Established in 1980, the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon is the premiere slad race series in Noth America
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World-class mushers including Jamie Nelson, John and Jason Baron have competed in the more than 300 mile event – facing off against other seasoned competitors as well as the extremes of northern Minnesota weather and the deceivingly rugged terrain of the trail. The “Beargrease” is a qualifier for the famed Iditarod race in Alaska.
The organization hosts a Mid-Distance race, The Beargrease 120, which also travels through the rugged Sawtooth mountains of the North Shore of Minnesota. A recreational race, The Beargrease 40, also begins and ends on race day.
All check points and road crossings are easily accessible to the public and provide many opportunities for photographers, winter camping or simply quality time around a campfire with good people, hot chocolate and the thrill of seeing the amazing canine athletes in action.
Close to 400 volunteers from around the country come together each winter to assure the event happens. The John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, overseen by a Board of Directors elected by the general membership.
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“The mission of the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon is to preserve, educate and promote dog powered sports while producing a thriving race series.”
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From Duluth to the Canadian border and back to Duluth
A local artist specializes in metalsmithing and beadwork to create works inspired by her ancestry.
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Madison Holler grew up surrounded by a family of artisans. “When I was a little kid, I just assumed everyone had a craft,” she says. “My mom, dad, aunts, and uncles all had studios where they practiced their passions—like re-caning chairs, stained glass work, antique furniture restoration, moccasin making, beading, what have you. I just thought that when you grew up, you had a day job, and you had art on the side.”
Holler would go on to dabble in myriad mediums, including painting, woodworking, graphic design, photography, and ceramics, and use art therapy and repetitive crafts as treatment and meditation to calm her ADHD and OCD. “I never stopped,” she says.
Today, while she says she’ll never really pick a lane, she’s made a name for herself through the business she runs under the moniker Rubinski Works. Her bread and butter is one-of-a-kind glass and metal seed bead art and jewelry that blends her Anishinaabe, Scandinavian, and Dutch heritages.
So many of her experiences are informed by her cultural background and what her family instilled in her. “Both sides of my family crossed over a lot, learning each other’s trades and creating a beautiful cultural mix of my Indigenous, European, and Scandi DNA,” says Holler, who draws on the synchronicities found in traditional Scandinavian embroidery and Native Ojibwe beading techniques to inform her folklore designs. “It’s a really cool exchange.”
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Nature is also an important driving muse. Motifs ingrained in her work nod to the landscapes, flora, and fauna found in both central Minnesota’s Wahpekute and Anishinabewaki lands (where Holler grew up) and scenes from her cabin in Ontario.
Through each collection, which can take several weeks to complete, Holler believes there should be an energetic exchange between the creator and the person who gets the beadwork. “I always say there’s prayer in every bead,” she says. “I mean that on a spiritual level—I’m putting prayer and hopes for the wearer in every stitch, hopefully resulting in a piece that will last a lifetime.”
A forewarning: Holler’s creations sell incredibly fast. She feels fortunate to have the camaraderie and community of people who have shown up to support her. “That’s the way it’s always been in Indigenous circles,” she notes. “I always think about the aunties and uncles that I had on the powwow circuits who always knew their customers. I feel like I have that but on an internet level.”
Embrace the cozy winter vibes in the Twin Cities while treating yourself to the best dining deals of the year.
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MSPMAG: Get ready to indulge as the Twin Cities’ top chefs showcase their culinary excellence with mouthwatering two and three course prix fixe menus, priced from just $15 to $50. With over 70 incredible restaurants to choose from, there’s something for every taste and every budget.
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Don’t miss out on this mouth-watering week of foodie fun!
The Bungalow Club
Butcher & The Boar
Cafe and Bar Lurcat
Coalition Restaurant – Excelsior, 50th & France
CRAVE – All locations
Creekside Supper Club
FireLake Grill House & Cocktail Bar
Gigi’s Cafe
Herbst Eatery & Farm Stand
Holman’s Table
Jimmy’s Kitchen & Bar
Kona Grill
Lake & Irving Restaurant
Layline Restaurant
Legends Club Grill
Luna & The Bear
Mason Jar Kitchen & Bar
The Melting Pot
O’Shaughnessy Distilling Co.
Parlour St. Paul
Red Cow Wayzata
Smash Park
Star Bar & Bistro
Tilia
Twin Cities 400 Tavern
Umbra
Yankee Tavern
Chloe By Vincent
Copper Hen Kitchen and Cakery
Tria Restaurant
St. Genevieve
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Restaurant Week is made possible thanks to the generous support of our sponsor.
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Restaurant Week is made possible thanks to the generous support of Society Insurance. Click on their logo and learn more about what they’re doing to support our local restaurant community.
Echoes,” a series of photographic sculptures by Lynn Bierbaum, explores the interconnection between human spaces and the search for solitude in nature.
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Through distortions of light and shadow, these sculptures depict both environmental and interior spaces, blurring our perspective on how the objects we cherish and the furnishings within our homes mimic and reflect nature.
Lynn employs the 1851 photographic process known as “wet plate collodion” in combination with her fused and blown glass. The resulting photographs appear negative when viewed through light and positive when backed with a color such as black. This interplay of light and darkness creates a striking three-dimensional effect, allowing the imagery to transcend the confines of traditional photography.
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Artist Biography
Lynn Bierbaum is a photographer and glass artist currently residing in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She believes that her interest in the art making process stems not only from viewing the world through the lens of a camera, but rather embracing the origin of the word photography, meaning “painting with light”. Her sculptural photographic work combines darkroom techniques in conjunction with blown glass, in order to warp and bend light to convey her personal perception of time and memory.
Lynn has presented as a panelist on alternative processes for the Culture lab (Long Island City, New York) and sculptural photography at the Experimental Photo Festival (Barcelona, Spain). Her work has been exhibited at A Smith Gallery, (Johnson City, Texas), Institut d’Estudis Fotogràphics de Catalunya, Barcelona, and Art Intersection, (Gilbert, Arizona). In 2019, she was featured as an interviewed artist in the premiere issue of Analog Forever Magazine. She graduated in the spring of 2023 with her MFA in photography and related media at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Lynn is currently an Art Lecturer at the University of Wisconsin – River Falls and a hot glass instructor with Foci the Minnesota Center for Glass Arts.