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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Petroglyphs, full sketch with torn edges

Rock of Ages: The Sanilac Petroglyphs

In 1881, the “Great Thumb Fire” ravaged the woods of what is now Sanilac Petroglyph Historic State Park and its surrounding areas in eastern Michigan, causing 282 fatalities and burning upwards of one million acres of land. (Sidenote: The region received the inaugural relief efforts from Clara Barton’s American Red …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Inside the Vault
woman in black dress sitting on dining room floor

Pipsan: The Lesser-Known (But No Less Impressive!) Saarinen Sibling

If it were up to me, every month would be Women’s History Month, but alas for the foreseeable future it is *officially* delegated to March in the United States, and today is our last chance to celebrate! How auspicious that March 31 also happens to be the birthday of Pipsan …


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Press Releases
woman with dark hair works at a loom

Cranbrook Opens Its Doors to Showcase Graduate Work and Work Spaces

Bloomfield Hills, Mich., March 27, 2014 – The 2014 Graduate Degree Exhibition of Cranbrook Academy of Art opens to the public on April 22, and will showcase work from the next generation of architects, artists and designers who are shaping the future of art and design. The exhibition features pieces …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Inside the Vault
tree, birds and flowers on fabric

Happy Birthday, May Morris!

On the 152nd anniversary of her birth (editor’s note: plus one day, because this editor is on a research trip and didn’t have time to get to the blog yesterday!), all of us at Cranbrook Art Museum are excited to wish artist and designer May Morris a very happy birthday! …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
John Cage green and white print

Music-Mushrooms-Manuscripts: John Cage at Cranbrook

John Cage Listens to John Cage, 1974. Offset lithograph poster designed by Michael McCoy, with photography by Frances Greenberg. Printed at Cranbrook Press. (c) Michael McCoy. Photo courtesy Stephen Milanowski. In early April of 1974, artist-composer John Cage traveled to Cranbrook to celebrate the opening of Music–Mushrooms–Manuscripts at the Art …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Pause screen of illustration with children watching television

Cranbrook and the American Look

Cranbrook Sighting # 11 Sighter: Shelley Selim Sighted: Cranbrook Art Museum and Library Location: the Internet Date: March 10, 2014 The Internet Archive continues to be a hardy source of endearment for me, and this weekend I found myself traipsing through a favorite district of its offerings–Prelinger’s backlog of mid-century …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Inside the Vault
large tapestry with knights in armor

Happy Birthday Albert Herter!

A day late but with no less affection, we here at the Cranbrook Art Museum wish a very happy birthday to Albert Herter, born on March 2, 1871. The son of Christian Herter, one half of New York’s famed Herter Brothers design and decorating firm, Albert went on to become …


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Cranbrook Art Museum in the News
My Brain Is In My Inkstand
Tony Orrico drawing on wall

The Seen Examines My Brain Is in My Inkstand

Drawing is often perceived as the beginning of an expression, as well as the culmination of a concept, a message, and a story. It may also be the precursor to, the draft of, a finished product; we imagine the artist that first sketches the scene that will become the painting. …


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Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Inside the Vault
Nighttime, Catherine Murphey, painting of figure looking out window

Catherine Murphy’s Nighttime Self-Portrait

From this gusty tundra of unrelenting frigidity (-20 degrees with windchill today!), we here at Cranbrook Art Museum would like to extend our warmest and most heartfelt congratulations to Catherine Murphy, the 2013 winner of the Robert De Niro, Sr., Prize, awarded to one outstanding mid-career artist each year. Since …


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Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
Cranbrook Sightings Blog
Pause screen of black and white photo with dark car

Cars, the Cranbrook Way

There are few things that history buffs love more than archives, and there is almost no archive that can rival—digitally at least—the Internet Archive for sheer volume and accessibility. Looking for a late 19th-century trade catalogue for a New York lantern company? They probably have that. Interested in Princeton University’s …


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