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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.

Wednesday
Sep142022

Mpls Downtown Improvement District Announces 2022 Greening & Public Realm Award Winners

The Mpls Downtown Improvement District (DID) announced its Greening & Public Realm Award winners, a group decided by an interactive public vote that includes three first-time winners among the seven categories.  

The Greening & Public Realm Awards aim to showcase the greening efforts by local organizations and companies that help beautify downtown and its surrounding areas through enhancing our urban landscape.  

This year’s first-time award winners include the Prince Mural by Hiero Veiga, The Freehouse (Best Entryway/Outdoor Café) and Water Works Park (Best Public Realm Improvement).  

Loring Greenway won a Greening & Public Realm Award for a record 11th straight year – including winning Best Large Green Space for the sixth year in a row. The Loring Park Neighborhood also took home the prize for Best Neighborhood Greening for the sixth year in a row as well. Peavey Plaza won its second straight Greening & Public Realm Award (Best Activated Space) and Gateway Park took home the award for Best Small Green Space for the second year in a row.  

“After a two-year hiatus, we’re excited to celebrate this year’s Greening and Public Realm Award winners and especially excited to add two new winners to our past award recipients,” says Steve Cramer, President & CEO of the Mpls Downtown Improvement District. “We value all efforts to enhance downtown’s beauty and vibrancy. Congratulations to this year’s winners—your contributions to our city’s core are greatly appreciated.”  

Greening & Public Realm Award winners will receive a commemorative plaque created by Wood from the Hood, a Minneapolis-based company that reclaims discarded trees from urban neighborhoods and creates high-quality wood products. Each award will display the year the award was issued and the category that was won. Winning locations will also receive a Greening & Public Realm Awards winner sign to designate their award-winning greenery.  

Finalists for the Greening & Public Realm Awards were announced on July 25. Public voting for finalists remained open through August 15. 

The finalists were selected and categorized by members of the Mpls DID staff based on criteria including overall year-over-year enhancements as well as continued excellence in their efforts to increase vibrancy in the public realm.  

This year’s results include the following winners:

Small Green Space Winner:  Gateway Park
Large Green Space:  Loring Greenway
Public Art Winners:  Prince Mural, Bob Dylan Mural
Activated Space Winner:  Peavey Plaza
Entryway and Outdoor Cafe Greening Winner:  The Freehouse
Public Realm Improvement Winner:  Water Works Park
Best Neighborhood Winner:  Loring Park
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More information and list of finalists can be found here: www.mplsdid.com/greeningawards.

Wednesday
Sep142022

21st Annual Autumn Brew Review Festival Returns to Boom Island October 15th

Enjoy fall releases and winter warmers at the 21st Annual Autumn Brew Review Festival

On October 15 brewers from across Minnesota will gather for one of the oldest and coziest annual celebrations of craft beer in the state.

Celebrate the autumn season with brewers and thousands of fellow beer lovers at Boom Island Park in Minneapolis. Craft beer fans and attendees of this afternoon festival can enjoy s’mores, live music, and bonfires in the golden hour light as they sample unlimited special seasonal releases, classic favorites, non-alcoholic beverages, and gluten-free options from 95+ breweries and brewpubs, all with scenic views of the downtown Minneapolis skyline as a backdrop. 

In its 21st year, Autumn Brew Review is one of the state’s oldest beer festivals. This uniquely Minnesotan fest highlights the variety of styles brewed by local businesses from around the state. Like other MNCBG festivals, ABR exclusively showcases the talent of Minnesota breweries and brewpubs and features games and activities created and led by the breweries themselves.
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The 2022 Autumn Brew Review festival will feature:
● Unlimited samples from 95+ Minnesota breweries, brewpubs, and cideries
● Autumn games and activities led by MN brewers and brewery staff
● Live DJ set by The Current
● Bonfires and s’mores
● Food trucks and local artisans
● Best of Fest awards - voted on by attendees
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Regular tickets are $60, sober-driver tickets are $15, and VIP early-access tickets are available to members of the Minnesota Craft Brewers Guild MNthusiast program. Tickets, event details, participating breweries, and MNthusiast membership information can be found online at mncraftbrew.org/ABR.
Tuesday
Sep132022

All Are Welcome at the Cedar Riverside Multicultural Dinner, September 22

Article by Becky Fillinger, photo provided 

Amano DubeThe annual Cedar Riverside Multicultural Dinner will take place September 22, from 4 - 7 pm at the Brian Coyle Center. We talked to Amano Dube, Senior Director of Community Development Cedar Riverside, for Pillsbury United Communities, about this year’s event. He told us, “This event has been taking place for over two decades and it has grown over the years in its size and diversity – we welcome everyone to come out on September 22 to meet your Cedar Riverside neighbors.” 

Amano pointed out these highlights: 

  • There is no fee to attend the dinner - delicious cuisine from 10-12 restaurants in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood will be featured.     
  • I stated earlier but want to emphasize that we don’t charge for the event – the food and performances are offered free of charge. The event is supported by organizations and individuals who believe in its purpose which is to bring the diverse multicultural communities in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood and the surrounding communities together to celebrate the beauty of diversity through conversing and networking with each other, learning more about our diverse cultures, sharing West Bank cuisine and enjoying the wonderful performances. Please come to 420 15th Avenue South and enjoy!

Monday
Sep122022

Weekly Events at Peavey Plaza September 12-17

Green Minneapolis is excited to host these events, free and open to all!

YWCA Minneapolis Yoga on the Plaza

Tuesday, September 13 from 5:30-6:30pm
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Flow into summer with FREE yoga classes at Peavey Plaza (weather permitting). Bring a water, mat and towel. Members and nonmembers are welcome to attend. Nonmembers that attend receive a FREE three-day trial fitness pass to any of our three fitness locations. Plus, join YWCA Minneapolis as a member for just $15! Registration recommended
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MNspin Musician of the Week: Ray Barnard

Thursday, September 15 from 12-1pm 

Ray Barnard and Clark Adams do original Roots & Soul music. And with the help of Blair Krivanek, Nick Salisbury, and, Greg Schutte, they do it as well as anybody. They meet at the intersection of smart, pretty, and groovy.
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Joe Davis & The Poetic Diaspora

Friday, September 16 at 6-7:30pm

Journeying through the sonically diverse realms of old school and new school hip hop, R&B, funk, and soul, Joe Davis & The Poetic Diaspora seamlessly blend melodic harmonies, smooth instrumentation, and raw, poetic energy to tell stories of struggle, resilience, and celebration. Formed in the heart of the Twin Cities, the collective is dedicated to crafting vibrant soundscapes around honest narratives that reflect their community’s sacred humanity. Each song is an ancestral echo, a battle cry calling for freedom, an unending dance for justice and joy, welcoming all of the diaspora home.

