
Free Ink Day, May 17th
Join us on May 17th for a family-friendly, garden-themed Free Ink Day!
Join us on May 17th for a family-friendly, garden-themed Free Ink Day!
SATURDAY, MAY 3
1:00 - 4:00 PM
FREE
Join us for the annual ACCESS/PRINT exhibition reception! The show will include artwork from students in Highpoint’s teen mentorship program. ACCESS/PRINT exhibiting artists include: Jamie Davis, Alexander Doll, Sotheara Ky, Giavana Macias, Hades Nyasani, Aurora Penasco Gouin, Jamie Quinn, Orpheus Swanson, Aza Williams-Carpenter.
ACCESS/PRINT is a teen mentorship program that supports creative youth with over 75 hours of studio time, printmaking tutorials, technical assistance, and support as they create a body of work.
TUESDAY, APRIL 15
6:00 - 7:30 PM
FREE
Highpoint Editions is pleased to welcome our newest staff member, Judith Baumann, as Lead Printer-in-Residence. Join Highpoint staff for a meet-and-greet with Judith. Judith will share her professional experience and work created throughout her career as a printmaker and Master Printer.
About Judith Judith Baumann is a professional collaborative printer, artist, and educator. During her time as Master Printer and Studio Director for Crow's Shadow Institute for the Arts (2017–2024), Baumann collaborated with dozens of renowned artists invited to participate in the Crow’s Shadow Artist-in-Residence Program. Baumann holds an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and participated in Tamarind Institute's prestigious Professional Printer Training Program. She taught printmaking and drawing at several institutions, most notably Evergreen State College (2005—2014) and Northern Arizona University (2015—2017). Baumann’s work has been shown nationally in group, juried and solo exhibitions and is held in public special collections across the country. She creates unique printmedia editions of her own work and fine art print collaborations under the imprint Renegade Cascade Editions. She specializes in lithography, letterpress and digital integration in print. Baumann is a frequent educator and lecturer.
5-6pm
Please join us at Highpoint on Saturday, March 15 at 5pm for a gallery conversation with McKnight Fellows Grace Sippy and Fidencio-Fifield Perez. The conversation will be moderated By Teréz Iacovino.
About the guest moderator: Teréz Iacovino (she/her) is an artist, educator, and the Assistant Curator of the Katherine E. Nash Gallery at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. As a First-Gen graduate working in academia her curatorial mission is to cultivate empathy for, give voice to, and take risks with underrepresented artists. Iacovino is the recipient of a Curatorial Research Fellowship Grant from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and is a 2024 National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures Leadership Institute Fellow. She is currently co-organizing Vaivén: 21st Century Art of Puerto Rico and Its Diaspora (September 9 - December 6, 2025) with José López Serra, a multidisciplinary exhibition that gathers forty-three intergenerational artists of Puerto Rican descent working from the archipelago and its stateside diaspora over the last twenty-five years.
Within her own artistic practice, Iacovino's recent works function as a chain of unique installations, combining objects, text, and collage, that explore ways to process loss, map time, and negotiate familial history. Her current investigations explore familial estrangement within the Puerto Rican Diaspora coupled with an inherited colonial legacy spanning over half a century. She draws from objects and photographs that document these two intertwined histories, examining questions of authenticity and inheritance in relation to a diasporic consciousness.
Teréz Iacovino
TYhis event is made possible through the generous support of the McKnight Foundation. The McKnight Foundation is a family foundation based in Minnesota that seeks to advance a more just, creative, and abundant future where people and planet thrive.
Join us on March 8th for a family-friendly, LEGO-themed Free Ink Day!
Curious about how Mezzotints are made? What even IS a Mezzotint?! This demonstration by printmaker Douglas Bosley will dive deep into the labor-intensive process of creating dynamic, high-contrast prints.
ON VIEW: January 17 - February 22, 2025
OPENING RECEPTION: Friday, January 17, from 6:30-9 PM
Highpoint Center for Printmaking is pleased to present a selection of new mezzotints from printmaker Linda Whitney. Opening on January 17th, the exhibition will feature over 20 new prints. Come view these incredibly detailed, textural, and awe-inspiring mezzotints. The exhibition and event are free and open to the public.
Opening Reception: December 13, 6:30-9 PM
Exhibition Dates: December 13–January 11, 2025
Join us at Highpoint for an artist lecture by Emma Nishimura
Unsettled Horizons: The Expanded Prints of Nicola Lopez
Join us on October 19th for a family-friendly, fall-themed Free Ink Day! Explore the season's textures, patterns, and plants, creating one-of-a-kind print pieces to take home! Visitors will create monotypes using pumpkins, apples, leaves, and more. Let’s get in the spirit of the season!
Are you a K–12 educator in the Twin Cities or nearby areas interested in bringing printmaking into your classroom? Join us for a free, engaging evening event to launch the 2024–2025 school year!
Highpoint's International Juried Print Exhibition
This exhibition will fill Highpoint’s 1,000+ square foot gallery space with 60+ select impressions of contemporary printmaking made by 56 individual artists from Australia, Japan, Cyprus, Portugal, Canada, and the United States.
Join us for Hot off the Press opening reception, featuring prints from 37 of Highpoint’s artist cooperative printshop members. Opening weekend, all co-op prints are 20% off!
Left to Right: Mei Lam So, Izzy Shinn, and Gidinatiy Hartman
Please join Highpoint Center for Printmaking in celebrating the 2023-2024 Jerome Early Career Printmakers at their culminating exhibition. Artists Mei Lam So, Izzy Shinn, and Gidinatiy Hartman will present a new work created during their residency, including a collection of intaglio, relief, and lithographic prints.
