
Photo/Kate Gowman
When the late, legendary artist Mike Kelley constructed a full-sized replica of his childhood home at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit in Midtown, the goal was to create an open house for creative use. Since it opened its doors, it’s been a venue for children’s community classes, musical performance, and served as an exhibition space for Detroit’s Little Free Library movement. Last month, with the installation of Vintage Voyages and Atomic Memories by Chicago artist Carlos Rolón/Dzine, the house was reimagined in a new way.

Photo courtesy of MOCAD
The various retro decorated rooms will serve as visual backdrop and speak to the many influences of an era when ornate tchotchkes and optic and geometric wallpaper design went beyond kitsch and into modern art.
See inside Vintage Voyages and Atomic Memories
Viewing the installation as a community service, Rolón says he wants you to feel like a part of his experiences on a tactile level.
“Kids were running around and saying, ‘Can we jump on the bed?’ and that’s really the idea to enjoying the installation,” Rolón told us when he was in Detroit on opening night.
As part of the exhibit, nail artists are on hand each Sunday to create customized nail designs for visitors by appointment.

Photo courtesy of MOCAD
Rolón’s Mobile Homestead takeover at MOCAD is the latest in his years-long examination of cultural identity — often taking otherwise overlooked aspects of various subcultures and giving them a high-art aesthetic. We first met Rolón back in Chicago in 2010 when we saw photographs of his customized and sculptural bicycles — inspired, in part, by Chicano lowrider and Puerto Rican bicycle clubs you find rolling the streets of Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles every weekend. Since our first meeting, he’s taken his studio practice that often addresses his own story by melding memory with the imaginary.

Photo courtesy of MOCAD
“I selected Carlos to do a project in the Homestead because of his connection to art that was outside the museum context,” MOCAD executive director Elysia Borowy-Reeder says.

Photo/Kate Gowman
Vintage Voyages and Atomic Memories runs in the Mobile Homestead at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit through Sunday, Aug. 28.