Minneapolis Riverfront News
Covering life, work, and play in the Historic Mill District and Downtown Minneapolis Riverfront neighborhoods. Have an opinion, local news or events to share? Contact us.
Hennepin Healthcare Foundation's Adventurama 2024 set for June 8
Join the adventure Saturday, June 8, 9:30am-12:30pm - Start and Finish in Commons Park
It's back! After a successful launch in 2023, Hennepin Healthcare Foundation returns with Adventurama 2024, an urban experience in downtown Minneapolis. This fundraiser invites teams of two adults to complete challenges within a three-mile loop of HCMC. Teams earn points by completing both mental and physical challenges at 10 pit stops. This is not a timed course - you go at your own pace and complete as many challenges as you like. Based on feedback from last year's event, they are elevating the challenges while bringing back favorites.
All proceeds from this event support patient comfort and care at Hennepin Healthcare. In addition to your team registration, you're invited to create your own fundraising campaign and digital profile using Funraise. From there, you can share your page with family and friends via email or social media.
For 130 years and counting, Hennepin Healthcare has been a fixture in downtown Minneapolis serving the community, and their doors are open to all who need care. Count on them to lead during disasters, through pandemics, heart attacks and trauma.
Weisman Art Museum presents The Other Four - a Multi-sensory Show
Article and photos by Becky Fillinger
Wendy Fernstrum, Common Scents
Are you ready for something totally different in a museum experience? The Weisman Art Museum (WAM) recently opened The Other Four - it’s an exhibit of multimedia works by avant-garde artists that explores touch, taste, smell and sound – the underutilized senses in art appreciation. That’s right – you can touch these artworks!
The sensory symphony was curated by John Schuerman, a Twin Cities-based artist and independent curator. The first exhibition of the show was at The Plains Museum in Fargo, ND in 2019, where it was well received. The pandemic postponed the exhibit until now at the Weisman.
Yevgeniya Kaganovich pieces
Schuerman notes that it isn’t easy to stage a multi-sensory show – it is difficult to install and by its very nature, it breaks the rules of the gallery, such as no organic matter in the galleries. (One of the pieces is a reimagining of an airline service where you may eat pretzels and biscotti.)
Schuerman worked on the show for a decade. He had been thinking about the one-dimensionality of museum visual expressions for a while and wanted to try something more expressive and immersive – artworks primarily experienced through the other four senses. He notes that visual art appreciation maps heavily to the prefrontal cortex. Scientists are discovering that creative moments may require the prefrontal cortex to be shut down – let the mind wander – which can lead to innovative and imaginative outcomes when senses other than vision become more dominant. Visitors can run their fingers across surfaces, breaking the traditional "look but don't touch" barrier. Vibrating sounds, fragrances and aromas are integrated into the installations, enhancing the overall sensory experience. You can actually wear some of the artworks!
Diane Mullin, Senior Curator at WAM, told us that the museum is thrilled to showcase this exhibit which has something for everybody. She invites the community to come to the museum and experience art in very different ways.
There are QR codes that provide an introduction to the exhibit and at each piece that provide a guide to the visitor. Schuerman hopes that the visitor will engage with the pieces with a sense of playfulness.
I had several reactions to the immersive exhibit – from delight to puzzlement - but what I liked best was the mingling of senses, seeing colors in scents, feeling textures in sound.
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The Other Four will be on display until May 19.
The Mill District Welcomes Klassics Kitchen + Cocktails
Gerard and Brittney Klass, Klassics Kitchen + Cocktails, 428 S 2nd Street
Gerard and Brittney Klass launch full-service restaurant, Klassics Kitchen + Cocktails, in the Mill District
Chef Gerard Klass, a Guyanese American deeply rooted in Minneapolis' vibrant hospitality scene, has embarked on the next leg of his culinary journey with the launch of Klassics Kitchen + Cocktails. This full-service restaurant has been seven years in the making and is located in the former Smith & Porter Restaurant space.
"Minneapolis has been my home, my inspiration, and my canvas for culinary creativity. The unwavering support and encouragement from this community have been instrumental in shaping my culinary journey, and I am deeply thankful for the opportunity to share my passion with you all." Chef Gerard
Bahn Mi Lettuce Wraps
Drawing inspiration from his diverse cultural background and extensive travels, Chef Gerard promises Klassics Kitchen + Cocktails will be a vibrant tapestry of flavors: “The menu is my food sermon, a masterful blend of tradition and innovation, crafted with love and care to tantalize the senses and ignite culinary curiosity."
Brittney and Gerard Klass also own C.R.E.A.M. Cafe (next door to Klassics Kitchen) and Soul Bowl, which operates in Graze Food Hall, U.S. Bank Stadium, Target Field, Target Center and the Minnesota State Fair. They are also co-partners in The Camden Social. They extend a heartfelt invitation to the Minneapolis community to experience the warmth, hospitality, and culinary excellence that await them!
