BY LISA BRODY F rom a young age, I was on the less-conventional side. I was always recreating things, like coloring on the inside of a sofa cushion. We'd make a fort, and I'd want the fort to have some art," laughs Darcy 1VIiro, a Brooklyn, New York sculptural artist who was raised in Bloomfield Hills. The daughter of Jeffrey and Marsha Miro of Bloomfield Hills, Darcy credits them with the support and encouragement that allowed her to grow from an aspiring artist who studied at Roeper, Cranbrook, and Rhode Island School of Design to a metal artist whose art is featured in galleries, on the arms of collectors, and as part of The Museum of American Folk Art. Miro creates one-of-a-kind, sculp- tural jewelry out of silver and gold, though she considers herself a sculp- tor, not a jeweler. "I do a lot of cuffs, which are very much about textures," she says. "The jewelry is small-scale sculpture that you can have with you, that is interactive and personal." Her work is showcased on a much grander scale, on the façade of The Museum of American Folk Art. Several years ago, the 30-year-old Miro met architects Tod Williams (himself a native Detroiter) and Billie Tsien, who were interested in buying one of her pieces. Williams and Tsien were the architects for The Museum of American Folk Art, and invited her to be part of the process, design- ing and manufacturing 1-by-l-foot metal panels out of white bronze for the exterior of the museum. "I did a wax mold of the cracked and pitted floor of this old canning foundry, and then cast it into metal, and that became the premise for the panels for the façade," she says. "This floor is eroded as a result of people working and living, and the concept was to incorporate that into the front of the building, as folk art is simple art made by real people." Miro works in a studio in a new home she and her boyfriend, musi- cian and record producer Lars Weiss, designed and built in Brooklyn. "I touched every single part of this house," she says. "I installed tile, I made a sink, I made light fixtures, and door handles, and drawer pulls." Locally, Miro's work is shown at the Suzanne Hilberry Gallery in Ferndale. "Over the years, I've var- ied the scale of my work," she notes. "Each piece is evolutional, and hinges on the last." NEW HAIRPIECES AND WIGS FOR SPRING! DETROIT PONTIAC - AT CENTERPOINT Detroit Marriott Pontiac at Centerpoint 3600 Centerpoint Parkway Pontiac, MI 48341 www.marriott.com/dtwpo 248.648.6016 6 • MARCH 2004 • PLATINUM Our easy to wear hairpieces and wigs easily blend with your hair to create a natural style. We have a large in-stock inventory and an experienced, licensed staff to cut, fit and style your new hairpiece, wig or hair extension. Whether it's just fashion, or you're a chemotherapy or alopecia client, ndy's Wigs will help make you look natural and fabulous. Mid-Five Center we Mile Rd. at Middlebelt Livonia, MI 734) 522-9420 ecommended by: Beaumont, University of Michigan, Providence and Karmanos Cancer Centers Wigs • Hair Exten sinc s • Hairpieces • Tues-Sat 9-4 HOURS: Mon by or call able...stop Evening appts. . us to maappointment today