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Spend the day at Cranbrook, a local treasure and a National Historic LandmarkΜύ
Itβs tough to measure the cultural influence of the Cranbrook Educational Community, home to the Cranbrook Academy of Art, the Cranbrook Art Museum, the Cranbrook Institute of Science, and much more. The museum hosts genre-bending exhibitions on the regular, and the nature paths that wind through the 319-acre campus are dotted with works by world-renowned architects and sculptors. Bloomfield Hills:
See cinema from around the globe in the gorgeous Detroit Film Theatre
The films screening at the Detroit Film Theatre (located inside the Detroit Institute of Arts) are films you wonβt be able to see on the big screen anywhere else in the area. Under the curatorship of longtime Director Elliot Wilhelm, itβs perhaps the greatest cinematic treasure in the city for casual viewers and cinephiles alike. Detroit:
Visit the Heidelberg Project
Itβs not what it used to be, but thereβs no denying the decadeslong impact and international awareness that the Heidelberg Project has brought to Detroitβs art scene. The project site, where empty houses and land have been turned into sprawling art installations, remains a vital must-see for locals or out-of-town visitors. They wonβt forget the experience. Detroit:
Go to the Dabls Mbad African Bead Museum to see a completely unique piece of Detroitβs art installation scene
Speaking of vast architectural spaces turned into artwork, the Dabls Mbad African Bead Museum eats up an entire city block. It uses materials like iron, rock, mirrors, and wood as a way to connect Black Detroiters with their African heritage through art. The artist behind the project β Olayami Dabls β has been a visual storyteller for decades. His creative career was honored this year when he became the latest Kresge Eminent Artist β one of the most prestigious arts awards in the country. Detroit:
Down the road, the Motown Museum transforms itself into something even grander
The planned $50-million expansion of the Motown Museum will no doubt make the museum more interactive, more accessible and more state-of-the-art. Weβve got to wait till the end of the summer to enjoy these changes (it is currently closed for renovations), but it will be well worth the wait to see the next chapter in this legacy museum that represents the signature sound of the city. Detroit:
Do it in a day β the Wright Museum, the DIA, the Historical Museum
If bouncing around cultural institutions is what youβd consider the perfect day, you can do it within a matter of blocks with the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, the Detroit Institute of Arts (which could include a visit to the aforementioned Detroit Film Theatre), and the Detroit Historical Museum. Park the car, grab lunch in between stops at Ima (a delicious ramen spot) just down the street, and soak up the cityβs cultural corridor in one visit.ΜύDetroit: , ,
Learn about the artistic and cultural legacy of one of the largest demographics in metro Detroit at the Arab American National Museum
Now that itβs reopened to the public, add the Arab American National Museum to your list. Itβs the first museum in the U.S. to focus on the contributions of Arab Americans, complementing its core galleries with rotating exhibitions. Dearborn:
![Dabls Mbad African Bead Museum Detroit.](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2022/03/B03A8033-1.cx_.jpg)
Tour the murals of Eastern Market
Detroitβs art scene has blossomed over the past decade in part thanks to the bevy of street art thatβs decked out neighborhoods like Eastern Market, which likely has the largest concentration of murals in metro Detroit. There are plenty of online maps available for you to plot out a route and also identify the names of the artists whose work youβre viewing. Detroit:
Get raunchy at one of the largest collections of erotic art at Detroitβs Dirty Show
Sure, youβve already missed this ²β±π²Ή°ωβs Dirty Show, but this is a bucket list, and you have to have this erotic art show on that list. Thereβs more nuance than you think β and itβs also raunchier than you think, so consider that when planning who you are going with. The Dirty Show features plenty of local artists you are likely not familiar with but also brings in national artists and burlesque performers. Detroit:
See locally produced theater at Detroit Public Theatreβs new venue
Detroitβs theater scene is criminally underrated. Detroit Public Theatre is changing that β quickly. One of its originally commissioned plays, Birthday Candles, has already made its way to Broadway. And while we likely wonβt see the new venue and bar until later this fall, itβs a must-do when the company finally opens the doors to its new theater in the Cass Corridor. Detroit:
Spend the day at The Henry Ford and Greenfield Village to see one of the most unique museums, grounds in the United States
Maybe you havenβt been since you were a kid. Maybe you havenβt had a chance to take your kids. The Henry Ford is like no other museum in the country, highlighting the ways our lives have been shaped by technology and innovation. Greenfield Village does much the same and offers a variety of themed events around the holidays, including Halloween programming that has become an annual tradition for many metro Detroiters. (Make extra time for the bounty of incredible Arabic food that surrounds the campus.) Dearborn:
Visit the Fisher Building to see βDetroitβs largest art objectβ
