Glen Michaels (July 21, 1927 – October 17, 2020) was an American sculptor and painter.[1]
Early life
Glen Michaels was born on July 21, 1927, in Spokane, Washington.[2] He attended Yale School of Music to study piano from 1950 to 1952, but did not finish his degree. He moved to New York City and worked for Harper's Magazine but later returned to Spokane where he attended Eastern Washington College of Education and received his B.A. in Art Education in 1957. After receiving his degree, he taught art at a local public school for two years.
Michaels moved to Michigan to pursue an M.F.A at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He had a major in painting and a ceramics minor.[1] After graduating, he stayed at Cranbrook working at Young People's Art Center (1958 - 1965). He taught at both Wayne State University (1966-1968) and the University of Windsor (1970 -1971).
Michaels' early ambition was to become a cartoonist and during his time at Yale he was able to pursue it. He work was published in both the Yale Daily News and the Yale Record.[3] He eventually published a book, Oh! You're a musician : a book of cartoons[4](1951). He was encouraged by Mary Petty and Alan Dunn to seek cartooning and illustration work.[2] He left Yale in the summer of 1952, moving to New York City. He found there was a market for his illustrations, but with little financial success.[2] "I realized that the field of art needed an education, so I must go back to school. So at twenty-six I started all over again."[2] He moved back to Spokane to attend Eastern Washington College of Education.
Influences
Michaels spoke of how the landscape of the Pacific Northwest, especially the basalt columns influenced his sculpture. His works usually included chipped tiles that echo these rock formations. The influence of the art and calligraphy of Japan is also visible. In 1960 spent two months there, including a few weeks staying at a Zen temple.[5] He was entranced by how the manicured gardens blended perfectly into the wild.[5] Both influences found their way into the site specific screen he created for the Frank Lloyd Wright Bloomfield Hills, Michigan Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Stein Smith House.[6]
Artwork
Early in his career his work was shown at the Bertha Schaefer Gallery in New York City (October 3–22, 1960 and January 2–20, 1962). His work was well reviewed in the New York Times by art critic John Canaday (January 7, 1962).[7] Michaels was featured at the opening night event for the 1968 Museum of Contemporary Crafts exhibition "Objects Are...?[8]". "The invitation requested that attendees bring with them an object – “larger or smaller than a breadbox, anything from a paper clip to a barn door” – as their ticket to admission. These objects became part of an object collage produced on the spot by “master assembler” artist Glen Michaels".[9] Michaels was singled out in a New Yorker Talk of the Town feature by George W. S. Trow.[10]
^Mueller, Janet (January 3, 1974). "From Another Pointe of View"(PDF). Grosse Pointe News. p. 9. Archived from the original(PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 16, 2012.