Twenty years ago, Cole Rogers noticed something missing in the Minneapolis art community. His printmaking students at Minneapolis College of Art and Design were racking up major debt without any assurance of a future career.
"It felt problematic for me to be teaching something like stone lithography when there was nowhere to go," he said. "And they were paying my salary."
When Rogers met Carla McGrath, who was working in the education department at Walker Art Center, they realized they had the same goal of opening a permanent print shop. Partners now in life as well as work, they have made Highpoint Center for Printmaking into a pillar of the Twin Cities arts community.
Now, they are taking the next step toward preservation at the museum level. The Minneapolis Institute of Art has acquired the complete archive of Highpoint Editions — 310 published prints and multiples, along with 1,200 items of ancillary production material from 40 artists, including Carlos Amorales, Julie Buffalohead, Willie Cole, Julie Mehretu, Todd Norsten and Dyani White Hawk.
Mia will showcase 175 artworks from that collection in an exhibit celebrating the acquisition, "The Contemporary Print: 20 Years at Highpoint Editions," opening Oct. 9.
White Hawk, whose 2019 four-print series "Takes Care of Them" speaks to how Native women collectively care for their communities, feels that accessibility is the driving force of printmaking.
"For Highpoint, I feel the acquisition means the legacy of their inspired work will be intentionally cared for and honored within the community that decided to center their work," she said.
The Highpoint archive joins a print collection of 40,000 works at Mia.