawn-Boy lawn mower ad; product designed by Brooks Stevens
Dan Friedman: Radical Modernist, 10/01/2016 – 12/03/2016
“What Dan brings to his work is an inspired vision, a conceptual approach toward ordering the diversity of visual material that one experiences.”
– Jeffrey Deitch, Hip-Hop Modernism
Dan Friedman’s diversity of visual material is evident in Dan Friedman: Radical Modernist, on view October 1 – December 3 in the Frederick Layton Gallery, with an Opening Reception and Talk by exhibit designer Christopher Pullman Friday, September 30, 6 p.m.
Friedman, a design pioneer working across various media, sought to create, delight and engage with his designs, furniture and more. His legendary work is featured in this comprehensive exhibit, making its Midwest debut at MIAD.
Viewers experience his unique vision, and contributions to graphic design and the broader realm of the visual arts. Highlighted in the exhibit are Friedman’s groundbreaking typography, eccentric furniture and playfully-subversive 3D objects, which were integral to both American street culture and global experimental design.
Though an influential figure of the New York, Paris and Milan art scenes, his work has rarely been exhibited since his untimely death in 1995. As a design pioneer, Friedman explored conceptual limits across the media in which he worked.
He helped redefine graphic design as an art form in its own right, and his influence is seen today across the pop culture landscape. For these reasons and more, the American Institute of Graphic Arts posthumously awarded him an AIGA Medal in 2015.
Dan Friedman: Radical Modernist merges art, design and craft, and is curated by Steven Skov Holt and Mara Holt Skov, with the assistance of Christopher Pullman and the support of Ken Friedman.
Gallery hours are Monday – Saturday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Learn more about Friedman’s life and his 2015 AIGA Medal here.
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MIAD Faculty Exhibition 2016, 08/22/2016 – 09/17/2016
Dates: August 22 – September 17, 2016 Location: Frederick Layton Gallery The old adage “those who can’t do, teach” doesn’t have much traction at MIAD, where faculty members are exhibiting and working artists and designers. The biennial Faculty Exhibition offers a chance to experience faculty work in one incredible exhibit. Participating faculty include: Jared Patton Plock; Rina Yoon; Chris Beetow; Bruce Humphries; Zoë Darling; Nicholas Frank; Rosalie Beck; John Matson; Peter Barrikman; Christiane Grauers; Michael Presutti; Jeremy McDonnell; Cole Norton; Steve Horvath; Joe Boblick; Susan Estelle Kwas; Corbett Toomsen; Waldek Dynerman; Jon Horvath; Kim Miller; Matthew Lee; Leslie Fedorchuk; Naomi Shersty; Will Pergl; Jan Feldhausen; Shana McCaw and Brent Budsberg; Bruce Grudzinski; Tom Noffsinger; and James Barany