Children’s Theatre Company Story Theatre 

Saturday, September 17 at 12-12:30pm & 12:30-1pm

Join Children’s Theatre Company for summertime fun at Peavey Plaza! Through imaginative play, collaborative storytelling, music, and family engagement, we’ll explore beloved children’s books together. Laugh, dance, and discover along with your family and friends.

For a complete calendar of Peavey Plaza Performing Arts Series, visit greenminneapolis.org/events.

Sunday
Sep112022

September 10th Trip to the Mill City Farmers Market

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market PhotosOn our September 10th trip to the Mill City Farmers Market we were lucky enough to get one of the last watermelons from Nistler Farms, as well as the last of the season's sweet corn from Bean Market. Slow Burn had some very cool Día de los Muertos beeswax candles. The blended salsa from Atacama Catering is the perfect sauce to pour over a batch of roasted squash/peppers/onions/garlic (and their cookies and empanadas are to die for!). Mary Dirty Face Farm had an extensive array of apples. We picked up some Ginger Golds.

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

September 10, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market Photos

Sunday
Sep112022

Visit MERCADO LATINO September 19-30 to Celebrate Latino-owned Businesses

Article by Becky Fillinger, Photos provided by mpls downtown council

MERCADO LATINO will take place September 19 - 30 at Gaviidae Common. We spoke to Shannon Fitzgerald, Director of Downtown Partnerships for the mpls downtown council for all the information we need to know before visiting.

Shannon Fitzgerald

Q:  What is the MERCADO LATINO?

A:  The second annual MERCADO LATINO, a partnership between Chameleon Shoppes and the Latino Economic Development Center (LEDC), gives downtown shoppers the opportunity to explore products from all over Latin America as well as those created by Latino makers here in the Twin Cities. In addition to hosting the pop-up event, Chameleon Shoppes and LEDC will be providing partnership and training opportunities for each vendor throughout the month of September, meeting Chameleon's mission to connect, incubate, and accelerate BIPOC and women entrepreneurs as part of a movement to create a vibrant and inclusive Downtown Minneapolis.

Q:  Before we jump into the event, please tell us about the number and impact of Minnesota Hispanic-owned businesses.

A:  The impact of Hispanic owned businesses enfolds social, economic, and cultural aspects that are important not only for the Hispanic community but to the whole country. In addition to being the largest minority group in the USA, Hispanic Americans earned more than $1 trillion and paid more than $250 billion in taxes in 2017 alone in the United States, filling critical workforce gaps in labor-short industries- agriculture, construction, and healthcare. Hispanic immigrants start new business at a higher rate than the rest of the population of the U.S. - eight in ten new business are Hispanic owned.

In Minnesota, the impact of Hispanic businesses that LEDC has supported is exponentially increasing and can be shown through the following numbers from 2020: 

  • LEDC supported Latino producers to have access to $560,000 in the market.         
  • 27 small business borrowers benefited from our COVID-19 lending relief program, receiving deferments averaging 4.3 months on their loans.      
  • 500+ small businesses impacted by the pandemic and civil unrest received nearly $5 million in grant relief and $2 million in emergency loans.

All this money invested in the Latino community in Minnesota is money invested in the economy that generates jobs and taxes for the state. However, the overarching reason for the investment is that it creates community and makes this growing community feel like they belong and making them believe that they can thrive and aspire to better futures.

Q:  Thank you! Now for this particular event, are you focusing solely on Minneapolis vendors and businesses?

A:  No, we have selected vendors are from several different areas of the Twin Cities.

Q:  What are the dates, hours and location?

A:  Monday - Friday, September 19 - 30, 11:00-6:00. The market will be set up at Gaviidae Common skyway level, 651 Nicollet Mall in Minneapolis.

Q:  Please tell us about the merchants who are participating.

A:  It is first important to recognize the importance of collaboration with LEDC in putting together the showcase. Thirteen local and Latino-owned businesses are represented, with products ranging from personal care, pastries, home décor, clothing, and accessories.

Corazón clothing - The Epileptic Chef - Liny's Herbal Boutique - E.M.A.s Boutique - The Pink Giraffe - Lala Draws Lines - Artesania Rosa Mexicana - Luceritos Fashion - Sanorte Designs - Susana Mendez Jewelry - Heidi Rivera Piñatas - IJX Lashes

Q:  Are any special events planned?

A:  The closing celebration will be held on Friday, September 30th, along with the opening of the newest Chameleon Shop, FX (Fashion X) a collaborative store of Urban Fashion, right across from the MERCADO LATINO location. More information will be posted on the celebration soon!

Q:  How may we follow the news of these businesses?

A:  Chameleon will be posting on social media about these businesses and tagging them. You can follow Chameleon Shoppes on Facebook @chameleonconsortiumshoppes, Instagram: @chameleonshoppes and our webpage: https://www.chameleonshoppes.com.

Here are a few photos from last years event:

Saturday
Sep102022

City of Minneapolis Welcoming Week, September 9 - 18

Article by Becky Fillinger

Did you know that the City of Minneapolis has a Welcoming Week, part of a now-global celebration which brings together immigrants, refugees, and native-born residents to learn about each other and foster a sense of community? This year marks the 10th anniversary of Welcoming Week celebrations across the globe, which run from September 9th to the 18th, and this year’s theme is Where We Belong. We spoke to Michelle Rivero, Director, Office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs (OIRA) to learn more about the events surrounding Welcoming Week.

Michelle RiveroHere's what Michelle shared about the theme of this year’s celebration and events we may attend:

This year’s Where We Belong theme encourages individual reflection on how and why belonging occurs and ways to break barriers so that places can foster belonging for all, including immigrants and refugees. This is the first year that celebrations are happening around the world – we know of celebrations in the United Kingdom, France, Australia, New Zealand, Spain, and Canada.

