In the shadows of the night, Mike Lynch captured nocturnal vistas that few others would pause to reflect on, propelling him into the limelight as an outstanding regional artist.
Over a 70-year career, the work of the Minneapolis painter — who died Sept. 8 at the age of 85 — was showcased at major art museums and galleries across Minnesota and landed him numerous accolades, including the McKnight Foundation's prestigious McKnight Distinguished Artist Award in 2003.
"I believe Mike to be one of the finest artists Minnesota ever produced," said Sally Johnson, former director of the Groveland Gallery in Minneapolis, which has exhibited Lynch's work since 1979. "He was kind of a poet of a painter ... He painted all those quiet places that most of us ignore or don't notice — the backdrop of our lives."
His work was featured in museums and galleries, and always had a long wait list of buyers at Groveland Gallery, Johnson said. Lynch also published two books of his work, illustrated novels by Garrison Keillor and Jon Hassler and painted mural-sized commissions for state agencies, including the Transportation and Revenue departments.
"He painted a portrait of Minnesota," Johnson said. "Not the fancy places, but the places that we all pass by every day that really do make up the fabric of our lives."
Harry Michael Lynch was born in Hibbing and raised in the Iron Range city, the youngest of two sons of Grace and John Lynch, a mine patrolman. He won a local art competition by the age of 15 and had his work exhibited at Dayton's in Minneapolis.
Lynch studied at the Grand Marais Art Colony and what is now the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. He briefly lived in New York, Amsterdam and San Francisco before returning to Minnesota in 1969 to work at a gallery and frame shop.
He quickly became known for paintings and drawings that were as understated and subdued as the artist himself. He highlighted familiar scenes, usually nighttime vistas absent of people, exuding mystery and loneliness: Deserted rail yards, neon lights reflected in puddles outside a bar, city streets illuminated by streetlights.