The Cross-Country Music of Singer-Songwriter Caitlyn Smith

The Cross-Country Music of Singer-Songwriter Caitlyn Smith

Photographs by Victoria Campbell

Despite all her Nashville success, Minnesota is where Smith, shown here in the woods she owns with her family, does her best work.

MSPMAG: Caitlyn Smith has written songs for country legends and now has her own single flying up the country charts. She’s also opening for George Strait, after just moving back to Minnesota from Nashville. It’s probably time you get to know her.

Why did Caitlyn Smith leave Nashville? Her stunning acreage west of the metro (and the house she’ll soon build on it), for one.

The American Swedish Institute’s Holiday Exhibition Opens – Minneapolis, MN

The American Swedish Institute’s Holiday Exhibition Opens – Minneapolis, MN

From Our House To Yours

One of Minnesota’s most anticipated holiday experiences returns in November and runs through January 9th as the American Swedish Institute kicks off its 71st annual holiday celebration!

Classic meets contemporary in this year’s exhibition within the Turnblad Mansion as guest curators representing Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Finland, the Sami Culture Center, and the Hmong Museum, come together at one, over-sized, round table in the Ballroom to share stories and traditions though festive place settings and décor from the home.

If being outside is more your scene, be sure to check out the ASI courtyard decorated with festive red holiday market stalls and activated with kubb, vendors, warm fires and live music on select days.

Explore our house in person – or connect to the experiences from home – with ASI’s holiday Julmarknad Handcraft Market, in-person or virtual holiday programs, destination holiday Jul Shop, seasonal menu at FIKA café, and live music and events including the return of the outdoor Winter Solstice party and Lucia Choir performances.

This year, the special guest curators joining in this annual exhibition are from the Hmong Museum, representing Minnesota’s vibrant Hmong Community. In addition to settings at the table in the Ballroom, they will take visitors on a deeper dive into the celebration of the Hmong New Year in ASI’s Artist Studio. A yearly celebration that happens every November, the Hmong New Year is a time to come together, celebrate the completion of the harvest, and welcome a new beginning.

This year will also feature the photography series Northern Nature by Wisconsin National Geographic Explorer Erika Skogg. This series highlights Nordic-American culture in homes and communities across the Upper Midwest.

Meet the Community Curators

The Hmong community is represented by Mai Nhia Vang Huizel and Chuayi Yang of the Hmong Museum — a local museum without walls focused on highlighting the intersection of all things Hmong: language, arts, stories, and traditions.

The Sami community is represented by Marlene Wisuri, Tanley Lego, and Nancy Olson of the Sami Cultural Center of North America (SCC) — a non-profit dedicated to fostering an awareness of Sami culture through education, communication, research, and the arts.

The Swedish community is represented by design enthusiasts Kerstin Beyer Lajuzan and Katja Örnberg, members of the Minnesota chapter of SWEA International — a global network of Swedish speaking women promoting language and culture.

The Norwegian community is represented by Kristofer Phan Coffman and Christina Melander, whose collaboration is spurred by an appreciation of their Scandinavian heritage and a desire to use their cultural values as a tool for transformation, healing, and social change.

The Icelandic community is represented by Rannveig Arnar Hommema and Katrín Sigurðardóttir. Both are local to the Twin Cities with strong ties to Iceland and the Icelandic community here in Minnesota.

The Danish community is represented by Susan Loschenkohl and Susan Jacobsen of the Danish American Center (DAC) – a center for Danish cultural exchange & Danish hygge located in Minneapolis. The DAC is dedicated to the forwarding of anything Danish, offering a wide variety of activities & events which focus on aspects of Danish living & culture.

The Finnish community is represented by Tia Salmela Keobounpheng, a multidisciplinary artist/designer whose current body of work uses fiber and metal techniques as a literal and conceptual language for processing her experience within the larger context of the world, history, and her own family lineage.

How ‘Do It In North’ Came To Be – It’s Our Second Anniversary, Thank You!

How ‘Do It In North’ Came To Be – It’s Our Second Anniversary, Thank You!

A Loon’s purview of Minnesota history…and how “North” came to be:

Historical: Minnesota became the 32nd State of the Union on May 11, 1858. A small extension of the northern boundary makes it the most “northerly” of the 48 contiguous United States. (This peculiar protrusion is the result of a boundary agreement with Great Britain before the area had been carefully surveyed.)  Minnesota is bounded by the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Ontario to the north, by Lake Superior and Wisconsin to the east, by Iowa to the south and South Dakota and North Dakota to the west.

