True to its title, Cranbrook Art Museum’s new exhibition Labyrinth/Laboratory: Selections from the Cranbrook Collection, which opened April 4, is designed as a labyrinth—a maze in which visitors can wander, pondering the connections among the works on display.
Those 40-plus works, drawn from the museum’s collection, were created by artists who have attended or taught at the famed Cranbrook Academy of Art from the 1950s to the present, many of them prominent figures within the world of craft-based art.
The Academy, in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, is well-known for its atelier-style teaching methods: there are no courses, no grades, and students pursue self-directed learning under the mentorship of established artists. The labyrinthine layout of the exhibition is a metaphor for the Academy experience, says co-curator Kat Goffnett. “Artists at Cranbrook seek out their own problems to solve as they develop their practice, cutting their own path through the two-year experience,” she says.
Qualeasha Wood, It’s All For U (If U Rlly Want It), 2024, woven jacquard, glass seed beads, machine embroidery, 85.5 x 59 in.