Minnesota artist Adam Turman to opens first pop-up store at Mall of America

Minnesota artist Adam Turman to opens first pop-up store at Mall of America

Adam Turman

Photo by Easton Green

The Minnesota artist has had his work featured in the mall previously, but will now open his first retail space.

Minnesota-based artist Adam Turman is opening his first retail store, a holiday-timed pop-up at the Mall of America.

Turman’s 2,000-square-foot store opened on November 1st and stick around the Bloomington shopping hub until December 30th. It’ll be packed with Turman’s recognizable Midwestern-themed art that has been featured inside the Mall as well as places like the Minnesota State Fair’s Commemorative Art Program.

“Opening my first ever retail store at Mall of America is a dream come true,” Turman said in a statement. “Throughout the past decade, this iconic venue has held a special place in my journey as an artist through various projects including a mural, screen prints, and more. I can’t wait to share more of my art with a wider audience and connect with both my amazing fans and visitors from around the world.”

Weisman Art Museum: Kara Walker “annotating” Civil War-era Pictorial History – Minneapolis, MN

Weisman Art Museum: Kara Walker “annotating” Civil War-era Pictorial History – Minneapolis, MN

Illustration by Weisman Art Museum

The Weisman’s fall exhibition presents a suite of prints by artist Kara Walker “annotating” Civil War-era illustrations in Harper’s Weekly to foreground Black experiences missing from the official record

A silhouette of faces is overlaid against a lithograph illustration of a battlefield

Kara Walker, born in 1969, is one of the most intellectually provocative and creatively productive artists of her generation. Her groundbreaking work revisits archival material to challenge dominant narratives of American history, exploring race, gender, sexuality, violence, identity, and social justice. Throughout her work in installation, film, drawing, and printmaking, Walker calls up historical imagery and—through redrawing, adding, and complicating existing narratives—creates startling tableaus meant to prompt thought and reconsideration in her diverse audiences. Walker’s work delves deeply into the experience of being Black in the United States, exposing a rich cartography of perception, misperception, and devastating prejudice that is dynamically determined by place, time, and personal perspective.

This exhibition, organized by the New Britain Museum of American Art and The Museum Box, presents Walker’s print portfolio, Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. This suite of fifteen large-scale prints considers experiences of racism and violence against African Americans that were absent or only alluded to in dominant historical representations of the Civil War.  Shown with Walker’s series is a group of original Harper’s Weekly engravings of the Civil War by the New England-born and -based, nineteenth century American realist artist, Winslow Homer (1836-1910). While not all of Walker’s “annotated” works are addressed to Homer works, this pairing of Walker’s contemporary prints with examples of works from the Harper’s material that inspired her opens opportunities to consider distinction and connections between the two bodies of work.

A silhouette of a person in a dress and bonnet depicted as if thrown or floating, overlaid on an illustration of a fleeing crowd

Each print in the portfolio includes an enlargement of a woodcut plate from Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, a two-volume compendium published in 1866 with the intention of narrating events of the war “just as they occurred,” according to the anthology’s editors. By overlaying silhouette figures, predominantly of African Americans, Walker visually disrupts the original woodcuts, forcing them to confront the people and historical events left out of the “official” record. In this way, Walker’s highly charged annotations prepare a space in which to reckon with the reality of racial oppression that persists in the United States today.

Image credits: Top, illustration by Weisman Art Museum. Middle: Kara Walker, Exodus of Confederates from Atlanta. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. Offset lithography and silkscreen, 39 × 53 inches. Bottom: Kara Walker, Alabama Loyalists Greeting the Federal GunBoats. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. Offset lithography and silkscreen, 39 × 53 inches. Artwork images © Kara Walker, courtesy of Museum Box.

 Event

 Kara Walker: Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated)

On view from now through Sunday, December 29th

Admission to WAM’s galleries is always free and open to all.

General operating support for Weisman Art Museum’s exhibitions and programs is generously provided by Ameriprise Financial, the Art and Martha Kaemmer Fund of HRK Foundation, and the KHR McNeely Family Fund, thanks to Kevin, Rosemary, and Hannah Rose McNeely.

This exhibition is organized by New Britain Museum of American Art and The Museum Box. 