As a Welcoming City, the City of Minneapolis hosts annual events in recognition of Welcoming Week to welcome new residents to the city and, because Citizenship Day always takes place during Welcoming Week, to share information about how to become a United States citizen and the importance of acquiring United States Citizenship.

The City’s Welcoming Week webpage holds this year’s calendar of events for welcoming week and beyond including:

Twin Cities Immigration Forum

Tuesday, September 13, 4:30-6 p.m.

Join the Twin Cities Immigration Forum for a conversation about the contributions of immigrants and refugees in the City of Minneapolis and St. Paul including information from the Journey to Belonging Report.

Join the meeting online over Microsoft Teams or call in (audio only) at 612-276-6670, using conference ID number: 365 504 388#

Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid Naturalization Orientation

Saturday, September 17, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m.

The City of St. Paul Immigrant and Refugee Program, City of Minneapolis Office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs and local nonprofit immigration legal service providers will offer an information session about applying for US citizenship both online and in person in honor of Citizenship Day. Coffee and snacks provided. The link to join will be provided soon on the City’s webpage.

Forum on renting to refugees and evacuees

Friday, September 23, 2022, 10-11:30 AM

Online forum about renting to refugees and evacuees in Minnesota by the Minnesota Council of Churches Refugee Services.

Register online to receive Zoom link

Of course, there will be many private get-togethers, readings, potlucks and sporting events in our city to celebrate and show welcome to our immigrant and refugee community members. Use #WhereWeBelong to let others know of your events!

Previous Welcoming Week event

Friday
Sep092022

Must See Exhibit: A Picture Gallery of the Soul

Article by Becky Fillinger

Herman Milligan, Jr. Photo, Susan SchaeferThis exhibit at the Katherine E. Nash Gallery features the work of over 100 Black American photography artists, with works ranging from the 19th to the 21st centuries. The exhibition is organized by independent curator Herman J. Milligan, Jr. and Howard Oransky, Director of the Katherine E. Nash Gallery. We talked to Herman Milligan about the importance of and influences for the show - and all the events open to the public. Plan your visit - the show runs  from September 13 - December 10, 2022.

Q:  I just learned that Frederick Douglass sat for photographic portraits 160 times - he was the most photographed American of the 19th century. Douglass did not sit to glorify himself. He understood that photography could do something different from a hand sketch or a lecture - it was an indelible visual record of exactly what the subject looked like at that time and as WBUR noted Douglass believed that “photography highlighted the essential humanity of its subjects.” Is his influence evident in the exhibition?   

A:  I would say that Douglass' influence in this exhibition can be seen and felt throughout. In the three speeches that he delivered, a common theme was the ability of photography to reveal an individual and historical record of humans, their traditions and surroundings that could be more readily available than before its invention. Paintings and drawings of individuals portraying their social mores and customs were more exclusively available to the elite. For enslaved and indentured individuals, the non-photographic artform of portraiture was confined to the houses, institutions, and establishments where they were allowed to work in or visit.

More importantly, photography allowed for individuals to record their own destinies so to speak, to share it, and to pass it on for generations to come. As the medium became more popularized and widely accessible, this allowed for a freer means of expression and communication that galvanized and sustained the abolitionist and other civil rights movements in his period and until the present. Photographers in this exhibition, A Picture Gallery of the Soul, employ the photographic medium as means to explore identity in its many forms; to reveal environmental, social, cultural, and socio-economic injustices that Black Americans and others are facing, as well as revealing the human conditions Black Americans and humans may experience. The photographers in this exhibition employ a diverse set of techniques (i.e., use of different camera models and technologies; differing compositional styles and varied subject matter) to reveal the Black American experience within the time period in which these images were taken. 

Q:  The US Civil Rights Movement was greatly aided by photography. We could not look away at images of the assault of peaceful protesters at lunch counters or state troopers assaulting Selma marchers. Why do we need the gut punch of a photograph to get moved by a story? Are these photographs art or history? Both?  

A:  I believe throughout human existence, humans have developed the ability to create figurative work in its many forms (i.e., cave drawings, figurative painting, photography, film, video, online media channels, etc.) to leave a historical clue as well as to communicate a current experience that challenges the viewer to become moved; motivated to engage; or not take action. In our modern society, the proliferation of diverse media channels amplifies the individual's or groups' ability to move or to not move someone or group by a story which one might interpret as having compelling photographic images. Individuals decide to engage or not to engage for various reasons. Photography as a medium, in my opinion, poses the question to the viewer as to how they should feel and if they need to do anything about it, based on the images and/or story being communicated.

I believe effective photographers do a great job at this. They produce powerful compelling images that tell a story, regardless of whether they will also write the story. Moreover, great photographers produce images that must stand on their own. If the image moves you to think and contemplate about the subject matter, in a way that compels you to think and act to do something about the subject matter of the image, then that person has done their job. Such photographs in my opinion will stand the test of time. Fine quality photographs, regardless of the reason why they were taken, will be memorable in the most positive manner over time. Who defines whether a photograph, for whatever reason why the picture was taken, or whether it is art or history, or both, is a question that I believe has meaning relative to the subject matter of the photograph as well as related to the photographer who took the picture. I hope that American society and the world will have progressed to a point where art historians, art critics, collectors, and photographers will honestly evaluate the quality of the work and honestly record the precarious journey of Black American photographers during this important period of our country's history. 

Q:  Telephones with cameras have moved us even closer to instantaneously recording the truth of a situation. Every citizen becomes a photojournalist. Are we all creating art? 

A:  Although the development of new technologies in the telephone industry has allowed photography to become a mass market phenomena, not every person can become a photojournalist or an artist just because they have a cell phone with a camera. These two fields still demand and require courses of study or the ability to acquire such skills through an educational route. Individuals who become proficient at art or photojournalism but did not get a degree in these disciplines (i.e., self-taught or through an apprentice, but not receiving a degree) are popularly identified as "Outsider Artists" or "Outsider Photojournalists." Whether what is being created by the so-called "Non-artist" or "Non-photojournalist" is "art" or "photojournalism" is left to the respective professions and society to decide if such work is "art" or "photojournalism."

