Michael was born in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania where he began his creative journey. He had no intention of becoming an artist, per say; yet art found him and it altered his life trajectory. This passion has taken many directions in a variety of creative practices including urban painting, interior design and sculptur… Read More
Michael was born in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania where he began his creative journey. He had no intention of becoming an artist, per say; yet art found him and it altered his life trajectory. This passion has taken many directions in a variety of creative practices including urban painting, interior design and sculpture. Michael has used his life experience and interaction with other artists and designers as his textbooks and the studio as his classroom. Free of traditional academic rigors, he has been able to discover his work in a way that is completely exclusive to his journey.
In 1999, Michael opened his own art and design studio in Pittsburgh that would fuel his curiosity and need for professional growth. It would be this decision that would lead to numerous public art offerings, gallery exhibitions, as well as hospitality design commissions that would prove very successful in the United States and in Canada.
In 2002, Michael set up a satellite studio in Toronto, where he continued to expand his sculptural work and his design reach. In 2003, he was in a two-person show with artist Ryan Case Mackeen at the Here and Now Gallery. They were featured in The Toronto Star article “Grabby Graffiti finds a room of its’ own” January 11, 2003 by Peter Goddard. Michael would begin to develop a distinct aesthetic through his distillation of line, composition and historical influences, which carries through his work today.
After closing his Toronto operation in 2003 he moved back to Pittsburgh to focus his attention primarily on interior design commissions – realizing many of his design concepts. This period in time was valuable to his growth and understanding of materials and fabrication techniques, project management, budgeting, and industry standard practices that would make constructing his larger scale ideas possible.
In 2007, Michael began metal casting. This would prove to be a discovery that would change his work forever. He feels that discovering the cast metal process was like a writer finding new alphabet. His work had a new lens to be conceived through and it solved some of the technical issues he was having with fabricating the forms. It opened the door to making work that would have otherwise been relegated to living in the pages of his sketchbook. He developed new techniques that would evolve into alternate processes and push his creativity in an organic direction.
In 2008, Michael moved from Pittsburgh to Miami, Florida where he really began to assimilate his artistic experience into a new forms and aesthetics. His work was on display extensively while living there resulting in a large piece that now resides in private collection within the city.
In 2011, Michael moved to Oakland, California where he currently lives and works. Shortly after touching down in the Golden State, he set up a space in The American Steel Studios in West Oakland. It is there that he is really able to begin to incorporate his years of art making, bringing together fabrication, painting, casting and CAD CAM printing under one roof. The ability to have all process at his fingertips has enabled Michael to produce and show work at a rate that is unprecedented for him. This culminated with the inception of the “Cosmic Carousel” that was conceived in mid-2012 and brought to fruition by his capable studio staff for exhibition at this years Burning Man in Black Rock City, Nevada. The piece was so well received and it changed – yet again – what he thought was possible in his work.The artist plans to expand upon these concepts.
Michael is perpetually informed, challenged and reinvented. His work continually spurs dialogue between the history and heritage of metal manufacturing and modern industrial techniques and production, while staying true to his roots creating an original style. Read Less