Julie Pincus is an award-winning graphic designer specializing in brand identity and communications for Fortune 500 companies, nonprofit arts organizations, and foundations. She received her BFA from the University of Michigan and her MFA from Yale University. Born and raised in metropolitan Detroit, Julie now lives in New York City with her husband. Nichole Christian is a writer and Detroit native who began her career as a staff member for some of the nation's top news outlets, including the Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, the New York Times, and the Detroit Free Press. Her work appears in the books Dear Dad: Reflections on Fatherhood and Portraits 9/11/01: The Collected "Portraits of Grief" from the New York Times. She holds a BA in journalism from Wayne State University's Journalism Institute for Media Diversity and lives in suburban Detroit with her husband and daughter.
Canvas Detroit could have easily just have been a photo book of
Detroit street art. Instead, designer Julie Pincus and author
Nichole Christian were determined to tell the stories of the people
behind the art, as well as their individual motives. The temporal
nature of street art is why a book like Canvas Detroit is so
important. It's also important to
catalog these artists because many of them seem more concerned with
unleashing their own artistic bug than with promoting their
work.--Lee DeVito "Metro Times"
Canvas Detroit is doing what we all know needs to be done for
Detroit: taking its reputation of being dark and dangerous and
countering that by displaying the energy, determination,
generosity, and sheer talent of the artists who are flooding the
city . . . Together, these authors have crafted a book which is a
beautiful collection of artwork in many forms including murals,
sculptures, portraits, light projections, wearable art and
installations.--Emily Pape "Real Detroit Weekly"
A masterful achievement five years in the making, Canvas Detroit,
conceived and designed by Julie Pincus and written by Nichole
Christian captures rare moments in Detroit's ever-changing
landscape through portraits of artists who have tested the limits
of the city's wild and public spaces.--My Jewish Detroit "My Jewish
Detroit"
An absolute "must-have" for twenty-first century artbook
shelves!--James A. Cox "Midwest Book Review"
Lavishly illustrated with 450 photos, the nearly 300-page book
profiles dozens of artists and was written by Julie Pincus and
Nichole Christian, with additional essays by others, including Free
Press reporter John Gallagher.--Mark Stryker "Detroit Free
Press"
The sheer size, the breadth of this place. . . . The cascading
histories, shining at one moment, crumbling the next. The vast
prairie lands within the metropolis. The freeways that divided
neighborhoods where people lived and also no longer did. And the
fist of Joe Louis--enormous! All of it an incitement to make
art.--Linda Yablonsky
The Detroit 'Canvas' includes 'large-scale and small-scale murals,
sculptures, portraits, light projections, wearable art, ' and
various installations, some "on and inhouses, garages, factories,
alleyways, doors, and walls." Collectively, said Pincus, they offer
a somewhat abstract message that Detroit is indeed alive and well -
at least from an artistic sense. Pincus, of course, deserves credit
for helping convey that fact. The book, which offers a riveting and
inspiring look at the creators of street art, is a testament to her
own ingenuity and determination, of her desire and willingness to
tell a story that begged to be told.--Tom Kirvan "Detroit Legal
News"
Their book is looking more and more like a bestseller.-- "The
Examiner"
You don't often get a book to review that makes you drop everything
and simply say, 'Wow.' But Canvas Detroit almost made me miss this
magazine's June deadline because I kept picking it up. Julie Pincus
and Nichole Christian take an amazing journey across Detroit's
thriving art scene. . . But it's much more than a picture book,
rounded out with artist profiles and contributions from John
Gallagher, Rebecca Hart, Linda Yablonsky, and others who cover the
art and architecture beat in Detroit and Beyond. This is a
coffee-table-worthy book that has substance to keep you coming back
for more.--Steve Wilke "Hour Detroit"
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