Becky Allen’s watercolor piece “King of the Mountain Shopping Cart – Eden Prairie Target March 2023″ depicting a snowbank outside a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Sunday.
Courtesy Becky Allen
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Minnesota: Mountains are not in the Minnesota landscape due to the glaciers flattening the area thousands of years ago, but this year we have a new mountain in Eden Prairie, Minn. to compete with the Appalachians and Rocky mountains.
Welcome one of the latest man-made geographic features of Minnesota: “Mount Target.”
The mountain, also sometimes called “Mount Eden Prairie,” is a large snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center. Photos showing the mountain’s crags and a Target shopping cart at its peak have gone viral in the past week on social media.
Some have been inspired to try to reach the top of the mountain, while others have captured the moment on paper.
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A cart appears at the top of a snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Sunday, March 19, 2023.
Courtesy Jen Fuller
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The cart on the mountain inspired her to paint.
“If I hadn’t seen the cart on it, I probably would’ve just thought, ‘Oh, that’s a big snowbank’ and kept driving on. But the cart, it stands out. Who put that there? Why? That’s hilarious!”
“I hadn’t painted in quite a few months and I had been wanting to for awhile” Allen said. “I thought it was cute and saw the pictures and just decided, ‘I’ll try painting this.’”
After seeing it on Saturday, it took about an hour to paint and sketch on Sunday. She used watercolor because “it’s kind of a tricky medium to use, so it’s just kind of fun to play around with and practice more with.”
The painting shows a red Target cart achieving a new level of royalty.
When deciding on a title, Allen explained, “I’m not very good at naming things. I know ‘King of the Mountain’ is when you were kids and you would all climb up on the snowbank and you would try to push each other off and whoever was the last one standing was ‘King of the Mountain’ so that’s probably also subconsciously thinking of that.”
“I didn’t know it had an official name until after I did the painting, people started calling it various things.”
She posted her painting on Reddit on Sunday afternoon and it quickly drew more than 3,500 upvotes and more than 100 comments. Some people have asked to buy prints of the painting.
“At this point, no, I’m not selling prints. But if somebody wanted to download and print it out themselves or set it as their phone background that’s cool with me. Just as long they’re not claiming it as their own or make money, I don’t really care who shares it.”
The snowbank was so popular that Eden Prairie police posted on Monday that officers visited it.
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Eden Prairie police visited “Mount Target,” a snowbank in the parking lot of a Target in Eden Prairie Center on Monday.
Courtesy Eden Prairie Police Department
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Allen can’t say when or where she’s seen snowbanks previously like this one.
“It’s an impressively big snow bank. What’s so impressive about it is it’s not just that it’s tall, it’s also very long.”
“It had to have been a good two stories — it’s big,” Allen said.
“Spring seems to be coming soon, so if anyone wants to see it in its full glory, probably go see it sooner that later. Obviously it’ll be around for a while, but I don’t think it’s gonna be quite as big looking,” Allen said.
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Someone plants a flag on a snowbank near Ridgedale Center in Minnetonka in early 2023.
“Mount Target” joins Lake Chipotle and crater-sized potholes on the list of Twin Cities weather-made wonders. . Several other mountainous snowbanks can be spotted around parking lots in numerous cities.
Sonja Faegre, whose Twitter name is @letloverule23, captured a photo of someone standing with an American flag on the Ridgedale Center snowbank a few weeks ago.
And Twitter user @amy_abts caught a photo of a “fallen comrade” at the edge of a snowbank — a red cart that appeared to have tumbled off its own peak. Perhaps there are several mountain kings to find and protect.
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After a photo of a cart at the peak of a large snowbank went viral, Twitter user @amy_abts shared this photo of a cart downed on the side of a snowbank, calling it a “fallen comrade.”
Courtesy Twitter user @amy_abts
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Target had not responded to MPR News’ request for comment.
We may need a team of cartographers to capture the newest snow-mountain range beginning in Eden Prairie.
At the moment, though, we have videos, photos and a watercolor documenting the short-lived shopping cart’s legacy. People on social media reported it had disappeared from its throne by Monday afternoon.
Looking to connect with contemporary art? A public tour at the Walker is a fun way to learn about the artworks on view, the ideas behind them, and the complex issues that they raise. Tours explore a selection of works across current exhibitions and include interactive discussion facilitated by Walker educators.
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Public tours start in the Main Lobby and are free on Thursday evenings. No registration required, and participants of all ages are welcome. Please gather five minutes before 6 pm.