Pangea World Theater presents Hecuba at The Southern Theater, April 5 - 21
Pangea World Theater presents Hecuba
Pangea World Theater presents Hecuba by Marina Carr, a compelling reimagining of the aftermath of the Fall of Troy, on stage at The Southern Theater in Minneapolis, April 5 – 21, 2024. Ticket info
Hecuba follows Agamemnon, the victor, as he locks horns with Hecuba, the vanquished queen. Both have suffered intimate loss — the sacrifice of a daughter and the murder of a son. In Marina Carr’s bold engagement with Euripides’ play of the same name written c. 424 BC ("the most intensely tragic of all poets" — Aristotle) there’s a demand for further bloodshed. In a brilliant display of ventriloquism, the drama weaves threads of inconsolable rage and grief with fate, revenge, and inevitable carnage. The show explores the shreds of duty and honor as well as the terrible deeds hatred breeds as it touches bravely on Hecuba’s heroic nature and “the endless tears of women.”
The Hecuba ensemble includes Suzanne Victoria Cross, Ankita Ashrit, Anne Guadagnino, Matthew Saxe, Ernest Briggs, Tyler Stamm, J. Antonio Teodro, Nathan Berglund, and Neel Shah.
Director Dipankar Mukherjee’s artistic team features lighting design by Mike Grogan, set design by Orin Herfindal, costume design by Mary Ann Kelling, composition, live music and sound design by Bethany Lacktorin, assistant direction by Sir Curtis Kirby III, with stage management by Cassi Henning.
“As artists in Pangea, we are in search of understanding the complexity of the time we live in,” said Pangea’s Artistic Director Dipankar Mukherjee. “Marina Carr’s adaptation of Hecuba opens one portal to our current truth. Mythology holds many answers and many secrets. Myth is the repository of truths, both spoken and unspoken. It is up to us to learn from them. In our search for collective accountability, moments are marked when our conscience is put on trial, as during the current moment. This can be covered up with the dust of rhetoric, but the truth never fails to stare at our face. Hecuba asks us, "Can we salvage our humanity when women and children’s bodies are weaponized in the name of war anywhere in the world?”
This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.
About the Playwright
Marina Carr is an Irish playwright who has written nearly 30 plays. She came to notoriety in the 1990s and is known for writing intense and often dark plays, and for being a particularly prolific and skillful voice in Irish drama. She often writes about human tragedy, and her work often takes its inspiration from classical texts.
Carr was born in County Offaly to an artistic family and was educated at University College Dublin. In addition to Hecuba, her works include a take on Lorca's Blood Wedding, an adaptation of Anna Karenina, By the Bog of Cats, The Map of Argentina, Phaedra Backwards, Portia Coughlan, The Mai, Ullaloo, This Love Thing, and The Deer Surrender.
Carr often writes about disturbing situations and unsympathetic characters. When a revival of her play On Raftery's Hill received backlash for depicting a scene of incestuous rape, Carr told The Guardian, "The moral police will be the death of art. Political correctness is destroying our literature and our poetry. There is a place for the moral high ground, but it is not art. You can't have the thought police looking over your shoulder when you are writing a play. You have to let the characters have their say. Plays are written with the imagination, not with the head."
She has been Writer-in-Residence at Trinity College, the Abbey Theatre, Princeton University and was the first John McGahern Writer-in-Residence in St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra/DCU. Marina Carr is a member of Aosdána and lives with her family in Dublin.
May 4 Symphony Ball 2024: River Rapsody - a Gala Supporting the Minnesota Orchestra
Symphony Ball 2024, River Rhapsody, is a celebration of the soul-nourishing, life-giving currents that flow through all of us - music and water - from the Northwoods to Louisiana Bayou Country. Join fellow music lovers on May 4 to support the Orchestra’s artistic and educational missions and revel in the traditions — from music to food - the River inspires.
Experience an exquisite river-themed concert of glorious orchestral classics performed by the Minnesota Orchestra, conducted by new Music Director Thomas Søndergård.
Cap off the night at the festive after-party at Orchestra Hall with gourmet desserts, savory bites and signature cocktails. And, if that weren't enough, dance the night away with a set list curated by special guest musicians. It's a river soiree! Dance, indulge and wonder in the rush of it all.
The evening begins at the Hilton with a cocktail reception, silent auction and dinner. Following dinner, the party moves to Orchestra Hall for music, and finally, the after-party. Tickets
Complimentary valet parking is available at the Hilton. Black tie recommended.
The Color Purple at Theater Latté Da - A Discussion with Artistic Director Justin Lucero
Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided
The Color Purple will be staged by Theater Latté Da from March 20 to May 5, at the Ritz Theater. There are so many reasons to be excited about this production. Artistic Director Justin Lucero tells us, with a compelling list, why Theater Latté Da is thrilled to bring the musical to our community. “One of my most lasting literary memories is of reading Alice Walker's masterpiece novel in high school,” notes Lucero, “and one of my most lasting movie memories is of Steven Spielberg's masterpiece film starring Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey. Now I am proud that we get to present a masterpiece musical of this inspiring story on our stage for fellow fans and new generations alike. And if someone feels like having watched the starry, spectacular new movie musical was enough, we promise you that watching this version performed live and up-close will be an eye-opening, heart-rending, rousing experience." Don’t wait on this one - get your tickets here.