Unfortunately, we have the tragic death of George Floyd, on May 25, 2020, in Minneapolis to illustrate this point. Darnella Frazier, who took the now famous video of Mr. Floyd, being slowly killed by Officer Derek Chauvin on that date, was not a trained photojournalist, but a very brave woman who made a difference. Her video galvanized a movement that spread worldwide, brought some justice to Floyd's family, and hopefully will bring meaningful and important change within the criminal justice systems within the United States and beyond. For her courage, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism in June 2021. "Outsiders" of both disciplines who continue to learn and practice their skills through workshops, courses, etc. over a long period of time will become professionally proficient in their respective fields and will eventually be defined as a "journalist" or "artist" in their respective fields.

Above, Salimah Ali's Dare (Portrait of Ugochi Egonu), Courtesy of the artist. Salimah is one of the artists part of A Picture Gallery of the Soul.

Above, Kwame Brathwaite Self Portrait at AJASS Studios, Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA. Kwame is one of the artists part of A Picture Gallery of the Soul.

Q:  Setting aside civil rights, what other aspects of black life in the United States does your exhibition touch upon? 

A:  The exhibition covers many aspects of Black American life across the three centuries. When visiting the exhibition, the viewer will be able to experience portraits of individuals in various settings and situations that parallel such situations that all Americans and human cultures globally experience. For example, there are portraits of individuals, young or older, in their home or professional or social setting that in a way communicates the common experiences that all cultures within our country experience. These images present people doing the things they love to do on an everyday basis or present individuals who are recognized for their achievements and the struggles they pursue and/or are experiencing at a certain point in time. Such presentations of the everyday experiences of these individuals underscores the commonality of behaviors and circumstances that are common across the United States and the world. There is also a historical experience of being Black in America that is presented over time in a manner that underscores and reveals these struggles that are presented in a provocative and effective way to encourage a serious dialogue with the viewer about these circumstances.

Q:  Please tell us about the companion exhibition of photographs made by local high school students. 

A:  We thought it was important to showcase the work of photography students attending the Gordon Parks High School in St. Paul which was founded in 1991. Their work will appear in the nearby Quarter Galley. Gordon Parks was a St. Paul native who emigrated to the city from Fort Scott, Kansas. He chose photography to communicate the human condition and to help improve it through his photographic, filmmaking, music, writing, and philanthropic careers. We thought it was only fitting to give these students to showcase their creative work as a parallel exhibition to ours.

Q:  Are there events around the exhibition that we may attend? 

A:  Yes. There are five events – please note that registration is required for each event: 

Virtual Keynote | Thursday, September 15 | 6:30 pm | Online
Presentation with Prof. Deborah Willis, New York University
Registration required: https://z.umn.edu/Prof_Deborah_Willis

Opening Program | Thursday, September 22 | 6:00 – 7:00 pm | InFlux Space, Regis Center for Art
Presentation with the exhibition curators and visiting scholar lecture
Mining the Archive of Black Life and Culture, Prof. Cheryl Finley, Cornell University
Registration required: https://z.umn.edu/RegisRSVP

Public Reception | Thursday, September 22 | 7:00 – 9:00 pm | Katherine E. Nash Gallery
Come celebrate with the curators and visiting guests
Registration required: https://z.umn.edu/RegisRSVP

Spoken Word Event | Wednesday, October 12 |12:15 pm|InFlux Space, Regis Center for Art
Program with Ty Chapman, Keno Evol, and Andrea Jenkins
Registration required: https://z.umn.edu/RegisRSVP

Writers Reading Event | Thursday, November 17 |12:15 pm|InFlux Space, Regis Center for Art
Program with Mary Easter, G.E. Patterson, and Davu Seru
Registration required: https://z.umn.edu/RegisRSVP 

Q:  Is there a catalogue for the show? 

A:  Yes! The catalogue, co-published with the University of California Press will be on sale at the University Bookstore starting in September. Lastly, myself and Howard have developed a Soundscape for the images contained within the catalogue. MP-3 Players will be distributed when you attend the show, along with a smaller catalogue linking the catalogue image with a particular song or songs. Several images may have more than one song.

Coreen Simpson, Self Portrait

Thursday
Sep082022

West River Parkway to Closes Between 4th Ave N and Portland Ave September 12-16 for Maintenance

West River Parkway is scheduled to close between 4th Avenue N and Portland Avenue beginning Monday, Sept. 12 for catch basin repairs performed by City of Minneapolis Public Works. The closure is expected to last up to five days.

Trails and the Stone Arch Bridge parking lot will remain open. The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board appreciates the public's patience while public infrastructure is repaired.

Thursday
Sep082022

New Vincent Francoual Restaurant Coming to the Former Bacon Social House Location

Chef Vincent Francoual, Photo: Restore Restaurant HoldingsSherman Associates and Restore Restaurant Holdings (RRH) recently announced RRH has signed a lease for the 3,000 square foot ground floor restaurant space at 700 S 3rd Street, adjacent to the Canopy by Hilton Minneapolis Mill District hotel. The space will be home to a new casual-dining concept being created by Chef Vincent Francoual in coordination with RRH.

Chef Vincent was the namesake and creative force behind Vincent, A Restaurant, which was frequently named the “the best French restaurant” in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area during its 14-year run. The new restaurant will not be a reboot of Vincent, A Restaurant, Chef Vincent emphasized, but rather a new take on a casual French restaurant featuring the foods Chef Vincent loves cooking for his own family.

The restaurant space is in the heart of Sherman Associates’ redevelopment of the Mill District which includes over 1,000 housing units completed or under construction, two hotels, and its new office headquarters.

“Over the past year, our vision has been to create a restaurant hub in the Mill District,” said Ben Kepple, director of commercial leasing at Sherman Associates. “We’re excited to welcome RRH and Chef Vincent as the first of many exciting new food and beverage concepts to the neighborhood.”

Restore Restaurant Holdings is a recently formed group pioneering a new way of running a restaurant company by collaborating with successful restaurateurs to rebuild the hospitality business in downtown Minneapolis and surrounding areas. RRH is headed by co-founders attorney Dennis Monroe and his son, Matthew Monroe, along with Francoual. Also, part of the team is restaurateur Erik Forsberg, owner of Devil’s Advocate, Dan Kelly’s Pub, Joseph’s Restaurant, and Erik the Red.

Additional details about the new Chef Vincent restaurant will be released as the date for the grand opening, expected later this fall, approaches.

