
“Horse Dance of the Fake Virgin”
Kelley, at far right, with Douglas Huebler (left) and Tim Silverlake, CalArts, circa 1978. Photo via the Douglas Huebler Art Trust.Numerous sources have reported the death of Mike Kelley, the celebrated visual artist whose discarded-object aesthetic also found musical expression in the noise/proto-punk band Destroy All Monsters and his collaborations with Sonic Youth, including doing the cover for Dirty. Kelley is believed to have committed suicide. He was 57.
Kelley was a student at the University of Michigan when he formed Destroy All Monsters with fellow artists Jim Shaw and Niagara. Those early days of the band reflected many of the elements that repeatedly cropped up in his visual work: A self-described “anti-rock” group, they performed on homemade and scavenged instruments such as broken keyboards, a vacuum cleaner, and a coffee can, crashing parties and generally causing a confusing ruckus.
Kelley left the band in 1978 to attend the California Institute of the Arts (where he studied under Laurie Anderson), while the band eventually recruited The Stooges’ Ron Asheton and the MC5’s Michael Davis, then went on to become a cult figure in the Detroit punk scene. In 1994, Kelley worked with Thurston Moore to compile a Destroy All Monsters anthology for Moore’s Ecstatic Peace label and participated in a reunion tour the next year.


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