Here are some of the many reasons to catch this production:
1. It’s a co-production! In an exciting new venture, Theater Latté Da is partnering with Geva Theatre Center in Rochester, New York to produce this new production. A co-production is a collaborative producing model between multiple theater companies to share in the costs and planning of a show that is ultimately performed in both markets. In our case, we are originating the production for a seven-week run, and then the cast, sets, and costumes transfer to Geva for another month.
2. It makes us think about some of our favorite local Black-owned eateries! Whenever we have an additional chance at championing some of our favorite local businesses, we will! We’re excited to highlight such coffee faves as Flava Coffee & Cafe in Saint Paul and The Get Down Coffee Co. in our backyard of North Minneapolis. We also love to recommend our artists and ticket buyers to dine at famed Twin Cities favorite, Pimento, as well as our nearby treasure, STEPCHLD.
3. The style! If you know the musical, you know that fashion is a plot point. And so of course it makes us think of such local fashion icons as Rammy Mohamed of Ramadhan Designs and, of course, Black Fashion Week MN. And be sure to check out Costume Designer Jarrod Barnes’ fabulous artistry on stage in our production.
4. Our local legend musical director! Composer, pianist, arranger and producer Sanford Moore is founder and director of the award-winning vocal jazz ensemble Moore by Four. Beyond his several collaborations with Theater Latté Da and other local theater companies, particularly Penumbra, Moore has shared the stage with such notable jazz artists as Bobby McFerrin, Harry Connick, Jr., the late Joe Williams, Sarah Vaughn, Dizzy Gillespie and Carmen McRae. He is also the Minister of Music for Kingdom Life Church in North Minneapolis.
5. Introducing our community to a guest director’s vision and voice! We are thrilled to invite Daniel J. Bryant as guest director and leader of the creative process. His attention to story and character, and his vibrant and vivacious leadership style will absolutely be detectable on stage.
6. An exciting guest choreographer! Heather Beal is an accomplished dancer and choreographer who teaches Dunham Technique at Washington University in St. Louis and at The City Studio. This approach is “a vibrant African diasporic dance technique” that “through its humanistic philosophies and its focus on deep connection with the self and with others…is a balm for the current worldwide state of divisiveness and egocentrism.”
7. Alice Walker’s masterpiece! Most thrillingly, the source material for the stage musical has made an impact on so many of us. The gifted Walker is a novelist, short story writer, poet, and social activist who, in 1982 became the first African American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Some of my favorite pearls of wisdom come from her and/or her masterwork, including one that has been a recent go-to: “I have fallen in love with the imagination. And if you fall in love with the imagination, you understand that it is a free spirit. It will go anywhere, and it can do anything.”
8. The music! Many of us may know the influential novel, or the magnificent 1985 epic Steven Spielberg film, and may have been intrigued to learn it was adapted into an award-winning Broadway musical. Just this past holiday season, a film adaptation of the musical made a splash. But did you know: 13 songs from the musical were not included in the film? So, you just need to come see the live version at The Ritz to hear all the showstopping songs in a variety of styles ranging from gospel, jazz, ragtime, African music, and blues.
March is Brain Injury Awareness Month; Local Author Dr. Richard Lentz Explores TBI in His Book, Accidental Journey
Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided
Our downtown neighbor, Dr. Richard D. Lentz is a clinical and forensic psychiatrist at Park Nicollet Health Services and a retired Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Minnesota. He has extensive experience with individuals and families who have coped with traumatic brain injury (TBI). He is also an author. His first novel, Accidental Journey, explores traumatic brain injury. We talked to him about the inspiration for the novel, narrative medicine and his future writing plans. March is Brain Injury Awareness Month – so it's an ideal time to pick up the novel, support a local author and learn about this common injury. You can also see Dr. Lentz discuss his book on March 11 at Magers & Quinn Booksellers – register here for the event.
Q: Thank you for speaking with us. Is this your first novel? What inspired you to write a novel about traumatic brain injury?
A: Yes, this is my first novel. As a clinical and forensic psychiatrist, I treated patients and families with traumatic brain injury, testified in brain injury cases as a forensic psychiatrist - and realized that the public knows very little about TBI. Even physicians sometimes missed it! In retirement, I chose fiction as the best vehicle to make accessible this common, real, and poorly understood affliction - a story I was passionate to tell for its social value.
Q: Were the characters in Accidental Journey based on real people, or did you create them from scratch?
A: All the characters - Jeff, Cate, and the kids - are fictional. No patient I have encountered would think this as their story. However, I did use my experience and knowledge to create characters who reflect real problems that TBI patients and their families face, in the acute phase and during prolonged treatment and recovery.
Q: Can you tell us about narrative medicine and why you believe it is helpful in cases of TBI?
A: Narrative medicine is a broad concept that means using story to help clinicians and the public understand the healthcare experiences of patients and families. It begins with understanding every patient as a unique person, knowing their stories, what their lives are like, taking detailed histories that goes far beyond the problems for which they seek care. A novel that tells stories like Cate and Jeff's, immersing one in the injury and pulling the reader through their experience, falls within that broad definition.
Q: How did you balance the medical aspects with the emotional and personal experiences of the characters?
A: Brain injury affects one's ability to remember, to process information, to relate to others. It affects one's personhood, so a person with TBI cannot separate the medical aspects from their emotional and personal experiences. That said, there are medical events that take place over time as the consequences of the injury unfold, with emotional impact for individuals and families. An interesting story must be emotionally real, not just inform. In writing Accidental Journey, I had two audiences in mind, those who want to know more about TBI, and those who enjoy literary fiction.
