There is a familiarity and otherness about Anne Lindberg's work which disturbs our initial assumptions about meaning and invites pause. Her drawings and three dimensional installations are states of mind and environment, as understood through the body and land. They are rooted in the familiar, close to the body, and very personal in connotation and scale. She has always sought to activate both retinal and physical elements as equal partners in work that is subtle, quiet and emotionally charged.

Anne's work has been exhibited widely throughout the United States and abroad including the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Daum Museum of Contemporary Art, Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, the Belger Art Center, The Writer's Place, Macalester College, North Carolina State University as well as venues in New Zealand, Quebec and Japan. In 2004, Anne created a permanent collection installation at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art. In 2005, the Detroit Institute of Art purchased one of her drawings, and she had one person shows at the Dennos Museum in Michigan, and the Belger Art Center in Kansas City. New work was included in a group exhibition "Decelerate" at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in 2006.

Anne has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors amongst them: a Charlotte Street Grant (1990) and a Mid-America/National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships (1993/4). She was Visiting Artist-in-Residence/Head of Department at Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan in Spring 2005 and taught for nine years at the Kansas City Art Institute.

She graduated with a BFA from Miami University in Oxford, OH (1985) and received her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art (1988).

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