Location

Weisman Art Museum

333 East River Road
Minneapolis, MN

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Kara Walker: White Shadows in Blackface

ICYMI

The Fall Flower Show is now open in the Sunken Garden! – St. Paul, MN

Meet the latest St. Paul icon: A nearly three-story tall loon statue (no lasers included)!

Meet the latest St. Paul icon: A nearly three-story tall loon statue (no lasers included)!

The new loon statue
The new loon statue near Allianz Field in St. Paul on Friday.
Sophia Marschall | MPR News

MPR News: Scottish artist Andy Scott designed the piece. In a 2023 interview with MPR News ahead of the installation, Scott said he was asked to come up with sketches for the loon statue. While he knows the bird, loons are not native to Scotland so he did a bit of research and like most Minnesotans, fell in love with the bird.

The new loon statue
Sophia Marschall | MPR News
The new loon statue near Allianz Field.

“They are beautiful and captivating and have a very distinctive call,” he said. “It was a pleasure to work with it as a muse for the idea.”

While the laser loon fandom has stayed present in Minnesota since the flag redesign through the St. Paul Library card, scarves and other Minnesota United merchandise, the loon statue will not have any laser components.

The statue is part of the United Village development, the 35-acre site on the corner of Snelling Avenue and University Avenue. The project is currently in the early stages; future plans include a new hotel, office building and restaurant pavilion.

The new loon statue
Sophia Marschall | MPR News
Construction workers sit under the new loon statue being built near Allianz Field.

 

Charles Lindbergh House and Museum opens: A Holiday Flight Tour – Little Falls, MN

Charles Lindbergh House and Museum opens: A Holiday Flight Tour – Little Falls, MN

Charles Lindbergh House and Museum

A Holiday Flight

MHS: On a guided tour, explore each room of Lindbergh’s boyhood home and be transported back in time to the various countries Lindbergh both lived in and visited. Observe their Christmas traditions and talk about the global impact Lindbergh had during different periods of his life.

Charles Lindbergh American Aviator

Event

A Holiday Flight

 – 
Tours will take place every 30 minutes beginning at 10:00 am with the final tour beginning at 4:00 pm

Cost: Regular Site Admission

Location

1620 Lindbergh Drive South

 Little FallsMN

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Lindbergh

Twin Cities Film Fest Premiers – Minneapolis, MN

Twin Cities Film Fest Premiers – Minneapolis, MN

We are excited to announce Stearns Bank as our presenting sponsor at this year’s Twin Cities Film Fest! They’re on a mission to serve all customers and inspired in uplifting the creative community by providing unique and innovative finance solutions.
 

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2024 TCFF SERIES
2024 Twin Cities Film Fest Series

Celebrating 15 Years!

Twin Cities Film Fest offers over 120+ films in hybrid format, both in-person and online. Film content is categorized in various series: STUDIO, CHANGEMAKER, OUT, HER, BLACK ON SCREEN, EMPOWER, CODE RED, and MN-Connected! Aside from these series the festival also offers other film genres such as, horror, family-friendly, shorts, and more!

We can’t wait for you to see this year’s line-up, special celebrity guests, and events as we celebrate 15 years of Twin Cities Film Fest!

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CELEBRATING 15 YEARS

We’re celebrating 15 years of the Twin Cities Film Fest this October 17th-26th! Read about how it all started, how it’s grown over the years, where TCFF is now, and enjoy highlights of major pivotal moments over the past 15 years!

READ ALL ABOUT IT
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

We need YOU!

The 2024 Twin Cities Film Fest is right around the corner, and we need volunteers like you to help us this year! If you’re interested in being a part of the festival and receiving some festival perks along the way we have several great areas you can volunteer for.

Festival Assist
Festival Lounge Aid
Red Carpet
Playback Assist
Community Outreach
Brand Ambassador 
Usher/Greeter
Photographer

Learn more about all volunteer opportunities here.

2024 TCFF LINEUP

2024 Twin Cities Film Fest Lineup!

Get ready for TCFF’s 15-year anniversary! We have a lot to enjoy aside from amazing films! Read about the 140+ films set to showcase including free matinees, special events, visiting celebrities like Daisy Ridley, Josh Duhamel, and more!