Q: Were there moments that were particularly difficult to capture in your narrative? Did you face any unique challenges in conveying medical information in a fictional narrative?
A: Jeff, following his particular kind of TBI, lacks insight into how his injury has affected him. Because of this, he cannot tell us what he feels or thinks. Jeff has to reconstruct his experience from fragments of memory and emotion. The story relies on the interactions of Jeff's wife and children with Jeff, what they observe and feel, to tell the story of Jeff's injury.
Q: What message or awareness do you hope readers gain from Accidental Journey?
A: My hope is that readers acquire knowledge and experience empathy - a greater understanding of how TBI affects individuals and families and compassion for what they endure.
Q: Let’s talk about your future writing plans. Do you plan to explore similar themes or medical topics in your future works?
A: Sports injuries and war injuries are often in the news. Accidental Journey is about an accident, since accidents - falls, motor vehicle crashes (also assaults and abuse) - cause the great majority of TBIs. I have in mind the story of a soldier and the story of an athlete.
Q: Wonderful! Might we see you leading or participating in book club discussions of Accidental Journey?
A: I have presented my work, with readings, to book groups. It's fun for me, and responses have been positive.
Q: How may we follow your news?
A: I have a website, RichardDLentz.com. I hope to keep my book in the news, especially around March, which is Brain Injury Awareness Month, and around the Holidays. At any time of the year, books make wonderful gifts!
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Copies of Accidental Journey are available for purchase through Amazon, Barnes and Noble Online, and can be ordered at book stores. The book is also available to libraries and bookstores through Ingram, and is in both paperback and Kindle formats.
Coalescence: Inaugural Exhibition Under Gamut Gallery's New Ownership Team
Gamut Gallery is kicking off the new ownership team's inaugural exhibition
To kick off the 2024 calendar year, Gamut Gallery’s new Director, Francesca Bernardi, partnered with Gamut’s former director, Cass Garner, to create the collaborative exhibition, Coalescence. To bring this conception to fruition this duo requested artist suggestions from the new ownership team, Francesca Bernardi, Kasi Aten, and Brian Oreck along with the co-founders of Gamut, Cass Garner Jade and James Patrick. As the new ownership team is transitioning into their roles, it was essential for them to connect with the community that has been part of Gamut’s roots.
The curators combed through all the suggestions to pull the most cohesive artists together who represent each owner and co-founder. Cass and Francesca are very excited to welcome back Briana Auel, Evan Weselmann, Kim Heidkamp, John Foster, Jessica Kitzman, Laurie Borggreve, Madison Rubenstein, Nelson Cain, seangarrison, Suyao Tian, and Rock Johnsen - 11 artists who have been part of Gamut’s story over the past 5 years.
Together, this roster of abstract artists was formed to bring a vivid multi-media exhibition that embraces the accessibility of Gamut featuring paintings, sculpture, and fiber art available at all price points and sizes. Many of the artists are creating works in the styles they are currently known for while incorporating nods to their past works that started their careers. This exhibition is guaranteed to give you the feels!
ABOUT THE CURATORS
Cass Garner is a graphic designer, art curator, project manager and working in Minneapolis. She co-founded Gamut Gallery, a cultural hub in Minneapolis over the past 12 years promoting the arts in Minneapolis and beyond. Cass led operations and project management for exhibitions and events while she was the Director until February of this year. She has curated dozens of exhibits within Gamut’s walls. In 2018 Cass was the solo Juror of Artistry’s 42nd Annual Members’ Juried Art Exhibition. Her curatorial practice expanded in 2020 partnering with The Coven at their St. Paul location to curate a special nook of the Coven, and she partnered with HAUS Salon in 2021 to highlight local, innovative artists from the Twin Cities producing 25 solo exhibits throughout the HAUS Salons across Minneapolis. Most recently Cass was the Project Manager for the Holidays on Nicollet and a juror for Hennepin Theatre Trust It’s the People Project.
Francesca Bernardi is the new Gallery Director and co-owner of Gamut Gallery. They are an art therapist, artist, art collector, and burgeoning curator. Through their work in art therapy, they are a skilled relationship cultivator, attentive communicator, and passionate about building community with multifaceted individuals. Coalescence is Francesca's gallery curatorial debut; however, they have hosted pop-up art galleries in their home featuring local artists. Francesca's excitement for curating will lead to many more exhibits highlighting artists in Minneapolis.
PUBLIC OPENING NIGHT:
Saturday, March 16, 7-10PM
Featuring Briana Auel, Evan Weselmann, Kim Heidkamp, John Foster, Jessica Kitzman, Laurie Borggreve, Madison Rubenstein, Nelson Cain, seangarrison, Suyao Tian, and Rock Johnsen.
