Minneapolis Institute of Art: Artsmia – The Object Podcast

Minneapolis Institute of Art: Artsmia – The Object Podcast

The new episode of Mia’s #TheObjectPodcast explores a big question: Can happy people make art? Long before Vincent van Gogh died young, poor, and under-appreciated, artists had gotten the message: you have to suffer for your art. But where did this template of the starving artist come from? And is there any truth to it or is it a myth, a romantic misreading of how great art is made? Search for “The Object” and listen wherever you find your podcasts, or tune in here: http://bit.ly/2DUgt3U

Here’s Vincent van Gogh’s beloved “Olive Trees,” from 1889, a year before his death, when he was in treatment St-Rémy in southern France: http://bit.ly/2kRWXZR

artsmia.org

Minnevangelist: Reasons to Love Minnesota No.159 – Mankato, MN

Minnevangelist: Reasons to Love Minnesota No.159 – Mankato, MN

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Reasons to Love Minnesota No. 159: A cluster of grain silos in Mankato is now one of the biggest, most ambitious art canvases in the state. ⁣ ⁣ The 135-foot-tall Ardent Mills towers can be seen for miles along the Minnesota River and Highways 14 and 169. But it wasn’t until Australian artist @guidovanhelten started painting them that they demanded a double take. ⁣ ⁣ Van Helten’s photorealistic murals decorate buildings as far away as Tehran, Kiev, and Mumbai. “I’m interested in bringing this art form, which is already popular in big cities, to smaller places,” van Helten told the @dmregister in 2018, “particularly to the Midwest, which isn’t looked at as a creative place.” ⁣ ⁣ True to his word, van Helten has taken on several projects in rural America, depicting small-town community members in breathtakingly grand scale. This includes a 360-degree mural wrapped around a 110-foot grain silo in Fort Dodge, Iowa and a stunning new piece on an old grain elevator in Faulkton, South Dakota. ⁣ ⁣ The Silo Art Project in Mankato was commissioned by @cityartmankato and @twinriversarts, and funded with $250,000 in private donations. Van Helten first visited Mankato in 2018. He met with community members and sought their approval on his final design, which is based largely on a photograph he took during Education Day at the annual Mahkato Wacipi, a traditional pow wow to honor the 38 Dakota men who were publicly hanged in Mankato on December 26, 1862. (The incident remains the largest mass execution in U.S. history.)⁣ ⁣ According to a statement released by Twin Rivers Arts, the new mural celebrates “the shared ideals of community, diversity, and inclusion; and it pays respect to history while encouraging a positive dialogue on the future identity of the Mankato area.”⁣ ⁣ Van Helten started the piece in late 2019 and continues to work on it. To check up on his progress, tune into the 24/7 Livestream at twinriversarts.org or download a map of the mural’s best viewing spots at cityartmankato.com. #silowhilesiloed

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About: Minnevangelist

Hello from 3,000 feet above Minnesota! We’re Ashlea Halpern and Andrew Parks, two ex-NYC travel writers who relocated to Minneapolis in February 2018 following an exhaustive 16-month, 40-state, 229-city search for a new hometown.
In the end, the Twin Cities won us over not because we have work or family here (we don’t), but because of its beautiful parks and lakes, bountiful bike paths and ski trails, ace cocktail bars, indie cinemas, overflowing farmers markets, edgy galleries, sterling museums, hip boutiques, excellent restaurants, superlative craft breweries, old-school bowling alleys, eccentric festivals, offbeat bookstores, gut-busting comedy clubs, first-class music venues, ethnic diversity, walkable neighborhoods, and—above all—kind and welcoming locals.
So if you love Minnesota and the rest of the North as much as we do, give us a follow on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for an obsessive homage to everything that makes the Upper Midwest great.

 

 

Land O’Lakes Finally Got Rid Of Its Cringey ‘Butter Maiden’ Mascot

Land O’Lakes Finally Got Rid Of Its Cringey ‘Butter Maiden’ Mascot

Same buttery scenery, no “Mia, the Butter Maiden.” Land O’Lakes announced the change without mentioning her absence.Land O’Lakes

We wouldn’t blame you if you didn’t notice anything different about Land O’Lakes.

 

But something’s missing: “Mia,” Land O’Lakes’ braided, buckskin-wearing “Butter Maiden” mascot, depicted sitting and proffering dairy products for nearly a century. It’s as if one day she just stood up and walked away.

This "butter with olive oil" package from 2009 includes the company's mascot, Mia.

This “butter with olive oil” package from 2009 includes the company’s mascot, Mia.Land O’Lakes

Mia had appeared on the Arden Hills-based co-op’s packaging since 1928, when she was first dreamed up by a St. Paul advertising firm. In the 1950s, she got a redesign by Patrick DesJarlait, the same prolific Ojibwe artist from Red Lake who designed the Hamm’s Brewery bear.

In February, the Fortune 500 company announced the package redesign, highlighting its farmer-owned history with photos of actual Land O’Lakes farmers. It failed to mention where Mia had gone. Minnesota Reformer, which noticed the change earlier this week, also points out she’s been scrubbed from the company’s website.

 

Mia didn’t exist in a vacuum. Americana is saturated in portrayals of Native people, usually by corporations in an attempt to sell things to white people. Depending on how each image was deployed, they came to be industrial symbols of integrity, or oneness with nature, or at their skeeviest, sexual purity.

