MICA Celebrates 20 Years of the McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chair in Painting with DEVOTED Exhibition

On view August 28 through October 11, 2026, in MICA‘s Decker Gallery, Fox Building.

McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chairs Anna Ortiz (left) and Mie Yim (right), AY26.

DEVOTED: 20 Years of The McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chair in Painting
Aug. 28-Oct. 11, 2026

Decker Gallery, Fox Building
1303 W. Mount Royal Ave., Baltimore, MD 21217

Admission: Free and open to the public

Gallery Hours: Monday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

 


As part of its year-long Bicentennial Celebration, MICA presents DEVOTED: 20 Years of The McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chair in Painting, a landmark exhibition honoring two decades of artistic mentorship, creative exchange, and the enduring legacy of artist and educator Reba Stewart.

The exhibition unites more than 30 works by 29 women artists who have shaped MICA’s creative community through the McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chair program. Featuring nationally and internationally recognized artists, DEVOTED highlights the diverse voices and artistic practices that have enriched the program since its founding in 2006.

Established through a gift from the McMillan/Stewart Foundation, the McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chair in Painting was created to connect accomplished women artists with MICA painting students through intensive critiques, mentorship, public lectures, and community engagement. Over the past 20 years, the chairship has fostered a dynamic network of relationships among artists, students, faculty, and alumni, creating opportunities for learning that extend far beyond the classroom.

The exhibition also honors the memory of Reba Stewart (1930-1971), the influential artist and educator for whom the chair is named. A Yale-trained painter and protégé of modernist Josef Albers, Stewart taught at MICA from 1963 until her death in 1971. One of only three women faculty members on campus at the time, she was remembered for her rigorous teaching, generosity, and unwavering commitment to students.

The exhibition’s title, DEVOTED, reflects the values at the heart of the McMillan/Stewart program and Stewart’s own approach to education. As described in the chair’s founding vision, recipients are selected not only for artistic achievement but for demonstrating “openness as reflected in devotion to and by students.”

The exhibition features works by all 29 past McMillan/Stewart Endowed Chairs, representing a wide range of generations, perspectives, and artistic disciplines. Together, their work underscores the impact of sustained mentorship and the vital role women artists continue to play in shaping contemporary art and arts education.

About the Artists

The show features works by all twenty-nine past McMillan-Stewart Endowed Chairs:

Mequitta Ahuja

Grand Rapids, Michigan-born, Connecticut-based artist Mequitta Ahuja uses pictorial conventions from past eras in Western painting to create historically grounded narrative self-portraits that reflect her South Asian and African American roots.

ruby onyinyechi amanze

Born in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, and working between Philadelphia and New York, ruby onyinyechi amanze creates large-scale drawings that explore ideas of play, magic, and hybridity, carrying non-linear narratives across constellations of conjoined sheets of paper.

Margaret Bowland

New York Academy of Art faculty member Margaret Bowland was born in Burlington, North Carolina, and currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Her meticulously rendered figure studies in traditional media pose questions about societal norms surrounding gender, race, and beauty.

Nanette Carter

Columbus, Ohio-born, New York-based artist Nanette Carter creates abstract collages using oil paint and biomorphic shapes cut from mylar. Through an art practice stretching back to the 1970s, Carter uses her art to intuitively process and respond to the weight of history, the churn of political upheavals, and the persistence of social injustices.

Zoë Charlton

Born and raised in Florida and based in Baltimore, Maryland, Zoë Charlton creates drawings, collages, installations, sculptures, and animations depicting totemic figures set in culturally loaded landscapes. She uses a mix of found images and traditional drawing techniques to meditate on hidden histories and invisible labor in diasporic communities.

Dawn Clements

Woburn, Massachusetts-born artist Dawn Clements (1958-2018) created panoramic drawings of interior domestic spaces using sumi ink, ball point pen, and irregular cut-and-pasted grids of paper. She focused on tactile encounters with objects and artifacts, leading to drawings that, as she once explained, function as “a kind of visual diary of what I see, touch, and desire.”