• $10 presale available
• $15 day of the event, FREE for members
• DJ sets by James Patrick and Clint Lakness
COALESCENCE CURATOR and ARTIST TALK:
Thursday, April 4, 7pm
Moderator, Russ White of MPLSART joins curators Cass Garner and Francesca Bernardi alongside Coalescence artists Evan Weselmann and Jessica Kitzman to talk all things art
• $7 presale coming soon
• $10 day of the event, Free for Gamut Gallery Members
THC SIP and PAINT
Saturday, April 20, 2pm-5pm
Bringing back the energy that created Gamut Gallery, this sip and paint will have all the feelings of CoLab. Bring a friend or make a new one while playing art games and picking up a paintbrush. Canvases and paint will be provided.
• $15 presales coming soon
• $20 day of event
• 21+ event
• DJ Bobby Kahn brings the funk
GALLERY & GIFT SHOP OPEN HOURS + CONTACT INFO
FREE open hours: Thursday - Friday, 11am - 6pm; Saturday 11am - 4pm.
Follow Gamut on Facebook and Instagram for further details and information regarding the event.
Minneapolis Softens Your Water as Part of the Treatment Process
The City of Minneapolis has been softening our drinking water since the 1940s. This means you don’t need to install your own water softener at home. Take a moment to watch this video to see how water from the Mississippi is treated and delivered to us.
Mill City Museum Wins Fifth Place in Best History Museum Contest
Minnesotans showed their support for the museum in an online contest
Mill City Museum has won the honor of being named among the best history museums in the nation. Online voters chose the Minneapolis museum as the fifth place finisher.
The recent contest included 21 sites from around the country, which were nominated by an expert panel for USA TODAY’s 10Best Readers’ Choice travel awards. Results were announced February 23rd.
“It is an honor to be ranked as one of the five best history museums in the nation for the second consecutive year,” said Site Manager David Stevens. “We’re thankful for all those who took the time to vote and support Mill City Museum.”
The following museums placed in the top five:
- Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Cincinnati History Museum in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Mississippi Civil Rights Museum in Jackson, Mississippi
- Mill City Museum! :D
More information about the contest and results are available here. You can learn more about Mill City Museum and its upcoming events at mnhs.org/millcity.
February 2024 Minneapolis Central City Tunnel Project Update
Via a February 23 e-announcement from the City of Minneapolis:
The City of Minneapolis Public Works Department is constructing a new parallel storm tunnel, enlarging a portion of the existing storm tunnel, and constructing a new tunnel access in Downtown Minneapolis.
The new tunnel is being constructed parallel to the existing tunnel located under Washington Ave S between Nicollet Mall and Chicago Ave. The existing tunnel under Chicago Ave between Washington Ave S and the Mississippi River is being expanded to handle the increased stormwater capacity. The purpose of this project is to reduce pressure in the existing tunnel, provide more room for future growth, and to reduce the need for future repairs and tunnel failures.
Project Map
Latest Project News
Mississippi River Portal
- Crews continue reconstruction of the storm tunnel outlet at the Mississippi River; excavation activities are complete.
2nd Ave
- Crews continue construction of a concrete liner for the new parallel storm tunnel under Washington Ave from the new tunnel access shaft in the southbound lanes of 2nd Ave S, just north of the Washington Ave intersection.
Portland Ave
- Crews continue construction of a concrete liner for the new parallel storm tunnel under Washington Ave from the existing tunnel access shaft at the northeast corner of the Washington Ave and Portland Ave intersection.
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Lining progress
Since December, crews have continued to work on the concrete tunnel lining, pouring about 750 cubic yards of concrete. To date 13500 cubic yards of concrete have been poured. As noted in the infographic above, this is just over four times the volume of an Olympic swimming pool. This process is approximately 93% complete.
What to expect
- Expect additional noise, dust, and vibration as crews complete work.
- Schedule is tentative and subject to change due to weather and other unforeseen circumstances.
- Working hours will vary in the coming weeks due to the holiday and scheduled training.
Stay Connected
Visit the project website for more information and to sign up for project updates: https://www.minneapolismn.gov/government/projects/central-city-tunnel/
Email the project team: info@mplscentralcitytunnel.com
Contact the project hotline: 612-888-9418
Registration Open for the April 20 Earth Day 5K Fun Run/Walk and River Cleanup
Looking ahead to spring and Great River Coalition's annual event!
Family-friendly, dogs welcome, Music & Booths. Costumes are welcome. Prizes for the best! Name your Team!
Organized river cleanup at 9:30 am.
A fun, family friendly event hosted by:
• Great River Coalition
• Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board
• The National Park Service
• Mill City Running/St. City Running
The Shape of Time: Korean Art after 1989 at Mia
Minneapolis Institute of Art Explores complex array of Contemporary Korean Art in New Exhibition
The Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) has announced a new exhibition of contemporary Korean Art. The Shape of Time: Korean Art after 1989, organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, covers five themes: Dissonance, Reinvention, Coexistence, Being Seen, and Portraying Anxiety. The exhibition will be on view in the museum’s Target Galleries from March 23 to June 23, 2024. Tickets are $20, with additional discounts for Mia members.
The year 1989 marked a major shift in the world order, with Eastern European countries breaking away from the Soviet Union even as pro-democracy protests were crushed in China. It’s also the year the World Wide Web was invented, jumpstarting the modern era of interconnectivity. South Korea, in the wake of the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, transitioned from a long-standing military dictatorship to a legitimate democracy. An international travel ban was lifted, creating opportunities for global engagement, powerful economic growth, and cultural exchange. South Korean artists began to connect in earnest to the global art scene.