Mei, Gidinatiy, and Izzy each investigate identity and personal experience through their distinctive styles of figuration. The work is remarkable, thoughtfully imaginative, and skillfully executed.
Fundamentally, a print is an image transferred from a matrix onto a substrate, and in that sense, much of the work featured in this exhibition employs traditional printmaking techniques. However, this work was not made without risk and discovery – Gidinaitiy learned stone lithography, arguably one of the most challenging printmaking techniques, Mei eschewed the customary copper or zinc plate in favor of a material called Cintra for her series of drypoint prints, and Izzy incorporated carefully cut, colored paper additions into their intaglio prints.
Read on to learn more about each artist and their work:
Mei Lam So
Mei is excited to share a new series of work that represents a directional change in both style and technique. While drypoint is not new to Mei, this series she presents utilizes a different material as the matrix. By incorporating monotype layers into the background, Mei’s work features a dynamic application of color, directing the viewer’s attention throughout the print. Mei will also showcase lithography, ceramics, and a print installation in the exhibition. Mei says the residency, especially the past few months, “have gone by fast. I’ve gained valuable feedback from co-op members through community critiques and short catch-ups in the studio and have incorporated them into my practice.”
Mei Lam So (she/her) is a Minneapolis-based visual artist whose medium includes printmaking, textile printing, and ceramics. She received her MFA in Printmaking and Ceramics from the University of Iowa and her BFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Originally from Hong Kong, Mei examines the acculturation process of bicultural Asian immigrants, covering topics such as memory, identity, separation, and time.
Izzy Shinn
Izzy has been busy finishing prints while simultaneously fleshing out the concepts behind their work. Izzy said that throughout the residency, they often found themself occupied with ideating, planning, and potential, “I've been keeping to what I know concerning printing technique and processes, but utilizing that knowledge to the best of my ability, especially amongst such amazing resources and community found at Highpoint."
Izzy Shinn (they/he/she) is a butch Twin Cities-based printmaker and comic artist specializing in intaglio etching and ink illustration, having earned their BFA from the University of Minnesota. With a focus on butchness, lesbian life, and history, their work is tied intimately with themself and their own experiences, showcased through characters and archetypes, exploring the sexual and social stigmatization of women, the body, and the queer subject.
Gidinatiy Hartman
Gidinatiy will be presenting multi-block color relief prints that depict words from Deg Xinag (their Native language), including images from an ongoing series of “bug prints”. In another work, Gidinatiy recreates the visual effect of Athabascan beadwork by meticulously carving hundreds upon hundreds of individual dots onto a linoleum block. The effect is incredible, and it needs to be seen firsthand.
Gidinatiy Hartman (they/them) has a Bachelor of Fine Arts in printmaking from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Their artwork creates visual representations of Deg Xinag and other Native languages. It is centered around a desire to reclaim their family’s Athabascan language, which was taken from them due to colonization. United by a sense of whimsy and wordplay, their art seeks to make it easier for people to learn Deg Xinag and other Native languages. They aspire to have multiple modes of representation, including visual art, making language revitalization more accessible to people.
About the Jerome Early Career Printmakers Residency – Highpoint’s Jerome Residency was established in 2003 with generous funding from the Jerome Foundation. The program serves early-career Minnesota printmakers who show significant potential yet have not received a commensurate amount of professional accomplishment or recognition in the field. Jerome artists are selected based on their dedication, interest, and potential in printmaking, as well as the artistic merit of their work.
Highpoint would like to thank this year’s panelists Tamara Aupumaut and Heidi Goldberg.
Tamara Aupaumut is a multidisciplinary artist and independent curator living on Mni Sota Makoce, also known as Minneapolis. She works in a variety of media, including printmaking.
Heidi Goldberg earned her BA from Hamline University and MFA in printmaking and works on paper at The University of Michigan. She taught studio art at Concordia from 1995-2022. Her works have been exhibited in local, regional, national, and international juried exhibitions. She lives and works in the sand hills near the National Sheyenne Grasslands in North Dakota.
Special thanks to guest critics Suyao Tian, Regan Golden McNerney, Tamara Aupaumat, and Hedi Goldberg for visiting with the artist and providing feedback at various intervals during the residency.
The Jerome Early Career Residency is in its 21st year of programming and is funded with a generous grant from the Jerome Foundation. The program is open to early-career Minnesota printmakers — defined here as artists who show significant potential yet have not received a commensurate amount of professional accomplishment or recognition, regardless of age or recognition in other fields. You can find details about the program, application process, and creative benefits on our website.
About the Jerome Foundation – Created by artist and philanthropist Jerome Hill (1905-1972), The Jerome Foundation seeks to contribute to a dynamic and evolving culture by supporting the creation, development, and production of new works by emerging artists. Based in St. Paul, MN, the Foundation makes grants to not-for-profit arts organizations and artists in Minnesota and New York City.
Join us for a Saturday full of printmaking – there will be live demonstrations, refreshments, and kid-friendly activities! Visitors will have the chance to tour Highpoint’s facilities and get a behind-the-scenes look at our artist co-op, print study room, and Highpoint Editions Studio.
The McKnight Printmaking Fellows in conversation, moderated by Casey Riley, Chair of Global Contemporary Art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia)
Please join us for a conversation with Michele Parchment, Brandywine Workshops and Archives Executive Director, and Taylor Jasper, Walker Art Center Assistant Curator of Visual Arts.
Please join us at Highpoint for a reception celebrating the creative achievements of students in the Saint Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists (SPCPA) J-term course
A Highpoint first! Join us for a reading of recent poetry by John Yau
Brad Kahlhamer, Cloudy Boy w/ Clouds: New Monotypes
Opening reception Friday, Nov 4, 7-9pm
© Highpoint Center for Printmaking