BIOGRAPHY
GROUP EXHIBITIONS:
2006
Fraser Gallery, Summer Group Exhibit, Bethesda, MD
Les Yeux Du Monde, Charlottesville VA
Cornerstone Gallery, Richmond VA
LushLife, Charlottesville VA
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC
2005
Hickok Warner Cole Architects, Washington DC
Fraser Gallery, Summer Group Exhibit, Bethesda, MD
The SEVEN show, Washington DC
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Second Street Gallery group show, Charlottesville
2004
The Art Registry Innagural Event, Washington DC
Hickok Warner Cole Architects, Washington DC
McGuffey Art Center, Charlottesville, VA
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC
2003
Hickok Warner Cole Architects, Washington DC
McGuffey Art Center, Charlottesville, VA
Astra Design, Richmond, VA
2002
University of Virginia Law School, Charlottesville VA
The Mudhouse, Charlottesville, VA
2001
The Mudhouse, Charlottesville, VA
“Dispatches from the New Dominion: 7 Virginia Artists” Brooklyn, NY
“Dispatches from the New Dominion: 6 Virginia Artists” Bedford Hills, NY
McGuffey Art Center, Charlottesville, VA
McGuffey Art Center, New Members Exhibit, Charlottesville, VA
1999
The Mudhouse, Charlottesville, VA
Studio Gallery, Washington DC
1996
Higher Grounds, Charlottesville, VA

ABOUT THE ARTIST:
Michael Fitts was born in Washington D.C. in 1961. He received his BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University in 1989. He began painting on scrap metal in 1992.
ARTIST STATEMENT:
"I began painting on scrap metal in 1992 and I’m always asked, “Why scrap metal?” After I graduated from art school, I began looking for alternative surfaces on which to paint—partly for the experimental aspect but mostly because I didn’t have money to spend on canvas. I noticed a neighbor was throwing out a piece of old sheet tin with his trash. I retrieved it and have been painting on scrap tin, copper and aluminum ever since. What I found appealing from the start was the varieties of surface tones and textures that I was discovering in the metals was finding. For me, surfaces are very important, more important than the subjects painted on them. Of particular interest are scrap pieces that have markings, distressed paint or dents and scratches that were produced before I discovered the piece. Collaboration with those past elements keeps the process evolving and interesting. I also enjoy the thought of retrieving materials from the trash heap and breathing new life into them through my paintings.
The subjects I paint in oils draw from the most generic of popular culture objects with an emphasis on objects that are used briefly, then discarded and quickly forgotten. The unexpectedness of elevating the importance of ephemeral objects to the status of art is what I find most interesting. " -Michael Fitts
Education
BFA, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, 1989