“The works in this serve as a snapshot of an important moment in Korean history, and global history,” said Katie Luber, Nivin and Duncan MacMillan Director and President of Mia. “The diversity of feelings and experiences shared by these artists is profound. I hope that visitors will leave the exhibition with new insights into the ways this historical moment echoes today.”
Using a variety of mediums, including ceramics, painting, fiber, photography, lacquer, installation, metalwork, mixed media, embroidery, and video, these artists explore themes like conformity, displacement, gender and sexuality, coexistence, and dissonance, making universal connections that offer a deeper understanding of South Korea, its history, and its culture.
Dissonance
Ongoing tensions with North Korea and the effects of unprecedented economic growth have long been a part of daily life for South Koreans. The artists in this section reflect on South Korea’s past and present, the foundations of Korean society, and the paradoxes of a divided Korea. Dissonance abounds in works such as Hayoun Kwon’s single-channel video 489 years (2016). The viewer occupies the role of a soldier undertaking a daylong patrol of the demilitarized zone (DMZ), a strip of land separating North and South Korea along the 38th parallel. The work’s title, 489 Years, references the amount of time experts anticipate it would take to clear the one million mines in the area. Yet in the 11-minute single-channel video, the DMZ appears lush and filled with wildlife, the destructive potential of the area hidden.
Reinvention
In the 1990s, South Korean artists began re-engaging with traditional arts and culture, infusing long-established aesthetics with a contemporary sensibility. Some of them employ centuries-old hand processes, materials, and narratives. All of them re-examine the past, addressing notions of resilience and transformation that are at once specific to their experiences and transcend geographical boundaries. Suki Seokyeong KANG’s vibrantly woven mats from 2018 and 2019, made to be used in the Chunaengmu royal dance, are inspired by Hwamunseok, a handcrafted straw mat tradition dating to the Goryeo dynasty (918–1392). These large-scale, abstracted weavings—made with Hwanmunseok thread, painted steel, and leather scraps—feature vibrant colors and abstract patterns that bridge contemporary practice with historic craft traditions.
Coexistence
As Korea participated in a new level of exchange, artists embraced the coexistence of new ideas and existing Korean values and artistic traditions, imbuing them with new meaning. Yoo Eui-jeong’s Treasures of Daily Life (2018) expresses this fusion of ideas in his series of recognizable corporate logos for companies including McDonald’s, Louis Vuitton, and Hello Kitty. Created in valuable materials such as ceramic, gold, and porcelain and presented as dishes served at a banquet, these cultural icons of today are presented as valuable treasures for the future.
Being Seen
The artworks on view in this section reflect the reality of the present and express hope for the future. Challenging patriarchal power structures and cultural standards, the artists center experiences that are often marginalized, silenced, or erased. Ultimately, they celebrate their resilience and that of their communities. An Attack by Green Horns, by Sang-hee Yun, is a pair of lacquered and gold dagger-like spikes worn on the front torso and back shoulder, protruding like horns. Drawing on experiences from her childhood, Yun created these spikes as a form of protection for the wearer, simultaneously ornate and ominous.
Portraying Anxiety
Responding to the tensions of being part of a collective and expressing individual identities, artists have turned to alternative ways of approaching, discussing, and challenging social mores. The works in this section raise questions about group participation and the acts of looking and being looked at, while touching on larger societal challenges in Korea and elsewhere. In Let’s do National Gymnastics, Oh Jaewoo fuses nostalgia and the messaging of collectivity and its continued impact on South Korean society. In this ten-minute, single-channel video, Oh evokes the compulsory exercise program prevalent in Korean schools between 1977 and 1999. The video is set to the militaristic beat of the Korean National Stretch Anthem in a commentary on the ubiquitous pressure to conform and the associated anxiety pervasive across Korean culture.
Works from Mia’s permanent collection will be added to the exhibition in Minneapolis, including Do Ho Suh’s Some/One, a 2005 sculpture based on a coat of traditional armor. Composed from thousands of polished military dog tags, the work juxtaposes the collective (represented by the armored sculpture) with the individual (symbolized by the dog tags, each representing a single soldier). Also featured is a selection from Byron Kim’s ongoing Synecdoche portraiture project, currently comprised of more than 400 panels, each approximating the skin color of a person Kim has met.
“The artworks in this exhibition respond to South Korea’s complex history and culture, which have been marked by the division of a country, political upheaval, and economic growth, all within a few short decades,” said Leslie Ureña, Associate Curator of Global Contemporary Art. “The exhibition has gathered artists who have made dynamic works that are deeply imbued with their shared artistic and social contexts. They invite us to consider the experience of exploring the past, present, and potential future.”
“The Shape of Time: Korean Art after 1989” is organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with major sponsorship from Wells Fargo and media sponsorship from the Star Tribune. Major support for this exhibition is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Indeed Brewing Company Announces 2024 Whirlygig Music Lineup
The weekend-long event takes place in conjunction with Art-A-Whirl, an annual artist studio tour throughout NE Minneapolis.
Indeed Brewing Company is excited to announce the music lineup for Whirlygig, a music, beer, and art festival on May 17-19, 2024.
