Tales from the Co-op: Carl Nanoff

Tales from the Co-op:  Carl Nanoff

I am a Minneapolis native and I have been drawing since I was a child. My career choice at that time was to be a commercial artist, I had no idea what they did, but I wanted to be one! Most of my childhood was spent within a mile of the current Highpoint location and joining Highpoint has been a return to that starting point. I began college pursuing a degree in architecture at the University of Minnesota. I discovered I was not meant to be an architect, and switched to Studio Arts as my major.

Tales from the Co-op: Lauren Flynn

Tales from the Co-op:  Lauren Flynn

My practice is governed less by a given theme than by the pursuit of certain tendencies and preoccupations. There is a tendency towards, even an embracing of, inefficiency, of allowing time and human effort to make their way into the work, a desire to approach perfection by imperfect means. There is a tendency toward focusing on what Soichi Ida called “what’s happening in the between,” on interstices and byproducts of process. I am fascinated by gaps, by the dotted line, the incomplete square, not as exercises which can be overcome by the mind, but as means of resisting closure.

Highpoint Editions: Now a Member of IFPDA!

Highpoint Editions: Now a Member of IFPDA!

Highpoint Editions is proud to announce that it has been invited to join the International Fine Print Dealers Association (IFPDA), a nonprofit organization of leading art dealers, galleries, and publishers with expertise in the field of original prints. IFPDA members are committed to the highest standards of quality, ethics, and connoisseurship, and to promoting a greater appreciation of original prints among collectors and the general public.

Prints by Julie Buffalohead

Prints by Julie Buffalohead

Highpoint is honored to present a group of captivating prints created in collaboration with Julie Buffalohead. A member of the Ponca tribe of Oklahoma and primarily known as a painter, Buffalohead’s new prints call upon a personal iconography of anthropomorphized animal protagonists. Themes are drawn from Native American legend and history, politics, contemporary culture, power, parenting, stereotypes, and identity.