interesting to me,” she says. “I started with metal envelopes and boxes. I like the idea of container as protection. An empty box is beautiful with different planes, and I like the way light hits the forms.” Being and Becoming, for example, was meant to capture the beauty of the shape itself, a functional reference transformed and implying change. Teicher, who lives in Dearborn with her partner and devotes time to seven grandchildren, has not explored Judaic themes in her work. Her connection with religion comes with planning family holiday celebrations. “It seems I work almost all the time,” says the artist, whose sculptures are on permanent display at the Detroit Institute of Arts, Saginaw Art Museum and the Dennos Museum Center in Traverse City. “I used to work seven days at my studio, but now I also have an office at home, where I make all my models. I have three-dimensional small models, and when I’m ready to fabricate, I go to the studio. “I have people do the bending for me, and they also do the waterjet cutting. For the large pieces, I have fabricators. I am self-challenging and questioning, and I avoid complacency.” Teicher’s first big commission was for the Bishop International Airport in Flint, and her outdoor works include pieces on display at the Dearborn cam- pus of the University of Michigan and Ferris State University in Big Rapids. “I’m very excited about the upcom- ing show,” says Teicher, whose work has been seen most recently at the Detroit Artists Market and Crooked Tree Arts Center in Petoskey. “It’s an example of my thinking and shows the evolution of my growth. It’s not just about material. “With my earliest pieces, I was only following the need to create, but the ideas and visual representation of them have come together.” Teicher explains that she started out thinking in terms of pictures before thinking in terms of the ideas they would represent. She describes that process as starting from an end point and working toward the beginning. While those pictures came close to the ideas she would associate with them later, she now is able to forge ahead with pictures and concepts aris- ing more simultaneously. From her earliest artistic lean- ings, she never considered any of it a hobby. As work increased in size and moved toward outdoor projects, metal became her preferred material. Honors have included a Michigan Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement and two Pollock-Krasner Foundation Awards. “As I evolved as an artist, I became aware of basic, essential concepts, such as the existence of a time/space continuum,” she says. “This awareness resulted in my use of space as a mate- rial. Themes used in my work flow directly from my search to understand and connect to the universal.” As viewers come to know the smaller works on display, Teicher is planning for two projects — one for a commercial building and one for a local temple. “When I was very young, I was extremely shy so I think this whole journey has been about finding my voice,” she explains. “I had to find a way of expressing myself, and it’s been a life theme.” * Congratulations Graduates! There are some great fi lms to see this summer! MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST and more! Have a FREE small popcorn on us! Valid at The Maple & The Riviera Expires 6/30/16 For showtimes and tickets, please visit: UIFNBQMFUIFBUFSDPNtUIFSJWJFSBDJOFNBDPN 2072460 May 19 • 2016 39