History and Science Come Together for STEM Family Day at Mill City Museum, February 24
The museum hosts a day of free family activities featuring guest presentations
Science, technology, engineering, and math aren’t confined to the classroom. This Saturday, families will have a chance to learn how the STEM fields are intertwined with history and how they continue to have an important impact today.
On February 24, Mill City Museum, 704 South 2nd Street, will hold a free STEM Family Day to showcase how science is all around us in the Twin Cities. The day’s program features fun activities that focus on the role STEM has played in the past and present history of the Minneapolis Riverfront.
Event highlights include:
- 11 am: Petite Concerts
- 2 pm: Z Puppets Rosenschnoz with The Amazing Gnip Gnop Circus
- MN Raptor Center with an eagle and other raptors
- MN Astronomical Society with astrophotography
- Mississippi National River and Recreation Area with mini boats and weights
- Geological Society of MN having fun with rocks
- General Mills Wheat and Flour Labs with the science of wheat (with museum admission)
Cost: Free, baking lab activity requires museum admission. For more information and a full list of guests, click here.
World Ballet Festival is Coming to the Pantages Theatre in June
Aviva Gefler-Mundl
A first-of-its-kind celebration of ballet
The World Ballet Company recently announced their World Ballet Festival, a first-of-its-kind touring festival celebrating all that ballet has to offer. The Festival will showcase an array of ballet programming from beloved classics to today's most exciting new works. In its debut year, World Ballet Festival will present a performance at the Pantages Theatre, June 7 – 9. Tickets
The Festival program will feature ballet blockbusters and encompass a range of ballets from romantic to comic. Among the performers scheduled to appear are Tiler Peck and Roman Meija of New York City Ballet; Aviva Gefler-Mundl, Marcos Hernandez, and Kate Inoue of Los Angeles Ballet; Rasmus Ahlgren of Boston Ballet; and Ekaterina Malkovich, Constantine Geronik, and Andrea Lassakova of World Ballet Company. Additionally, a local ballet company will be featured in each city giving local dancers the opportunity to share the stage with seasoned professionals. Full programming details will be announced in the coming months.
World Ballet Festival is produced by Sasha Gorskaya and Gulya Hartwick, with programming director Adrian Blake Mitchell, a graduate of the Vaganova Academy and former member of the Mikhailovsky Ballet Company. World Ballet Festival will be presented in new cities each year with a goal to bring ballet to every corner of the country.
The company’s signature program, World Ballet Series presents the most beloved and iconic ballets of our time in cities across the country. The company attracts many international artists and is composed of renowned professional dancers representing over ten countries. The family-friendly productions feature timeless scores, rich storytelling, vivid hand-painted sets, and stunning hand-crafted costumes. To date, World Ballet Series has travelled to more than 280 cities reaching an audience of more than 250,000, many of whom are first time attendees to a ballet.
Theatre in the Round Celebrates Women in STEM with Silent Sky and Art Gallery
Eva Gemlo as Henrietta Leavitt, Photo by Aaron Thuen
Silent Sky runs February 23 thru March 10, Fridays and Saturdays 7:30pm, Sundays 2pm
Theatre in the Round Players (TRP) is observing the start of Women’s History Month by celebrating unsung women in STEM fields, the highlight of which is a production of the historical drama Silent Sky by Lauren Gunderson, running weekends February 23 through March 10.
Silent Sky tells the true story of astronomer Henrietta Leavitt who began work at the Harvard College Observatory in the early 1900s as a part of a group of women “computers,” charting the stars using glass plates. Although not allowed to use a telescope, these women made discoveries foundational to modern astronomy. An inspirational, uplifting story, Silent Sky is appropriate for ages 10+. Gretchen Weinrich directs the five-member cast with sets designed by Sadie Ward, costumes by Colleen O’Dell, lighting by Peter Mitchell, props by Mark Steffer, and sound design by Warren Sampson.
Additional programming includes:
Women in Astronomy Panel, Saturday, February 24. This event, immediately following the performance if Silent Sky, will feature a panel of women in various career stages from the University of Minnesota School of Physics and Astronomy: Catherine Slaughter (Graduate Student, Astrophysics), Alexandra La Reste (Post-doctoral Researcher, Physics), and Claudia Scarlata (Professor, Director of the Minnesota Institute for Astrophysicists), moderated by Prisca Cushman (Professor, Physics).
Audience Discussion with the Cast & Dr. Roberta Humphreys, Sunday, March 10. Audience members will be able to participate in a question-and-answer time with the cast and director of Silent Sky as well as stellar astrophysicist, Dr. Roberta Humphreys. Dr. Humphreys is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She led the Minnesota Automated Plate Scanner research group for over twenty years, creating a digitized, searchable catalog of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey.
Trailblazing Women Art Gallery Showing, February 23-March 10. Throughout the run of this production, Theatre in the Round will be showcasing portraits of women who have made significant contributions to STEM fields. These portraits, created by artist Sadie Ward, have been created from upcycled bras, which Ward calls Brart. “One of the ways to remove patriarchy in our society is to recreate faces that were actively erased by that patriarchal society,” says Ward,” Brart is a socially derived artform that requires the participation of community to fuel conversation, while actively repurposing textiles.”