Chef Vincent, who is now heading up the kitchen at EaTo, is excited to get back to his French roots: "I believe that French food and a French restaurant can be a casual concept, as is the case with other ethnic food, and can be served in a way that is more carefree and incorporates shareable dishes," Francoual said. “I look forward to bringing this idea to the people of Minnesota soon.”

Wednesday
Sep072022

Global Bartending Excellence – Meet Jessi Pollak

Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided

Spoon and Stable’s Jessi Pollak won the national Bartender of the Year championship in June, competing against 14 other contenders. She’s now off to compete in the World Class Cocktail Festival in Sydney, Australia, to be held September 12-15. We talked to her about the competitions, her approach to a winning cocktail, and mixology classes for all of us when she returns.

Jessi Pollak at the 2022 Nationals

Q:  Congratulations on winning Bartender of the Year Award in the USBG national finals! Please tell us about your journey to become a bartender. 

A:  I began working in hospitality in my mid-20's. I had graduated from college and was on a career path in academic administration, and it just didn't feel right for me. I saved up some money and resigned, planning to spend some time figuring out my life. To pay the bills while I figured out my long-term path, I applied for my first bartending job. Within a couple of weeks, I knew that bartending was the path. I loved so many things about it - the people, the physical exertion, the schedule, and the creativity of making drinks. Since then, I've been on a journey to learn as much as I can and to be the best possible version of myself behind the bar. 

From the Nationals: "La Tequilera" - Don Julio tequila blanco, lemon and lime juices, Aperol, soda water, and La Tequilera cordial, which is based with watermelon juice, serrano and jalapeno peppers, cilantro, and mint. Photo, Shannon SturgisQ:  Were you nominated to attend the competition, or did you sign up to compete on your own? 

A:  I chose to enter the "USBG Presents World Class Sponsored by Diageo" competition (better known simply as World Class) because it's the competition that I kept track of to know who were the best bartenders in our industry and the folks I should be following. World Class is an amazing comprehensive challenge of a bartender's skills and knowledge. It's an intimidating competition to enter because it really is the best of the best, but after a few years of watching from the sidelines, I felt like I had to give it a try.

Q:  You were judged on knowledge, skill and creativity. Were there interviews or tests as part of the competition to gauge knowledge, or did it all come down to the cocktails? 

A:  World Class tests everything about being a great bartender - ingredient creation, menu conceptualization, storytelling, speed, technique, cleanliness while working, hospitality, all of it. The way I think of it is like this - at this level, every drink is going to be delicious and well balanced, and the judges are going to taste them all. How do I make my drinks stand out? How do I make it a memorable experience for the judges? Usually the answer is through storytelling, kindness, and engaging with the guest (or judge) in an authentic way.

Q:  You will now represent the U.S. in the World Finals in Sydney, Australia this month. Will you create all new cocktails for the finals?  

A:  Yes! I'll be competing in 5 separate challenges with 7 cocktails total. Each challenge tests a particular skill set - like creating a "modern classic" Scotch cocktail that is simple to make and can stand the test of time, or developing a complex martini variation that is served in a creative and theatrical way to wow the judges and show them something groundbreaking.

Q:  Will you have coaches and mentors as you prepare for the Finals? 

A:  Now that I am representing the U.S. in the Global Finals, I have an amazing team of resources behind me. I've been paired up with fantastic mentors, like past winners and judges, to help me plan and succeed. Each country is rallying for their competitor, so they put a lot of resources into supporting them. And I will of course have the Spoon and Stable team with me, as I have throughout this whole journey. 

From the Regionals in Chicago: "The Long Flight Home" - a New York sour variation with Don Julio tequila reposado, lemon juice, a compound syrup with a lot of culinary ingredients from Northern Mexico, salt and then a float of Birch-smoked mulled wine on top. Photo, Shannon SturgisQ:  Will you teach Cocktail Making to the Minneapolis community when you return – I hope victoriously – from Sydney? 

A:  Absolutely! I have had many opportunities to move to other cities to pursue my career goals, but Minneapolis is where I choose to be. Spoon and Stable feels like home, and I love educating our guests about cocktails and spirits. I regularly teach cocktail lessons for events, and I still spend a couple nights a week behind the bar doing what I love - making great cocktails for our guests. 

Q:  Good luck to you – we’re all cheering you on! How may we follow your news? 

A:  Thank you! You can follow me on my journey to the Global Finals through Spoon and Stable's social media channels (@spoonandstable) and my personal Instagram (@jessipollak).

Tuesday
Sep062022

MacPhail Center for Music Announces 2022-23 Spotlight Series

The September 24th concert will feature Jendayi Berry, and include a live painting on the stage as performances by Julia and Irina Elkina, Iris Shiraishi and Michael Cain take place.

MacPhail Center for Music has announced the 2022-23 Spotlight Series: Musical Explorations in Spectral Colors. This collaborative series of performances will build pathways in the artistic community by unifying the two captivating mediums of visual art and music.

Jendayi BerryPer Spotlight Artistic Director Mischa Santora, “I am so thrilled about the continuing journey with the Spotlight Concert Series, as we keep building new artistic connections in our community. With each new season, we have a unique opportunity to expand the scope of representation through our fantastic guest artists. Besides presenting wonderful performances, I feel we can learn so much about who we are as a community, and perhaps more importantly, where we want to go next.”

The season will showcase three important Twin Cities artists featuring Asha Belk with The Space Where Words Fail, Eyenga Bokamba with Translucent Beauty and to kick off the series Jendayi Berry will present In the Moment. Berry will put his extremely unique and alluring talents on display as he paints live on-stage rendering the musical performance into visual terms.

The first concert in the series will take place Saturday, September 24th at Antonello Hall in MacPhail’s Downtown Minneapolis location. Season subscribers will save 20% off the single ticket price and are guaranteed tickets to all three performances in September, February, and April. Season subscriptions are available for purchase up until the date of the first performance. Single tickets are also available for purchase on macphail.org.

Tuesday
Sep062022

Open Eye Theatre Announces Fall/Winter Season

Open Eye Theatre announces its Fall/Winter Season, featuring rowdy puppetry, a horrifying Halloween show on the roof at The Bakken Museum, a Mexican-American multimedia collaboration, masterful Indigenous storytelling, and a raucous musical version of A Christmas Carol! This season, audiences will see a thrilling array of original theatre, inventive puppetry, and world-class storytelling from local, national, and international artists. 