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Visitors in From Here to There: Alec Soth’s America, 2011. Photo by Gene Pittman. Courtesy Walker Art Center.
When a mysterious illness befalls a Viking clan, a young woman is called to fulfill her destiny as a great warrior leader in a battle for the cure with the Christian army. Inspired by the Norse gods, her journey tests the boundaries of her faith, shakes the ground of the relationships with the men dearest in her life, and causes her to question the definition of female strength.
Inspired by recent evidence of the grave of a female Viking holding the accoutrements and injury marks of a prestigious warrior, the discovery cast a new light on gender roles in Scandinavian history. Collide tells the story through its signature blend of high-energy dance styles and explores this fascinating story with an original pop rock/rap score composed by Twin Cities musician Mike Michel (The Orange Goodness), with lyrics by vocalists Rush Benson (Ordway) and Katie Gearty (Dakota Jazz Club).
Created by Collide Artistic Director, Regina Peluso, the production stars Renee Guittar and Jarod Boltjes.
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SKOL! will be available to watch virtually starting April 10th!
“On the Surface” features 16 porcelain vessels from Hitomi Hosono, a ceramic artist based in London, England. Her detailed porcelain vessels, which reference the natural world and botanical specimens, grace the collections of the British Museum and Victoria and Albert Museum. Hosono’s work brings intuition, delicacy and an intuitive touch to her intricate floral creations etched in chalky white clay. Inspired by internationally lauded Wedgwood’s Jasperware, pioneered by Josiah Wedgwood over 200 years ago, in which thin ceramic reliefs or ‘sprigs’ were applied as surface decoration to a piece, Hosono details the veins of a leaf branch and how its edges are shaped to create a poetics in ceramics only the Japanese heritage and mastery of English ceramic tradition can offer.
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On view now at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum through April 30th, 2023.
Join us to admire our latest exhibition, Winter Plein Air, a collection of works from over 15 different artists painted over a week long gathering in the BWCA. Exhibition runs March 10th through April 2nd alongside our historical Anna C. Johnson exhibit.
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About
The Cook County Historical Society operates the Johnson Heritage Post Art Gallery in Grand Marais, Minnesota. The nonprofit Art Gallery features local, regional, and national artists in revolving exhibits, as well as featuring a permanent collection of original art by Anna C. Johnson, an early 1900s artist.
Event
Opening reception March 10th, 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Gallery hours, Wednesday through Saturday 10 am – 4 pm and Sunday 1pm – 4pm
Michael Engebretson, Cosmic Hypergiant Super Dreadnought Transport Carrier Variants, 2022, mixed media on paper, 26 x 19 inches. A multitude of geometric shapes are drawn within two larger geometric, trapezoidal shapes. Patches of maroon, lime green, sky blue, and pink are painted throughout.
Engebretson’s expansive drawings, paintings, and ceramics describe a futuristic, extraterrestrial utopia. Neurodiversity, sustainability, and equitable healthcare are celebrated in an intergalactic civilization that he catalogs in hyper-detailed, graphic, technicolor works.
“Transdimensional Multiversal Nonlinear Cosmic Traveler is an opportunity to have everybody in the community see what it’s like to be me,” says Engebretson. “I want the public to see what it’s like for somebody to have Autism like me and see what it’s like to be able to travel to higher dimensions. My work is about what I call a Class Five civilization. Class Five inhabitants are transdimensional, multiversal, nonlinear space-time continuum thinkers. They are more free-thinking than we are. They are open minded to any possibility, any idea, any conversation, any scenario. They have better health care and economics and special support systems that can help them out. They can help human/alien hybrids and cyborgs and robots with disabilities with specialized psychological and biological care that is designed for them.”
Engebretson transforms Interact Gallery into a metaphorical spaceship, inviting visitors to immerse themselves in his visionary landscape. Kaleidoscopic drawings and paintings outline thorough plans for spaceship construction yards, hyper giant space super stations, escape pods, asteroid bases, and the like. The space vessels that he draws — and the ideology they represent — are the vehicles of a more equitable time and place. Engebretson offers these images not as speculative fiction, but kismet. He works ardently and without hesitation, transcribing a singular future.
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Michael Engebretson, “Key Engineering Sectors”
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When
Opening reception Wednesday, March 1st, 5 – 8 p.m.
Free and open to the public. Remarks and artist reading at 6 p.m.
Exhibition runs Wednesday, March 1st – Friday, April 14th, 2023