Tickets are $25. For information, call the theatre’s box office at 612-333-3010 or visit its website at www.TheatreintheRound.org.
Small Business Spotlight: Arturo’s Pizza - A Discussion with Co-owner, Jill Murray
Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided
Arturo's Pickle Pastrami Pizza
Craving delicious pizza, with not only tried and true standards but also innovative pie choices? We talked to Jill Murray, co-owner of Arturo’s Pizza in Old Town Minneapolis about the history of their restaurant, family dining legacies and some not-to-miss choices. Come by their shop at 18 University Avenue NE for a slice or a whole pie!
Q: Facebook tells us that Arturo’s Pizza was founded in 2021. How did you decide to open a pizza restaurant? Who is the restaurant named for?
A: Our family has looked for opportunities to diversify throughout our years in the restaurant industry. We chose pizza because of its mass appeal - everyone loves pizza! We like to work with approachable and familiar food items and high-quality ingredients. It has been a great experience creating with new flavors and products. Arturo’s is named in homage to our grandfather, one of the founders of Murray’s.
From the left, James, Jill and Tim Murray
Q: I did hear that you’re a member of a Minneapolis dining dynasty. Please tell us more.
A: We (James, Tim and Jill Murray) are part of the Murray family. Our grandparents were the founders of Murray’s Steakhouse in downtown Minneapolis, now in its 78th year of operation. Our late father, Patrick, was their only child and carried the restaurant through the second generation. He was at Murray’s over 50 years working and teaching his children the business. The three of us manage Murray’s, and along with our sisters, are the current owners.
Q: What are the most popular items on the menu? What should we try if we're first timers at Arturo's Pizza?
A: The most popular items on the menu are our specialty pizzas - you really can’t go wrong with choosing any of them. The Arturo’s Special highlights our house-made sausage, pepperoni, olives, onion, red pepper and fresh herbs. On the simpler side our Original is a lovely blend of mozzarella, Fontina, Parmesan and Pecorino cheeses, topped with freshly chopped herbs. Our cheese bread and spinach & artichoke dip with grilled bread appetizers are also guest favorites.
Mushroom Goat Cheese Pizza
If you are coming for the first time, I would recommend one of the previously mentioned pizzas, or something on the specialty pizza menu with flavors you like. One of my favorites is the Mushroom Goat Cheese pizza that has an Alfredo base, roasted garlic and an Italian burnt honey drizzle.
Q: Ok, those pizzas sound amazing! I noticed another pizza on the menu - please tell us more about the Pickle Pastrami pizza.
A: Our Pickle Pastrami pizza is a must try that celebrates the winning flavor combination of pickles, cream cheese, and pastrami. We do it on an Alfredo base with mozzarella cheese in addition to the cream cheese, pickles and pastrami. I think many people our age grew up enjoying this in appetizer form where the pickle was slathered in cream cheese, wrapped in ham and sliced. Pickles on pizza are very hot right now, and for good reason, they fit right in.
Q: Do you serve pizza slices?
A: We serve plain cheese, sausage and pepperoni slices Tuesday-Sunday. We have a great 2 slices for $10 special that includes a soda.
Q: How may we stay up to date with your news?
A: You can stay up to date with our news by joining our mailing list. Sign up is at the bottom of our website.
Francois Paradeise, a Fixture in the Twin Cities Restaurant Scene for Decades, Retires with a 2-Day Send Off Party at Chloe by Vincent, February 28-29
Francois Paradeise (right, pictured with Chef Vincent Francoual), completed his restaurant career as General Manager of Chloe by Vincent.
After five decades working with some of the most inventive restaurants companies in the Twin Cities, Francois Paradeise, 77, is retiring. Stop by to say good-bye and wish Francois well on his last two days of work, February 28-29, with a free glass of bubbles.
Known for his big personality, story-telling skills and irresistible French accent, Paradeise was a well-known force in the local hospitality industry.
He began his career as the front office shift manager at a five-star hotel and resort in Scottsdale, Arizona, after moving to the U.S. from Paris and culminates it as the opening GM for the new iteration of a Vincent Francoual restaurant, Chloe by Vincent.
“We were fortunate to be able to work with Francois before we opened to help us set up systems and hire good people and to share his showmanship style of making guests feel welcome and special,” said Matthew Monroe, CEO of Restore Restaurant Holdings, which owns the restaurant along with Erik Forsberg’s French Toast.
Paradeise and his wife of 44 years, Nancy, are moving to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to be closer to grandchildren.
Over the years, Paradeise has worked with Parasole Restaurants, where he was the GM of a number of their iconic restaurants, including Manny’s, Figlio and Good Earth. He was hired as the director of operations for the first Buca di Beppo restaurant and opened seven additional stores, including in Milwaukee; Palo Alto, California; Seattle; and Chicago.
He also worked with Wayne Kostroski at Cuisine Concepts, at Tejas, Bar Abeline and Franklin Street Bakery.
“I am grateful for all my coworkers as well as the company officers and owners,” Paradeise said. “I cherish all the memories with my teams as we dealt with both challenges and successes.”
Minnesota will always have a place in his heart, but “now is as good a time as ever to spice up our lives.” And what better place to find that spice than in the southwest, where he started his culinary journey.