Troy Montes-Michie (born 1985) is an American interdisciplinary painter and collage artist.
Troy Michie was born in El Paso, TX. He received a BFA from the University of Texas at El Paso in 2009 and an MFA from the Yale School of Art in Painting/Printmaking in 2011.
Michie participated in the Tuesday Night MFA Lecture Series at BU School of Visual Arts.
On December 3, 2017, Michie held his first solo exhibition Fat Cat Came To Play through Company Gallery, which lasted until January 21, 2018. In the solo exhibition, Michie explores the significance of zoot suits, which are âÂÂbroad-shouldered suits that were popular with Italian, black, and Latino men in the United States in the 1940sâÂÂ. The installation was inspired by the Zoot Suit Riots, which took place in 1943 after white servicemen attacked a group of Mexican Americans wearing Zoot suits. Unlike his earlier works, which dealt with sex, Fat Cat Came To Play focused on exploring âÂÂblackness, queerness, and sexuality within an assemblageâ by expressing socio-economic traits on to the Zoot Suit. In many of his installations, Michie cuts out the faces of photographs from this era to address that these histories of the minorities are still relevant today. A notable piece of the exhibition was âÂÂDisruptive PatternsâÂÂ, which aimed to remind people that police officers were among the attackers in the Zoot Suit Riots. The exhibition stayed true to Michie's philosophy of representing the cultural expressions, specifically through fashion, of âÂÂhistorically marginalized American male figuresâÂÂ.