LEARN MORE

Location

Marcus West End Cinema

ICYMI

The Twin Cities’ Most Anticipated Fall Restaurant Openings

Best 10 theater musicals and dramas in the Twin Cities for fall 2024

Best 10 theater musicals and dramas in the Twin Cities for fall 2024

Adrianna Hicks won a Tony for their glitzy, glamorous Broadway role as Sugar in “Some Like It Hot.” Leandra Ellis-Gaston, who played Anne Boleyn in “Six,” depicts Sugar in the national tour.

From musicals like “Some Like It Hot” and “Scotland, PA” to solo shows by Patrick Page and Roger Guenveur Smith, Minnesota theaters have a lot on offer.

“Scotland, PA”: Unsatisfied with the 2019 premiere of this darkly comic musical based on “Macbeth” and Billy Morrissette’s 2001 film, Broadway directors Lonny Price and Matt Cowart bring the team, including composer and lyricist Adam Gwon and book writer Michael Mitnick, to Minneapolis’ Theater Latté Da to develop it further. The cast includes Will Dusek, Katherine Fried and Emily Gunyou Halaas. (September 18th – October 20th, Ritz Theater, Mpls.)

“A Walless Church: The Black Woman’s Guide to Creating God”: Very few auditoriums rival Pillsbury House Theatre for intimacy and immediacy, and this show promises an immersive baptism. Playwright AriDy Nox introduces us to a trio of godlings on their search for transformation and healing. Artistic director Signe Harriday directs. (September 19th – October 13th, Pillsbury House Theatre, Mpls.)

“Behind the Sun”: Stanley Kipper, drummer for the New Primitives reggae band, teams with playwright Laura Drake to tell this story of perseverance and wits. Set in 1956 Minneapolis, Stanley’s dad, Obie, quickens his American dream of buying a house, but there are barriers that include redlining. Obie enlists friends in a scheme that could land them all in jail. Richard D. Thompson directs this world premiere. (September 21st – October 13th, History Theatre, St. Paul)

 …

“Rent”Infused with vigor and a zest for life after a near-death experience, Bloomington playhouse Artistry has been reinvigorating classic American book musicals while introducing a raft of talented performers. Jonathan Larson’s contemporary classic, gets the Artistry treatment by director and choreographer Kelli Foster Warder. (October 3rd – 27th, Artistry, Bloomington)

“Helen”: What if the Trojan War was caused not by a cheating Helen — whose face launched a thousand ships — but by a phantom double? For her last show as artistic director of Ten Thousand Things Theater, Marcela Lorca explores the nature of truth in John Barton and Kenneth Cavander’s comic reimagining of Euripides’ classic. J.D. Steele crafts the music and George Keller plays Helen opposite Ryan Colbert’s Menelaus. (October 3rd – November 10th, Ten Thousand Things, Mpls.)

“Drawing Lessons”: Playwright Michi Barall’s graphic novel-influenced show marries technology with live action. Storyboards come to life in this world premiere in which a pre-adolescent protagonist deals with issues of friendship, school and her Korean heritage. Co-commissioned by New York’s Ma-Yi Theater Company, the show is the first fruit of a five-theater consortium funded by the Mellon Foundation. (October 8th – November 10th, Children’s Theatre Company, Mpls.)

“Holmes/Poirot”: Before its fiscal woes, Park Square Theatre could be counted on for big mysteries. Now in its rebirth, the company is back in the game with this new mystery that yokes the two most famous detectives in a caper co-written by playwright Jeffrey Hatcher and actor Steve Hendrickson. David Ira Goldstein directs. (October 9th – November 3rd, Park Square, St. Paul)

All the Devils Are Here: Patrick Page sinks his teeth into Shakespeare’s villains in this solo show that was a 2023 off-Broadway smash. Known for roles such as Hades in “Hadestown,” the Green Goblin in “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” and Scar in “The Lion King,” Page launches a national tour in Minneapolis with original director Simon Godwin. (October 12th – November 17th, Guthrie Theater, Mpls.)

“In Honor of Jean-Michel Basquiat”: Actor, director and playwright Roger Guenveur Smith has embodied lyrical and disembodied figures such as Rodney King and Huey P. Newton in solo shows. He returns with this intimate tribute to his late friend Jean-Michel Basquiat, the iconic painter and Andy Warhol acolyte with whom Smith collaborated. (October 17th – 27th, Penumbra Theatre, St. Paul)

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