As you enter the MICA’s Decker Gallery, you immediately encounter an unfolding natural disaster. Yannick Lowery’s “Flooding” reimagines a neoclassical building, rendered in black and white, whose facade is teeming with vibrant natural elements. Waterfalls, moss-covered rocks, plants, coral reefs, and aquatic life stand out in contrast with an array of magazine cut-outs through which the image becomes recontextualized, teeming with fish. In this piece, and so many others, the medium of collage allows the artist to speak in multiple languages at once, incorporating disparate elements into multifaceted narratives that elevate, challenge, and posit unusual connections.
The new exhibit, “LAYERS: The Art of Contemporary Collage,” curated by MICA Exhibitions Director Andrea Dixon and Independent Curator Teri Henderson, highlights the ways in which 34 contemporary artists harness collage’s unique ability layer images to build worlds. Here, Henderson and Dixon summon up art from emerging Baltimore-based talents as well as blue chip artists, promoting the extent to which these curators conjure up accessibility, including artists like Jackie Milad, Devin N. Morris, Derrick Adams, and Aline Helmcke.
In LAYERS, Dixon and Henderson have cultivated a selection of artists who speak to issues that are relevant to our daily lives, including environmental concerns, social justice, racism, queer identity, and the Black Lives Matter movement.