A 1974 Willis Gallery group show included "Ann Mikolowski's life-size,
photoreal rendering of a cow [
Stella] flanked by, of all things, miniature paintings."
John Yau notes: "Scale plays a crucial role in Mikolowski’s landscapes and portraits. The land- and waterscapes can be as large as six by seven and a half feet, while the portraits are seldom taller or wider than three inches, and fit easily in the palm of one’s hand. They are literal mementoes that one can carry anywhere." Mikolowski's work explores postwar art,
superrealism, and
contemporary realism. In Mikolowski's work, paint and ink challenge photography's claims on representing experience. Yau on the portraits: "Despite working from color snapshots, she has avoided the quality of detachment that we usually associate with Photo-Realism. Her paintings quietly assert what they are — oil on canvas, on homemade stretchers, framed with thin wood slats." Observations are hers: "'I always work from my own photos, 'cause there it's like a sketchbook. If I try to work from photos that people give me, I don't have any connection with a live person.'" Mikolowski draws attention to scale not only as a play of small against large, but as studies of how objects impact consciousness in ordinary life: the outdoors, animals, Adirondack chairs, electrical poles, food, technology. Mikolowski's repurposing of representational technique aligns with
Marsha Miro's observation about Cass Corridor artists generally: "The Detroit artists did it in a totally new way because they came out of
abstraction...they didn't come out of it like Picasso, through
Impressionism." Mikolowski worked in
oils on linen,
watercolor, pen and ink,
pastel,
pencil sketches, and printmaking (
silkscreen,
lithography,
linocut,
wood engraving,
drypoint,
intaglio and
relief printing). For text illustration and printmaking, Mikolowski's techniques included intensive repetitive use of
stipple and
line, with attention to the impact of layers of impression and paper texture. Art critic Natalie Haddad, on the portraits: "Mikolowski’s process was rigorous. To achieve an almost photorealist accuracy on the tiny canvases, she worked with modified brushes, pared down sometimes to a few bristles." == Later life ==