Contemporary: The moniker, “North”, description is an interesting confluence of recent history. I read an original article by Tim Gihring in 2014, shortly after returning to my native Minnesota from living in NYC. (The article was followed up in 2018 by the writer). Gihring was perhaps considered the author of  the “North” inception. My initial curiosity was sparked in the use of “North”, and the author observed how the machinations of “North” evolved; advertised in tag lines and marketed for public consumption.

This is how and why doitinnorth.com came to light.  As I watched, listened to the disparate definitions and uses of “North”, I could not gather a substantive or definitive answer, as to what it meant or where to go to find this “North” expression. So here, a home site has been created for “North” with doitinnorth.com, combining the unique history and crafted cultures of Minnesota by sharing for us the insiders and the out-of-towners looking in, with selections of curated Minnestoa events/locations, style/mode, art/design, people/places, shop/share, eat/drink.

About MN

Date of Statehood: May 11, 1858

Capital: St. Paul

Population: 5.7 million (2021)

Size: 86,935 square miles

Nickname(s): Land of 10,000 Lakes; North Star State; Gopher State

Motto: L’Étoile du Nord (“Star of the North”)

Tree: Red Pine

Flower: Pink and White Lady Slipper

Bird: Common Loon

Join/Subscribe to learn, experience and share more of our “North”.

creative/content curator: Gregg Tusler  

 

Native Mn Facts: “Reservation Dogs”

Native Mn Facts: “Reservation Dogs”

Looking for a new show? “Reservation Dogs” (@RezDogsFXonHulu) smashes stereotypes of Indigenous people. “There’s been 130-something years of cinema and we’re finally showing ourselves as human beings, which shouldn’t be radical, but it is pretty radical today.” 

About

From Co-Creators and Executive Producers Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi, Reservation Dogs is a half-hour comedy that follows the exploits of four Indigenous teenagers in rural Oklahoma who steal, rob and save in order to get to the exotic, mysterious and faraway land of California.

“Bear Smallhill” (D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai) is destined to be a warrior, and a leader. The only problem is he’s not a good fighter, and the gang doesn’t really consider him the leader. But with the guidance of a questionable spirit guide, he just might get there. “Elora Danan” (Devery Jacobs) may be the true leader of the group. But she’s so focused on getting to California, and so oblivious to her own power, that she often can’t see the beauty and goodness in herself and all around her. Street-smart tough girl “Willie Jack” (Paulina Alexis) is the beating heart of the group. She’s always looking out for her crew. Meanwhile, “Cheese” (Lane Factor) is the gentle, quiet ride-or-die who is so willing to go along with the group that he never stops to consider what his own dreams might be.

One year ago, Daniel, the fifth member of the Reservation Dogs, died. Struggling to make sense of the loss, the remaining four blame their boring, small town and its ability to crush the spirit. They decide to honor Daniel by adopting his dream of getting to California as their own. To succeed, they will have to save enough money, outmaneuver the methheads at the junkyard on the edge of town, constantly dodge conspiracy-obsessed Lighthorseman “Big” (Zahn McClarnon) and survive a turf war against a much tougher rival gang, led by the enigmatic “Jackie” (Elva Guerra).

Reservation Dogs has Native rappers, catfish, Indigenous superstitions and spirits both hilarious and terrifying, laughter, tears, unexpected grandmothers, decent people, terrible people and a cavalcade of supporting characters who color and shade this already vibrant world.

Filmed on location in Okmulgee, Oklahoma, Reservation Dogs is a breakthrough in Indigenous representation on television both in front of and behind the camera. Every writer, director and series regular on the show is Indigenous. This first-of-its-kind creative team tells a story that resonates with them and their lived experiences – and invites audiences into a surprisingly familiar and funny world.

Reservation Dogs is executive produced by Sterlin Harjo (11/8/16, Barking Water, Four Sheets to the Wind), Taika Waititi (What We Do in the Shadows, Jojo Rabbit, Thor: Ragnarok) and Garrett Basch (What We Do in the Shadows, The Night Of) and produced by FX Productions.