Producing Artistic Director Joel Sass officially took over the leadership helm at Open Eye in 2020 after Founder and Executive Director Susan Haas announced her departure from the organization. Since then he has successfully led Open Eye through the pandemic, commissioning and directing LOG JAM! A Paul Bunyan Musical Spectacular and HAIR BALL! A Bigfoot Musical Adventure on the roof of The Bakken Museum, and creating unique opportunities for audiences to engage with artists through outdoor spectacles, virtual performances, global online puppetry workshops, a wildly successful Driveway Tour, and PUPPET LAB residency and festival this year. In addition to creating new and exciting productions, his leadership focuses on supporting artists, fostering connections with community, and expanding the circle of those who call Open Eye a creative home.

FULL MOON PUPPET SHOW, October 21 – 23

A rowdy puppet cabaret during the full moon! Join us under the full moon for an adult, rowdy puppet cabaret. Featuring performances by some of the most innovative Twin Cities puppetry artists and live music between acts! Since 2008, FULL MOON PUPPET SHOW has been performing puppet slams throughout Minneapolis. This October, nominated artists will perform 10 minute original puppet shows to an audience encouraged to howl at the moon and cheer on each show!

HALLOWEEN @ The Bakken Museum, October 27 - 30

 Open Eye returns to The Bakken Museum for a third year of Halloween mayhem, this time with a multimedia spectacle conjured by Steve Ackerman and his team of puppet poltergeists. Ingredients in this witch’s cauldron include a gothic heavy metal band, puppet-animal sacrifice, arcane mystic rites, and comic demons summoned in a rock concert / seance / mockumentary that will delight fans of movies such as “This Is Spinal Tap” and “The Exorcist.”

SPEECHLESS | SIN PALABRAS, November 3 – 13

SPEECHLESS illuminates the extremes of both isolation and proximity between feuding neighbors who learn to overcome their conflicts and communicate across their divided community. The unique multimedia puppetry is performed without words to connect with audiences across language barriers and cultures.

Kling & Co Master Storyteller Series: BIRD BRAINED November 17 - 20

Beloved storyteller Dovie Thomason returns to Open Eye as part of Kevin Kling & Co’s Master Storyteller Series. One of the country’s most respected tale-tellers, Dovie Thomason combines her knowledge of Indigenous stories with contemporary observations in evenings of luminous storytelling, rich with tenderness and humor. Each performance is followed by an audience talk-back with the artist, hosted by Kevin Kling.

SCROOGE IN ROUGE, December 1 - 23

The Royal Music Hall Variety Players' production of A Christmas Carol is in a pickle after seventeen members of the company suddenly fall ill. This leaves the three remaining members to plow on (so to speak) through a musical performance of the Dickens classic. Expect missed cues, unfamiliar characters, and costume mishaps aplenty. With cheeky puns and bawdy songs, this quick-change, cross-dressing version of the Christmas tale is a hilarious holiday treat!

The return of PUPPET LAB this fall

Following a sold out relaunch during the PUPPET LAB Festival this year, and continuing under the leadership of co-artistic directors Oanh Vu and Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra, we will soon announce a call for applications for our fall PUPPET LAB cohort of emerging artists. More info will be available soon at openeyetheatre.org/about-puppet-lab.

Tickets

Visit openeyetheatre.org for showtimes and tickets. A limited number of $10 Economic Accessibility tickets are available online for each performance. Patrons may also pay what they can at the door.

Location and Parking

Open Eye Figure Theatre. 506 East 24th St., Minneapolis, MN 55404 (MapOpen Eye is located 2 blocks south of Franklin Ave between Portland Ave and 35W. Park for free in the Lutheran Social Service lot at 24th and Portland.

Monday
Sep052022

The Forgotten Islands Beneath the Falls

Article by Michael Rainville, Jr.

Before Minneapolis turned into the Mill City and tamed the riverfront, there was a clump of three islands located downstream of St. Anthony Falls. Cataract, Spirit, and Upton Islands were limestone outcroppings left behind from the receding waterfall. While these islands were not large, like Hennepin and Nicollet Islands, that did not stop early settlers and entrepreneurs from attempting to start up businesses on these river islands.

Light pole powered by the first hydroelectric plant in the US.The first of these islands, Upton, was located immediately downriver of the falls, roughly where the northern portion of the Upper St. Anthony Falls Lock and Dam lies today. The island’s claim to fame is that it was home to the first hydroelectric power station in the United States. In 1881, a group of men, which included Joel Bassett and C. M. Loring, started the Minnesota Brush Electric Company. Once the company bought land on Upton Island, they built a small central power station with five generators that used power lines to connect to businesses along Washington Avenue. The island was completely removed by the Army Corps of Engineers when they built the upper lock and dam.

About 1,000 feet to the East and between Spirit and Hennepin Islands was Cataract Island. In 1855, the Lovejoy Brothers constructed a shingle factory, with a small wooden bridge that connected the island to Hennepin Island. This was done so their employees could have easier access to Cataract Island. Unfortunately, since the island was very small and in the middle of turbulent water, the sandstone located underneath the island eroded rapidly, and Cataract Island collapsed into the river in 1860.

Spirit Island, 1899

The most well-known of the three islands, Spirit Island, held high importance to the Dakota who called this part of Minnesota home well before pioneers settled the area. The mist of the falls would float over the majestic spruce trees that sprouted from the rocky surface, and to top it all off, bald eagles frequently nested on the island. However, once more and more people started moving to the area, the beauty of the island started to decrease. While the island never had any structures built upon it, Minneapolitans, or rather mill owners, valued the island even more than the previous two. For a few decades, the island turned into a Platteville Limestone quarry that provided building materials for many of the mills along the river. In 1882, the St. Anthony Water Power Company purchased the island, and they owned it up until 1957, when they ceded it to the federal government. This was necessary as Spirit Island was right where the lower entrance for the upper lock would eventually be constructed.

Both nature and humans have leveled the islands that once occupied the river at the base of St. Anthony Falls, but let us not forget the practical and spiritual role they once played for the many people that have called the Minneapolis riverfront their home.

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About Michael Rainville, Jr.

