FREE YOUR MIND: ART AND INCARCERATION IN MICHIGAN
MOCAD is proud to partner with the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum and the Michigan Justice Fund to present the timely exhibition, Free Your Mind: Art and Incarceration in Michigan. Making art can be a transformative experience helping us to confront and address some of the most pressing issues of our time. Art shifts how we see and understand the world around and within us. Free Your Mind invites us to consider these qualities of art while also grappling with the effects of the carceral system. The presentation of this exhibition in Detroit is especially crucial considering the construction of the new Wayne County jail.
EXHIBITIONS
FREE YOUR MIND:
ART AND INCARCERATION IN MICHIGAN
APRIL 14 – SEPTEMBER 10, 2023
MIKE KELLEY’S MOBILE HOMESTEAD
MOCAD is proud to partner with the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum and the Michigan Justice Fund to present the timely exhibition, Free Your Mind: Art and Incarceration in Michigan. Making art can be a transformative experience helping us to confront and address some of the most pressing issues of our time. Art shifts how we see and understand the world around and within us. Free Your Mind invites us to consider these qualities of art while also grappling with the effects of the carceral system. The presentation of this exhibition in Detroit is especially crucial considering the construction of the new Wayne County jail.
Currently, the United States incarcerates approximately 2.2 million people. In Michigan, there are roughly 33,000 residents serving time in the prison system. Working with a coalition of more than a dozen organizations, Free Your Mind showcases the inner worlds of incarcerated individuals and the fundamental issues that shape conversations around incarceration today. The exhibition centers key topics of inquiry around incarceration in Michigan – length of sentencing and prison overcrowding, the impact on women and youth, and the dangers of COVID-19.
This exhibition aims to cultivate a better understanding of how incarcerated individuals’ growth is linked to our society’s broader health. Free Your Mind features artists, poets, and storytellers of outstanding achievement. The majority of these artists are either currently or formerly incarcerated. Their experiences invite us to consider art-making’s role in prisons as a liberating force. The artworks also ask us to approach the subject with an open mind and empathy.