Gary Paulsen: “The most important thing you can do is read.”

Gary Paulsen: “The most important thing you can do is read.”

A photo of a man in a hat smiling.
Brian Adams | Getty Images file
Gary Paulsen, a three-time Newbery Honor–winning author, died at the age of 82.

Arts and Culture: Gary Paulsen once said, “The most important thing you can do is read.”

He went on to exhort people to read everywhere: “Read all the time; read when they tell you not to read, what they tell you not to read, read with a flashlight under the covers, read on the bus, standing on a corner, waiting for a friend, in the dentist’s waiting room. Read every minute you can. READ LIKE A WOLF EATS. Read.”

The acclaimed and prolific children’s author, who died Wednesday at the age of 82, provided lots of material for those following his instructions.

Paulsen wrote more than 200 books for children and adults. Some 35 million copies of his books have been sold.

He told MPR in 1996 that the response to “Hatchet” was overwhelming.

“It struck something, a chord in people, that is really strange. It is wonderful,” he said. “And really, I get about 200 letters a day. And I have for years, and that’s almost a constant — between 200-300 a day. And I answer them.”

By that point, in the days before email, he reckoned he had received 300,000 letters. He said a huge percentage asked questions about the ending of “Hatchet.”

Many of his stories are about people involved in a struggle, and he told MPR News in 1996 that this reflected his own childhood growing up with parents with alcoholism.

“And I think that kind of leaks through, becomes inherent. I noticed I was doing a lot of books about survival and about wilderness stuff,” he said, again in 1996. “And I realized when I was a kid, I kind of fostered myself to the woods. They were drunk all the time, so I would just head to the woods. That became part of my life and how I write, too.”

As a teenager, Paulsen ran away from home and traveled with a carnival. He went on to have numerous adventures including twice running the Iditarod dogsled race in Alaska. At one point he and his wife, Ruth Wright Paulsen, had 90 dogs. They lived in Minnesota for many years but spent the last years of his life in New Mexico.

Random House Children’s Book said Paulsen’s belief in young people drove him to write. His final novel, “Northwind,” will be published in January 2022.

He is survived by his wife and son.

Readers reflect on Paulsen’s work

“My partner and I bonded over ‘Hatchet’ early in our relationship. We both grew up in volatile families and found a lot of comfort alone in the woods as kids. We actually met in the National Forest, and we both thought of Gary Paulsen during a trip to Alaska this past summer. His work changed our lives.” — Maddie

“‘Hatchet,’ ‘Dogsong’ and ‘The Winter Room.’ I like the wilderness and camping and exploring. I’m a Minnesota girl. Can’t wait to read the new book coming out in January.” — Marjorie-Lee

“‘Hatchet’ was an inspiration. I would not be a writer, or reader, if not for this beautiful human being.” — Dan

“‘The Cookcamp,’ ‘Alida’s Song’ and ‘The Quilt.’ They cut right to my own experiences with my grandparents.” — Matt

“‘Hatchet’ is an absolute classic. I teach language arts and I have been reading this book with my middle schoolers. They have so much interest and enthusiasm for this story. It’s amazing to see kids that might not tend to engage with literature find this book so compelling.” — Tess

“‘Winterdance’! His connection to dogs, their antics and the special bonds he forms with them. Laugh out loud funny! I also always read ‘Hatchet’ and ‘Brian’s Winter’ to my 3rd graders — all kids love it! RIP Gary Paulson — thank you for touching so many lives!” — Chris

“‘Winter Dance.’ because I love sled dogs and dogsledding. This book made me dream and laugh.” — Deb

“‘Hatchet’ was deeply terrifying and deeply moving. Transformative read from my childhood and I read the book to my kids when they were coming into middle school, too.” — Janelle

“My favorite is ‘Woodsong.’ I’ve shared it my 5th grade students for the past 23 years. They loved his adventures in the Iditarod. I felt like I knew Gary.” — Deedee

“When I read ‘Hatchet’ for the first time, it felt like it was written for me specifically. Because it was so easy to see myself in the story. It is the single most influential book of my whimsical and carefree Minnesota boyhood. I think about ‘Hatchet’ more often than any other book I read as a kid, and I am very sad to hear about the passing of Gary Paulsen. God, bless that man … and get him something to write with.” — Devin

Tell us about your favorite book!

Pin It on Pinterest