A 6th generation Minneapolitan, Michael Rainville Jr. received his B.A. in History from the University of St. Thomas, and is currently enrolled in their M.A. in Art History and Certificate in Museum Studies programs. Michael is also a historic interpreter and guide at Historic Fort Snelling at Bdote and a lead guide at Mobile Entertainment LLC, giving Segway tours of the Minneapolis riverfront for 7+ years. Contact: mrainvillejr@comcast.net. Click here for an interactive map of Michael's past articles.

Monday
Sep052022

Happy Labor Day! Meet Local Labor Leader, Sarah Beth Ryther

Article by Becky Fillinger, Photos provided by Sarah Beth Ryther 

Sarah Beth RytherOn Labor Day, our first thoughts are usually on end of summer celebrations. Let’s leave the party for a bit to focus on the real meaning of the holiday: Labor Day is a day to celebrate the achievement of workers. When Labor Day was first celebrated in the late nineteenth century working conditions in the U.S. were often poor and unsafe. Over the decades, organized labor brought about many changes to the workplace in terms of better wages, benefits, reasonable hours and safer working conditions. The work is not finished - labor leaders are still necessary today. Meet Sarah Beth Ryther, employee-organizer, instrumental in the union activity at the Mill District Trader Joe’s. We talked to her about the process of organizing at the store and the amazing energy around unionizing in the country today.

Q:  You mentioned in an interview in early August that there is a “wonderful union energy in our country right now.” Can you tell us more about this notion? 

A:  This year, there’s been a 58% increase in union representation petitions received by the National Board of Labor Relations, and we’ve all heard about the historic wins at Amazon and Starbucks. A multitude of factors - layoffs during the pandemic, inflation, dissatisfaction with workplace culture - have made workers increasingly willing to search for outside solutions. Ultimately, worker dissatisfaction is not occurring in a vacuum; in the past few years, there’s been a larger national conversation about what work means to us culturally and as a value. The pandemic forced many of us to examine the place work holds in our lives. For discouraged workers, unionization feels like a ready-made solution. While unions were perhaps unfashionable five years ago, most everybody knows somebody who is in a union and has benefited from the larger protections unions can provide. 

Q:  As a leader, you’ve done your homework – you’ve communicated with other young union leaders, you’ve met with other unions in the area to learn best practices (nurses, educators, craftspeople. etc.) - and formed strong bonds with your co-workers. Could you tell our readers about this groundwork that you did? Could you see yourself taking on a broader national role to share these learnings if the union movement sprouts in other Trader Joe’s locations? 

A:  For the organizers at our store, it felt intuitive to use trust as a baseline in our union drive. We were committed to having ongoing conversations with each other about what unionization might ultimately mean for every one of us. We wanted our coworkers to know that our relationships with them were far more important than Trader Joe’s or any union, and we repeated this sentiment often. We felt unionizing was the best option to make daily life better for people we care about, but we made sure to let everyone know that if at any point during the drive, we no longer felt it was the right move for us collectively, we would pull out.

We’d encourage other folks looking to unionize their workplaces to do the same: get to know the people around you. The more you know about someone’s life - their passions, values, fears and worries - the better you’ll be able to understand how they can benefit from the worker’s movement.

Personally, I’m very excited to be part of the beginning of such an important national conversation. I’m energized by the possibility of Trader Joe’s United as a presence in many stores with similar concerns across the country, and I’m committed to (slowly and surely) helping make that happen! 

Trader Joe’s United public outreach in the Mill District. 

Trader Joe’s United organizing and community outreach at Gold Medal Park.

Q:  Your Trader Joe's store is located in a densely populated urban area in the Mill District – what safety concerns are on the mind of you and your fellow crew members who voted for the union?

A:  We love Downtown East! We’re so proud of our neighborhood, and we feel so lucky to be close to the Guthrie and the Stone Arch Bridge. We also love our neighbors. That being said, emergency situations happen nearly every day, and we’ve asked for more comprehensive training from Trader Joe’s Corporate. Clearer procedures around fire alarms and tornado warnings come to mind. We’d also like access to de-escalation training and equipment that doesn’t take such a toll on our bodies. 

Q:  Did social media factor into the success of the vote to unionize in your store?  

A:  By the time we announced in June, we were confident that we would win our election. From June, when we went public, to August, when we voted, we used social media as a tool to communicate with our local and national community. Being part of the larger movement felt particularly important to us. Social media is a wonderful connector - it’s how we learned that the Trader Joe’s in Hadley, MA was organizing. It has also allowed us to have conversations with workers across the country who are in the middle of their own union drives or are interested in organizing. 

Q:  How may we follow your news? 

A: You can follow us on Twitter @TraderJoesUnite, and on Instagram @traderjoesunited. If you’d like to email us, our address is press@traderjoesunited.org.

Sunday
Sep042022

Shopping Basket from the September 3rd Mill City Farmers Market

September 3, 2022 Mill City Farmers Market PhotosNew in this week's shopping basket from the Mill City Farmers Market are butternut squash from Dawn2Dusk and Kimchi from Mhonpaj’s Garden. The outdoor Market is open Saturdays, 8a-1p thru September, and October hours are 9a-1p.

Saturday
Sep032022

Catch the "Lettres de Gratitude: When Minnesota Fed the Children of Europe" Exhibit at the Mill City Museum thru September 11th

Article by Becky Fillinger 

David StevensTime is running out to see this free exhibit, Lettres de Gratitude: When Minnesota Fed the Children of Europe, at the Mill City Museum, 704 S Second Street.

We spoke to Site Manager, David Stevens, on what the exhibit is about and the relevance to today’s news. He provided us with a high-level list of reasons to visit the museum before this exhibit leaves on September 11, 2022.

