CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS.- The MIT List Visual Arts Center presents Mirror Mirror by AA Bronson, a celebrated Toronto and NY- based multimedia artist, on February 7, 2002. Bronson is the surviving member of the legendary Canadian conceptual art collective General Idea, and this is his first solo exhibition in New England, since his 25-year collaboration in art and life with Felix Partz and Jorge Zontal was ended when they died of AIDS in 1994. AA Bronson, Felix Partz, and Jorge Zontal formed General Idea around 1970. Bronson, who was born Michael Tims, and his collaborators promptly shed their former identities and adopted new personas. The group gradually evolved into a collective, exploring media and the mythologies that surround it. Through complex and convoluted performances and installation events, they brought their fictional self-creations of Bronson, Partz, and Zontal to life. General Idea's work was often humorous, playing in the realm of fashion, coiffed poodles, metaphorical cocktails, mass culture, and celebrity. After more than 25 years of working and living together, however, General Idea came to an end in 1994 when Partz and Zontal died of AIDS-related causes. Bronson elected to continue producing artwork on his own, and he has explored issues of life, death, and rebirth in relation to the AIDS epidemic.