Jennifer Coates

Born in Surrey, England, and currently working in Brooklyn, NY, Jennifer Coates creates luminous imaginary landscapes using acrylic and spray paint. In Coates’s paintings, ghostly figures and mysterious fluorescent animals crowd dreamlike forest scenes influenced by seventeenth-century Dutch Symbolist paintings.

Patricia Cronin

Beverly, Massachusetts-born, New York-based sculptor, painter, and photographer Patricia Cronin is best known for her large 2002 marble sculpture, Memorial To A Marriage, depicting Cronin and her partner Deborah Kass in bed, embracing. This three-ton statement on marriage equality—carved a decade before Cronin and Kass were legally allowed to wed—specifically refers to Sleeping Children, a nineteenth-century funerary monument by notable MICA alumnus William Henry Rinehart.

Jane Dickson

In the late 1970s and early ‘80s, Chicago, Illinois-born artist Jane Dickson joined legendary New York-based art collectives Fashion Moda, CoLab, and Group Material. She became known for working on unconventional industrial materials like astroturf and vinyl to paint images of the diners, strip clubs, and sex workers in Times Square, where she lived for almost thirty years.

Chie Fueki

Beacon, New York-based painter Chie Fueki was born in Yokohama, Japan, and raised in São Paulo, Brazil. She creates densely patterned paintings and mixed media assemblages layered with symbols, grids, and allusions to the female form.

Judy Glantzman

Born in Long Island, NY, Judy Glantzman was part of the East Village art scene of the 1980s, showing her large-scale expressionistic paintings alongside artists Marilyn Minter, David Wojnarowicz, and Keith Haring. Her energetic, intuitively composed images often feature constellations of mask-like faces and torqued human figures.

Kira Nam Greene

Prior to becoming an artist, Kira Nam Greene received a PhD in Political Science from Stanford University and worked as a management consultant. Born in Seoul, Korea, and currently based in Brooklyn, NY, Greene eventually became a full-time artist, creating detailed illusionistic portraits of women surrounded by household objects and patterns inspired in part by the Pattern and Decoration (P&D) movement of the 1970s and ‘80s.

Mimi Gross

New York artist Mimi Gross paints gestural, expressive portraits; designs sets and costumes for dance performances; and creates diorama-like installations in galleries and outdoors. In the 1970s, Gross created room-filling cartoonish installation pieces with then-husband Red Grooms, including Ruckus Manhattan (1975), a 6400-square-foot sculptural rendering of the city and its landmarks.

Phaan Howng

Phaan Howng

Providence, RI-born, Baltimore-based artist Phaan Howng ’15 (Mount Royal School of Art MFA) creates paintings and installations that ask viewers what a post-human world might look like. The lush, semi-abstract plant imagery in her work draws from multiple narratives: from Hollywood sci-fi blockbusters, to histories of endangered plants, to the use of camouflage in modern warfare.

Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi

Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi

Born in Tehran, and currently living and working in the Washington, DC area, painter Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi juxtaposes blooms of poured pigments with intricate gilt patterns from Persian art, opening portals between histories of western abstraction and Safavid art and architecture. Ilchi’s practice reflects her personal experiences between two worlds, and evokes narratives of invasion, migration, and escape.

Lani Irwin

Born in Annapolis, Maryland, and having grown up across the US and overseas, painter Lani Irwin has lived in Italy since 1987. She paints in a tightly controlled manner that recalls medieval or early Northern European Renaissance artworks, depicting theatrical spaces crowded with masked human figures, dismembered mannequins, and eccentric animals and objects.

Leeah Joo

Seoul, Korea-born, Connecticut-based artist Leeah Joo creates trompe l’oeil paintings to investigate forms of pictorial space, concealment, and cross-cultural exchange. In her works, references to traditional Korean textiles and the arts of ancient Greece collide; brightly-colored silks wrap hidden objects or hang as curtains in front of seemingly empty picture frames.

Baseera Khan

Baseera Khan

Denton, Texas-born, New York-based artist Baseera Khan uses performance, photography, painting, and installation to trace how material economies shape identities and perpetuate trauma. Khan’s materials, unrefined crude oil, walnut wood panels, real and synthetic human hair, evoke her complex experiences as a femme native born-Muslim-American with Indian-Afghani roots.