As Adrienne Keene, a professor at Brown University and the creator of the popular Native Appropriations Blog, told the Reformer, this is a “great move” for a lot of Native folks who have been forced to watch companies use cartoonish visions of their culture to sell butter, cigarettes, and motorcycles.

Meanwhile, Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, who is a citizen of the White Earth Nation of Ojibwe, praised the decision on Wednesday.

“Native people are not mascots or logos,” she tweeted. “We are very much still here.”

Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan

@LtGovFlanagan

Thank you to Land O’Lakes for making this important and needed change. Native people are not mascots or logos. We are very much still here. https://minnesotareformer.com/2020/04/15/land-olakes-quietly-gets-rid-of-iconic-indian-maiden/ 

Land O’Lakes quietly gets rid of iconic Indian maiden mascot – Minnesota Reformer

For nearly a century, the Land O’Lakes Indian maiden has kneeled by the side of a blue lake holding out an offering of a 4-stick box of butter. No more. The Minnesota-based farmer cooperative…

minnesotareformer.com

 

That explains what Land O’Lakes is changing to, but without acknowledging what it’s changing from—arguably one of the more recognizable labels in the grocery store. To Keene, it’s a missed opportunity.

“It could have been a very strong and positive message to have publicly said, ‘We realized after a hundred years that our image was harmful and so we decided to remove it,” Keene said. “In our current cultural moment, that’s something people would really respond to.”

 

 

MPRNEWS Art Hounds: Join the hunt for arts & culture!

MPRNEWS Art Hounds: Join the hunt for arts & culture!

We Want You: Join the hunt for arts & culture! Become an Art Hound today! Sign up

This activity is made possible in part by the Minnesota Legacy Amendment’s Arts & Cultural Heritage Fund.  Link to view all feature videos: MPRNEWS Art Hounds

 

brightly colored portraits of a bus driver, a mailman, and a pharmacist

Art Hounds: Portraits of essential workers.

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend Benjamin Percy’s “Wolverine” podcast and a streamed performance of “Booth’s Ghost.”
Two folded face masks, made with native fabric, on a wooden table.

Art Hounds: Native artists turn their talents to making masks

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend Mindy Mejia’s novel “Strike Me Down” and North House Folks School’s Instagram feed.
A collage of six paintings with birds, flowers and trees

Art Hounds: Amid coronavirus shutdown, Meg Corcoran’s ‘happy paintings’ spread joy

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend music by The Nightingale Trio and a community celebration in Red Wing.
man stares into camera with Beowulf poster behind him

Art Hounds: ‘Beowulf’ finds new meaning with coronavirus

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend story time with a letter-press printer and thousands flock to “Livestream Cover Challenge.”
brightly colored abstract painting with repeating patterns

Art Hounds: Abstract paintings inspired by the geometry and beauty of nature

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend Minnesota-made movies and series, as well as the podcast “Break the Dice.”
Gully Boys

Art Hounds: Art in a time of ‘social distancing’

By Marianne Combs
The new coronavirus has forced bands to cancel shows and theaters to go dark. But there’s still plenty of great work by Minnesota artists that you can enjoy from the comfort of your own home.
six women in pink clothing dancing

Art Hounds: Dancers navigate personal boundaries and consent in ‘Touch Code’

By Marianne Combs
Plus, Art Hounds recommend “The Rinky Dink Show” at Bryant Lake Bowl and “The Fox” at Commonweal Theatre.
woman dancing with ecstatic smile

Art Hounds: ‘Let the Crows Come’

By Marianne Combs
Ashwini Ramaswamy brings her choreography to Lanesboro, Twin Cities Ballet dances to Pink Floyd’s “The Wall,” and Eric Larson explores why and how we collect things.
Champagne Confetti

Art Hounds: Champagne Confetti in Red Wing

By Marianne Combs
Art Hounds recommend music by Aby Wolf and friends, “From Puerto Rico… With Love?” and a celebration of gospel music.
Teenage girl standing in front of high school lockers.

Art Hounds: ‘Peerless’ gives Macbeth a dark and comic update

By Marianne Combs

Plus, Art Hounds recommend Mindy Mejia’s novel “Strike Me Down” and North House Folks School’s Instagram feed.
Hennepin Theatre Trust: #ArtConnectUs – Minneapolis, MN

Hennepin Theatre Trust: #ArtConnectUs – Minneapolis, MN

We’re thrilled to announce the launch of #ArtConnectsUs, a public art installation of original digital work by eleven Minnesota-based artists displayed on billboards across the Twin Cities through May 31st. These pieces were created with the mission of offering messages of hope to those affected by the disruption of COVID-19 and gratitude to those working on the front lines of this pandemic.

Thanks to Clear Channel Outdoor for providing a virtual canvas. We hope this dose of art will raise your spirits 💙

Learn more: hennepintheatretrust.org/art-connects-us

Learn more: hennepintheatretrust.org/art-connects-us

Minnesota-Made Film Tuscaloosa Now Streaming – Northfield, MN

Minnesota-Made Film Tuscaloosa Now Streaming – Northfield, MN

Filmed in Northfield, the 1970s-set drama starring Natalia Dyer and Devon Bostick is available on Amazon and Apple TV.

 

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