Kalamazoo Institute of Arts
The Kalamazoo Institute of Arts is a non-profit art museum and school in downtown Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States.
History
In 1924, members of the Kalamazoo Chapter of the American Federation of Arts established an art center "to further the development of interest and education in and of regard and appreciation for the various arts."The Kalamazoo Institute of Arts current building was unveiled in September 1961. Designed by the Chicago, Illinois, firm of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the structure is based on a Mies van der Rohe design for a small museum, in the International Style of architecture.
In 1997, the KIA began a $14.5 million expansion and renovation. The project increased the size of the KIA to, and added a two-story lobby gallery, auditorium, classrooms and galleries, gallery shop, library and an interactive gallery for children.
Dale Chihuly's Kalamazoo Ruby Light Chandelier, a colorful chandelier of 400 pieces of glass, became a permanent fixture in the lobby foyer. The renovated facility, with its 10 galleries and of exhibition space, opened in September 1998.
Exhibitions
The KIA hosts 10 to 15 temporary exhibitions each year in its ten galleries. These include recurring shows such as the West Michigan Area Show, High School Area Show, and Young Artists of Kalamazoo County. Others are built around works lent from museums, galleries, corporations or private collections.The museum also mounts ticketed exhibitions; the most successful have drawn tens of thousands of visitors.
- In 2004, 47,000 visitors came to see "Millet To Matisse: Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century French Painting", an exhibition of Impressionist and post-Impressionist paintings from Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow.
- In 2005, nearly 60,000 people came from all 50 states and 17 countries to see "Chihuly in Kalamazoo", an exhibition of works by glass artist Dale Chihuly.
- In 2007, the KIA hosted "Lorna Simpson," a touring exhibition of the work of this contemporary artist.
- In 2008, the KIA curated an exhibition celebrating the resurgence of American figurative painting: "The Figure Revealed."
- In 2008–09, the KIA hosted two large-scale, ticketed exhibitions: "Spared from the Storm: Masterworks from the New Orleans Museum of Art" and "Georgia O'Keeffe and Her Times: American Modernism" from the Lane Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
- In 2015, the KIA hosted exhibitions by Seungmo Park, Manierre Dawson, and curated an exhibition about an artist who helped found the KIA: "Rediscovering Nina Belle Ward."
- In 2016, the KIA hosted solo exhibitions by Barbara Takenaga, Renee Stout, Chul Hyun Ahn, Jiha Moon, and Fred Wessel, all of whom visited Kalamazoo during the course of their exhibitions. The KIA also presented in "Suspended: Sculpture from ArtPrize 2015" emerging artists Joel S. Allen,, Russell Prather, Irene LaVon Walker.
- in 2017, the KIA hosted solo exhibitions by Kay Walkingstick, Sayaka Ganz, Hung Liu, and Wadada Leo Smith.
- In 2018, the KIA hosted an exhibition featuring photographer Dawoud Bey.
- In 2019, the KIA hosted the touring exhibition "Black Refractions: Highlights from The Studio Museum in Harlem" and solo shows by contemporary artists Orna Ben-Ami, Inka Essenhigh, Maya Freelon, and Sungyhun Moon.