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16 Facts About Tristan Meinecke

1.

Tristan Meinecke was an American artist, architect and musician who spent most of his life and career in Chicago.

2.

Tristan Meinecke was married to television and radio actress Angel Casey.

3.

In collaboration with architect Robert Bruce Tague, Meinecke built and rehabilitated many properties in and around Lincoln Park, Chicago.

4.

Tristan Meinecke's father, Bruno Meinecke, was an accomplished scholar and a classics professor at the University of Michigan, "'but not,' Meinecke says, 'a good parent'".

5.

Tristan Meinecke's endeavors were numerous, and included poems and essays and at least one short story.

6.

Tristan Meinecke was one of four University of Michigan students selected by Professor Jean Paul Slusser to complete a mural in what is the Jean-Paul Slusser art gallery, depicting the four seasons.

7.

Tristan Meinecke returned to the Chicago and Vicinity show the following year.

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8.

Tristan Meinecke continued to exhibit in Chicago, including with the Renaissance Society, as well as in Michigan.

9.

In 1975, a chance encounter with Tristan Meinecke's son brought Chicago Surrealists Penelope and Franklin Rosemont into the artist's studio.

10.

Tristan Meinecke continued to paint until 2000, when carpal tunnel syndrome forced him to put down his brush.

11.

Since he was entirely self-taught, Tristan Meinecke needed a licensed architect to sign off on the plans he created, and an acquaintance got him in touch with former Keck associate Robert Bruce Tague.

12.

Tristan Meinecke developed an interest in jazz at the age of 12, which led him to start collecting records.

13.

Tristan Meinecke's work elicited mixed reactions from both critics and the public.

14.

Tristan Meinecke was praised as "an ardent experimenter with new materials, stretching the painting medium to extra dimensions".

15.

Whether the constriction of authority manifested as an academic system of rules for how to create, or as a social system of patronage and approval for determining which works of art were deemed valuable, Tristan Meinecke engaged in "a conscious rebellion" and chose to reject such systems:.

16.

Rammel, an artist who was a Chicago surrealist, makes the case that Tristan Meinecke's art is political just the same.