Itβs called this because of its superb design, mosaics, and painted ceilings, plus the sheer amount of materials (marble, brass, and bronze) that went into this art deco masterpiece. The Fisher Building is the vision of architect Albert Kahn, who was commissioned by the Fisher automotive family to build βthe most beautiful building in the world.β While tours of this building are currently unavailable, thereβs more info than ever scattered around the building to help guide you. Detroit:
Tour the art deco decadence of the Guardian Building downtown
Much like the Fisher Building, the Guardian Building is a one-of-a-kind art deco gem in downtown Detroit. Luckily for us, the lobbies to both buildings are open to the public. Bring your camera β the architectural views are stunning. Detroit:
Itβs a heavy but important visit at the Zekelman Holocaust Center
Located in Farmington Hills, the Zekelman Holocaust Center is far from just that place you visited in high school to learn about the Holocaust. Its core galleries, alongside its rotating exhibitions, shed new light on old issues, often reminding patrons that the work this museum does in preserving a cultural memory is more important today than ever. Farmington Hills:
Panelist Picks
Tylonn Sawyer
Acclaimed Detroit painter and educator
![Tylonn Sawyer](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2022/03/TylonnSawyer.cx_-150x150.jpg)
βNβNamdi Center is one of the preeminent art galleries in the Midwest. George and Igzegbi NβNamdi curate a feast for the eyes and soul. On any given day, you may see classic works hanging from [the late] Robert Colescott, Allie McGhee, and the late Gilda Snowden to a new generation of artists such as Dr. Anita Bates, Jocelyn Rainey, and yours truly. Another spot is M Contemporary in Ferndale, a spot I visit and patronize often. The owner and operator, Melannie Chard, has gathered an impressive roster of artists and consistently puts on some of the best exhibitions around.β
Angela Wisniewski
Owner of Coup DβΓ©tat, a womenβs lifestyle boutique in Detroit
![Angela W](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2022/03/AngelaW.cx_-150x150.jpg)
βOne of my favorite artistic Detroit events is by far the Detroit Hair Wars, founded and produced by David Humphries (better known as βHump the Grinderβ). From what started as an underground βbeauty battleβ for Black stylists showing their skills in nightclubs to a full-on traveling show complete with sponsors, choreography, and DJ sets, Hair Wars has become an acclaimed visual phenomenon. Thereβs nothing like it, honestly. The hairstyles are true works of art, and the stylists are artists offering an incredible glance into a beautiful culture.β
New & Notable
When we talk about βnew and notableβ in this section, itβs important to note that venues, museums, and galleries donβt pop up as quickly as restaurants or bars, so weβve aimed for places that have opened in the past five to seven years.
The IndependentΜύComedy Club
It may not always be seen through this lens, but stand-up comedy is a performing art and belongs in the arts section. The Independent Comedy Club is a tiny, 60-ish seat venue that matches the energy and vibe of a comedy club in New York City. You wonβt recognize many of the names booked (just take a risk, OK?), but itβs certainly the place to see the next wave of local and national talent before they become household names. Hamtramck:
Reyes Finn Gallery
When Reyes Finn brought its contemporary art gallery from Birmingham to Detroitβs Corktown neighborhood in 2019, it represented a cultural changing of the guard β out of the suburbs and into the city. With the move, Reyes Finn has brought artists like Maya Stovall and James Benjamin Franklin to a thriving art scene thatβs yet to reach its ceiling. Detroit:
BLKOUT Walls
The long-running Murals in the Market street art festival in Eastern Market showed the power of large-scale murals to attract thousands and beautify a neighborhood. Detroit artist Sydney G. James has taken this model and brought it to the North End neighborhood, enlisting a diverse array of queer and minority artists to turn the walls into canvases (and attracting investment along the way). Detroit:
Playground Detroit
Playground Detroit is part gallery, part incubator. Itβs given grants, platforms, and wall space to myriad Detroit artists β BreβAnn White, Gisela McDaniel, Patrick Ethen, Bakpak Durden. Thatβs created an impact that goes beyond the exhibitions it hosts, ultimately supporting a creative community that continues to transform not only the galleryβs space on Gratiot Avenue but Detroitβs art world itself. Detroit:
Norwest Gallery of Art
Itβs a relief to see a gallery as strong as Norwest outside of the cityβs central cultural corridor (or what we traditionally think of as the cultural center of the city around Midtown and the Detroit Institute of Arts). Like at Playground, youβll find a bevy of emerging and established talents here thanks to owner and curator Asia Hamilton (who is a talented artist in her own right), including past shows with sculptor Austen Brantley and clever group exhibitions with themes like flowers and online dating. Detroit:
Ryan Patrick Hooper writes ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ Detroitβs Culture Calendar. He is the host of CultureShift on 101.9 WDET, Detroitβs NPR station (weekdays from noon to 2 p.m.).
This story is from the April 2022 issue of ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ Detroit. Read more in our digital edition.Μύ
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