• Lettres de Gratitude documents the work of famine relief in Europe during the First World War. 
• This work was led by American Herbert Hoover, who organized the Commission for Relief in Belgium, the largest humanitarian relief effort in history, which fed 100 million people in 45 countries between 1914 and 1923. 
• Mill City Museum was interested in hosting this exhibit because of the important role that Minnesota flour milling companies played in this effort.
• The exhibit is relevant and timely, as the global food system has been interrupted once again by conflict in Europe with the Russia-Ukraine war. 
• The exhibit features thank-you letters written by Belgian children to their benefactors. Mill City Museum has also supplemented these letters with flour sacks from our own collection that were embroidered by grateful Belgians and presented as gifts to members of the Commission for Relief in Belgium. 
• The exhibit was organized and produced by Global Minnesota, a non-profit, nonpartisan organization that connects Minnesotans to the world, and the world to Minnesota. 
• The exhibit is located in the museum’s central Mill Commons, and is free and open to the public during regular museum business hours through September 11, 2022.
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Visit the Mill City Museum over the Labor Day weekend!
Saturday 10:00 am–5:00 pm
Sunday 10:00 am–5:00 pm
Labor Day  10:00 am–4:00 pm
Friday
Sep022022

Third Avenue Bridge Project Reaches a Milestone as the Remaining Tower Cranes are Removed

Article and photos by Doug Verdier

A milestone was reached this past week in the Third Avenue Bridge rehabilitation project with the removal of the two remaining tower cranes that had been in place on the bridge since the early stages of the project. Each crane had to be disassembled and lowered to the bridge surface where the sections were loaded onto flat bed trucks to be removed from the job site. The whole operation took most of four days to accomplish.

The photos below show the various elements of the two cranes being removed one at a time from the towers and lowered by another crane (the yellow one). Anyone watching the operation had to be impressed by the skill and precision of the workers, especially when they were climbing around on the cranes to detach each section from the others and connect the cables from the other crane that would safely lower each section. The workers on the ground also had to ensure that each piece being lowered was brought down precisely where it was, then detached from the crane and prepared for loading onto the awaiting flatbeds. The entire process was well orchestrated to keep the operation moving on schedule and, above all, safely.

The first crane to be disassembled was the one closest to the First Street end of the bridge. Here the front section has been removed and is being lowered by the yellow crane.

Another view of the front section coming down. While this is going on, the workers on top of the tower are starting to disconnect the rear section of the crane (the horizontal red portion with the flag on top) from the control unit. That will be the next piece to be removed and lowered.

Rear section is connected to cables for lowering it before final disconnection is made.

Rear section about to be lifted. Note the worker at the left end of the red section making sure the disconnection and separation goes smoothly.

Here comes the rear section of the first crane to the ground. Note the other tower crane to the right. It will be taken down the following day.

The crane operator’s cabin is next to be removed from the tower and lowered.

Workers beginning to prepare sections of the tower to be removed. The horizontal section of the second tower crane can be seen to the right of the tower being worked on.

This is the second (and last of the original four) crane being disassembled and lowered. Cab of flatbed truck can be seen on the bridge awaiting the sections of the crane as they are brought down. Several flatbed trucks were required to transport all the various section of the cranes as they were taken apart.

The rear section of the crane coming down. The red front section can be seen laying on the bridge. It will be disassembled into sections that can be transported off site.

Almost there! Once on the ground, the “ALL” signage and other elements will be removed before the remaining section will be prepared to be loaded onto flatbed truck transport.

Pieces of the tower being placed on flatbed. Just two vertical sections remain standing.

The last tower section is on the ground.

A closer look at the last tower section before it is laid down in preparation for loading onto the flatbed.

Thursday
Sep012022

Fall Fashion Check-in with Queen Anna House of Fashion

Article by Becky Fillinger

Nicole JenningsFall is right around the corner. We have all heard that hard and fast fashion rules no longer apply (no white after Labor Day, don’t mix silver and gold jewelry, etc.). Are you curious as to what’s trendy and timeless for the new season? We spoke with local fashion expert, Nicole Jennings, owner of Queen Anna House of Fashion for advice. When interviewed by CBS News in 2017, she said, "When people walk through the doors of Queen Anna, they will experience a sense of freshness.”

Our question - Please tell us the Fall 2022 Fall Fashion Trends that you are seeing and how may we find them at your North Loop shop, Queen Anna?  Here’s what she had to say:

Trends may come and go, but timelessness is forever. Finding key trends that will allow you to wear them into style perpetuity is essential in reducing the amount of money you spend on clothing each year as well as reducing the harmful impact that fashion has on our planet. Investing in quality pieces will allow for your style to be on point each and every season without breaking the bank or the back of Mother Nature.

Rebecca Allen Nude Loafer

Trendy + Timeless Accessory Capsule Pieces

Ballet Flats + Loafers

- Multi-Purpose Handbag

- Hoop Earrings

- Classic Belt

Moon River Cutout Sweater

Trendy Fall Staples

- Chunky Knit Sweater

- Denim Jeans

- White Top

- Leather Jacket

- Blazer

- Slip Dress

Come to my shop at 109 N. Second Street in the North Loop and we’ll dress you in what is comfortable for you and decidedly fashionable.

Thank you, Nicole! We’ll see you soon and thanks for the advice. 

Wednesday
Aug312022

Minneapolis Monarch Festival/Festival de la Monarca is Saturday, September 10

Saturday, September 10
10 am to 4 pm 
Lake Nokomis Park

Free and for everyone!

Butterfly, music and art lovers from the Twin Cities and beyond come together on Saturday September 10 for the free 2022 Minneapolis Monarch Festival / Festival de la Monarca

Scheduled from 10am to 4pm, the festival is filled with music, art activities, games, food, plants that monarchs love and more. 

The day offers a host of fun ways for people of all ages to learn about these amazing pollinators and their role in the ecosystem.

The festival takes place at Lake Nokomis Park, northeast of the lake and near the Nokomis Naturescape, a certified Monarch Waystation.

Read on for highlights, or visit the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) website or monarchfestival.org.

Festival Highlights:

Costume parade
Join in or cheer on this ever-popular monarch-themed march for children

Monarch encounters
Observe these insects up-close; learn about their 2,300-mile journey between Minnesota and the mountains of Michoacán, Mexico; find out simple things everyone can do to help restore their population

Monarch-friendly plants 
Purchase native flora to create a habitat in your yard for butterflies and other pollinators 

Performances galore 
Monarch-themed puppet shows, music from Salsa del Sol and Mariachi Mi Tierra performances and dance highlighting the Minnesota/Mexico connection 

Art activities 
Join in community mural and sculpture-making; make your own screen- or block print or paper from plants

Great tastes 
Minnesotan and Latin foods plus other eats and treats available for purchas

Volunteer at the Festival! Email monarch@nokomiseast.org for information.