From historic institutions such as the Detroit Institute of the Arts, to new galleries and contemporary spaces such as the Museum of Contemporary Art of Detroit, the art scene in Detroit is more than just decoration. The excitement and energy brought forth by new projects every year invigorates each neighborhood, often changing the physical landscape as well as the emotional one. A new generation of artists and designers flock to the city seeking more affordable living and working spaces; a vibrant, diverse, and socially engaged community; and new opportunities for entrepreneurial activity.
Cranbrook in Detroit
Cranbrook in Detroit
In Detroit, art is woven into the very fabric of the community. It always has been.
Cranbrook in Detroit
Cranbrook Academy of Art alumni and faculty play a leading role in Detroit's creative community.
Cranbrook in Detroit
Cranbrook Academy of Art alumni and faculty play a leading role in Detroit's creative community.
The great Spirit of Detroit sculpture, an icon of the city, is by former Cranbrook instructor Marshall Fredericks. Architecture graduate Tadd Heidgerken designed Selden Standard, an award-winning restaurant in Detroit’s Midtown neighborhood. Painting Artist-in-Residence Beverly Fishman’s mural Rise, at 170-feet-by-60-feet, ranks as one of the largest pieces of public art in Detroit.
Chris Schanck's Studio in Banglatown
Alumni in Detroit
Alumni in Detroit
Over the last decade, more and more Cranbrook Academy of Art alumni have made their homes and built their careers in Detroit.
They are educators, working at institutions such as Lawrence Technological University, the College for Creative Studies, the University of Detroit Mercy, and Wayne State University. They run community-based projects, such as Burnside Farm, Talking Dolls, Detroit SOUP and Power House Productions, many of which were conceived as students at Cranbrook. Many Academy graduates set up studios, galleries and professional practices, where they not only create the work they sell around the world, but they also employ their neighbors. Nearly every creative enterprise in Detroit right now has a Cranbrook connection.
Nick Cave: Hear Here. Photo by PD Rearick.
Cranbrook Art Museum in Detroit
Cranbrook Art Museum in Detroit
Cranbrook Art Museum launched the first of several projects in Detroit with the epic 2015 exhibition and performance series by an alumnus of Cranbrook, Nick Cave.
Reaching nearly 10,000 city residents, Nick Cave: Hear Here opened doors and established relationships that continue today. Nick Cave is a 1989 graduate of Cranbrook’s Fiber department. In addition, in 2016, the museum sponsored the In Search of the Truth (The Truth Booth) tour of Detroit, Dearborn, and Flint. Cranbrook Art Museum partnered with Library Street Collective in 2017 to bring to downtown Detroit a free skate park designed by Tony Hawk with a public art installation by Ryan McGinness.
All of this means the opportunities for students to be involved in the city are limitless.
Studying at Cranbrook affords you the opportunity to work within a close community of creative thinkers while also being within a short drive of one of the most prolific cities of emerging art and design in the country.