Hein Koh

Born in New Jersey City, and living and working in New York, artist Hein Koh creates surrealist soft sculptures, pastel drawings, and ceramics depicting one-eyed cartoon protagonists consumed by angst and dread. In Koh’s world, sentient fruits and vegetables weep, smoke cigarettes, and struggle with gender stereotypes in absurdly humorous scenarios.

Ying Li

Born in Beijing, China, artist Ying Li immigrated to the US in 1983. Her visceral, thickly impastoed paintings move between plein air representation and urgent abstraction. Li traces the shapes of parks, ponds, and ruined buildings with vigorous brush strokes and palette knife scrapings, producing canvases laden with sculptural outcroppings of paint.

Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann

Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann

Born in Madison, Wisconsin, and currently based in Washington, DC, Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann ’09 (LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting M.F.A.) spent her childhood moving between Taiwan, China, Korea, and the U.S. She uses paint, sumi ink, collaged rice paper, and mosaic tile to create graphic, dimensional paintings in which she interleaves Chinese and European image-making traditions.

Anna Ortiz

Anna Ortiz

Brooklyn-based painter Anna Ortiz grew up dividing her time between Worcester, Massachusetts, and Guadalajara, Mexico, where she studied art with her grandfather and aunt, both of whom were professional artists. Ortiz paints with a dramatically limited color palette, creating dreamlike desert landscapes based on real and imaginary places, and populated by creatures from Mayan and Aztec mythology.

Hadieh Shafie

Born in Tehran, and having moved to the U.S. in 1983, artist Hadieh Shafie uses ink, paint, and paper, collaged or arrayed in tightly wound scrolls to create works that sit between two and three dimensions. Using her own writing, abstract mark-making, and cut-up passages of Farsi poetry, Shafie creates intense optical patterns that ask to be read but resist interpretation.

Amy Sherald

Columbus, Georgia-born, New York-based artist and MICA graduate Amy Sherald ’04 (LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting M.F.A.) was commissioned by First Lady Michelle Obama in 2018 to paint her now-iconic official portrait for the Portrait Gallery’s permanent collection. Sherald’s distinctive photo-based figure paintings grapple with legacies of pictorial modernism and prompt questions about historical representations of Black Americans in photography.

Patricia Reneé Thomas

Patricia Reneé Thomas

Native Philadelphia, PA artist Patricia Reneé Thomas uses painting and drawing to investigate Black hyper-visibility in the U.S. The subjects in her sumptuously painted worlds struggle to navigate supposedly neutral settings, either self-consciously adorning their bodies or donning camouflage — (ghillie suits — to conceal themselves in plain sight.

Denyse Thomasos

Born in Port of Spain, Trinidad, painter Denyse Thomasos (1964-2012) immigrated to Toronto at the age of six; she spent most of her career as an artist working between Philadelphia and New York City. Thomasos used linear language, stacked grids, and blocks of loosely applied color to evoke different forms of architecture, from spaces of confinement—prisons, slave ships—to indigenous, non-Western structures she encountered in her travels outside the US.

Shoshanna Weinberger

Born in Kingston, Jamaica, and raised in Montclair, NJ, artist Shoshanna Weinberger has lived and worked in Newark, NJ, since 2006. She uses abstraction and recurring icons for disembodied lips, hairdos, and stiletto boots to unpack cultural beauty norms and explore the complexities of her Afro-Caribbean-American heritage.

Saya Woolfalk

Japan-born, New York-based artist Saya Woolfalk uses performance, video, sculpture, and painting to create complex narrative artworks that reflect her own mixed Asian and African-American heritage. Staging tableaux with wearable soft sculptures and psychedelic science fiction props, Woolfalk weaves stories about the Empathics, an imaginary race of human-plant hybrids.

Mie Yim

Mie Yim

Seoul-born, New York-based artist Mie Yim creates dreamlike worlds crowded with disembodied eyes, cartoonish animals, and shimmering disco balls. Her brightly colored, expressively brushed paintings manifest strange beauty and wild humor tinged with psychological darkness


MICA's Bicentennial: Celebrating Two Centuries

Join the festivities as MICA honors its 200-year history, recognizes its present success, and looks forward to a bright future. Throughout 2026, the College will be sharing community stories and announcing one-of-a-kind events on campus, in Baltimore, and beyond.

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