Winona LaDuke: ‘Our Future Generations Count On Us Voting’ – Minnesota

Winona LaDuke: ‘Our Future Generations Count On Us Voting’ – Minnesota

Winona LaDuke—an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) member of the White Earth Nation—is an environmentalist, economist, author, and prominent Native American activist working to restore and preserve indigenous cultures and lands.

She graduated from Harvard University in 1982 with a B.A. in economics (rural economic development) and from Antioch University with an M.A. in community economic development. While at Harvard, she came to understand that the problems besetting native nations were the result of centuries of governmental exploitation. At age 18 she became the youngest person to speak to the United Nations about Native American issues.

In 1989 LaDuke founded the White Earth Land Recovery Project in Minnesota, focusing on the recovery, preservation, and restoration of land on the White Earth Reservation. This includes branding traditional foods through the Native Harvest label.

In 1993 LaDuke gave the Annual E. F. Schumacher Lecture entitled “Voices from White Earth.” That same year she co-founded and is executive director of Honor the Earth, whose goal is to support Native environmental issues and to ensure the survival of sustainable Native communities. As executive director she travels nationally and internationally to work with Indigenous communities on climate justice, renewable energy, sustainable development, food sovereignty, environmental justice, and human rights.

Among the books she has authored are All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life (1999, 2016); The Winona LaDuke Reader: A Collection of Essential Writings (2002); Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming (2005); The Militarization of Indian Country (2013).

LaDuke’s many honors include nomination in 1994 by Time magazine as one of America’s 50 most promising leaders under 40; the Thomas Merton Award in 1996, the Ann Bancroft Award for Women’s Leadership in 1997, and the Reebok Human Rights Award in 1998. In 1998 Ms. Magazine named her Woman of the Year for her work with Honor the Earth. She was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 2007, and in 2017 she received the Alice and Clifford Spendlove Prize in Social Justice, Diplomacy, and Tolerance.

Winona LaDuke was an active leader as a Water Protector with the Dakota Access Pipeline protests in 2017 at Standing Rock, where the Sioux Nation and hundreds of their supporters fought to preserve the Nation’s drinking water and sacred lands from the damage the pipeline would cause. Over the years her activism has not deviated from seeking justice and restoration for Indigenous peoples.

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Despite the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, many Native Americans living on reservations continue to be excluded from the democratic process. The voter participation rate of Native Americans is among the lowest of any ethnic group in the country. This Election Season, we've partnered with @honortheearth, an organization established by @winonaladuke to raise awareness and support for Indigenous environmental issues. They are currently running PowWow The Vote, an effort to empower the Native vote by providing resources for voting and registration as well as Rez Uber, a driving service that offers rides to county election offices in Becker, Mahnomen, and Clearwater counties. Voting is foundational to a representative democracy. Find more information on how you can register to vote and get involved on our Vote For Winter campaign page. Link in bio. #KeepTheNorthCold #VoteForWinter #powwowthevotemn #nativevote

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MN OPERA: Opera In The Outfield – St. Paul, MN

MN OPERA: Opera In The Outfield – St. Paul, MN

EXPERIENCE MN OPERA AT CHS FIELD

Slide into home. Root, root, root for your hometown opera team! Join us for two evenings of opera outdoors at majestic CHS Field in downtown St. Paul. Featuring an innovative digital creation up on the field’s giant video board, this event includes music from CarmenThe Marriage of Figaro, modern classics, and more. This spectacular, one-of-a-kind, and physically distanced event is sure to be a home run.

 

September 24 and 26, 2020 at 7:30pm (Estimated running time of 75 minutes with no intermission.)

BUY IN-PERSON TICKETS – BUY DIGITAL ACCESS   (This event is sold as an in-person event and separately as a digital event.)

LOCATION:

CHS Field
360 N Broadway St
St. Paul, MN 55101

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As we introduce our new, safe, and innovative 2020 Fall Season. From September through December, you can once again enjoy the opera you love with an array of exciting artistic experiences including Opera in the Outfield at CHS Field, a digital version of Wuthering Heights, a 3D digital version of Das Rheingold, and a live-streamed holiday concert.
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To learn more about our reimagined Fall Season, please visit mnopera.org/season-update.
Q&A: Samantha Rei Is Designing Change – The Importance of Supporting Black-Owned Businesses

Q&A: Samantha Rei Is Designing Change – The Importance of Supporting Black-Owned Businesses

Samantha strives to help women feel confident, strong and comfortable in their own skin. She believes they can all be beautiful warriors!

 

Samantha R. Crossland began her design career with her label “Blasphemina’s Closet” in 2000. After closing “Blasphemina’s Closet” in September of 2013, she started anew with her new eponymous label “Samantha Rei”. “Samantha Rei” embodies the sweetness and femininity that has come to be expected from the designer.

Samantha Rei draws her inspiration from such illustrators as Chris Riddell, Brom, Tony DiTerlizzi, Brett Helquist and Mihara Mitsukazu as well as stories like Alice in Wonderland and Snow White. Her hero Alexander McQueen along with designers Vivienne Westwood, Hirooka Naoto, John Galliano, and Anna Sui have all influenced her style.

In 1998, Samantha began attending the Perpich Center for Arts Education in Golden Valley, Minnesota, choosing to hone her skills as an illustrator and painter so she could pursue comic book art. After graduating in 1999, she spent some time at the College of Visual Arts (CoVA) in Saint Paul to major in illustration before continuing her education at the Minneapolis Community and Technical College for Apparel Technologies. She’s been featured in Huffington Post, Shojo Beat, the American Gothic and Lolita Bible, Gothic Beauty, Glamour UK and Vogue UK. Samantha was named one of 2014 City Pages “Artists of the Year” and 2016 Best of the Twin Cities “Best Fashion Show” and 2016 and 2017 Reader’s Choice “Best Local Fashion Designer.” In 2015 she authored and illustrated a how-to book on subculture fashion design called Steampunk and Cosplay Fashion Design and Illustration. Samantha was a contestant on season 16 of Lifetime’s Project Runway, the final season to appear on the station.

 

Q&A: Samantha Rei Is Designing Change

The former Project Runway contestant and fashion veteran on designing during a pandemic; the importance of supporting Black-owned businesses.

by 

For more see samantharei.com and @samanthareiofficial, or become a patron at patreon.com/samantharei.

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5 Fun Ways to Spend Labor Day Weekend in Minneapolis

5 Fun Ways to Spend Labor Day Weekend in Minneapolis

Don’t know what to do with your Labor Day Weekend? That’s okay, that’s why we’re here!

It’s the last hoorah of summer, the one weekend where you try to fit in as much as possible before the fall feels start to set in. This year, it’s extremely important to be safe and follow social distancing rules while celebrating. Luckily, Labor Day Weekend in Minneapolis is still full of events and activities to help you in your end of summer celebration. Your only worry will be how you’ll fit it all in. Check out the best ways to spend your Labor Day Weekend in Minneapolis.

 

1. Act like a true Minnesotan at the State Fair

UPDATE: The Minnesota State Fair has been canceled this year due to COVID-19. However, the organization will still be hosting fun events, such as the Fine Arts Exhibition of Minnesota, the Minnesota State Fair Food Parade, and the Minnesota State Fair Online Marketplace. Learn more here.

 

 

2. Have a family fun day at a museum

Check out the Science Museum of Minnesota, which will reopen to the public the weekend of September 4-6th. Don’t miss the Omni film, Ancient Caves, where you’ll take a deep dive into all things geology and how studying caves has helped us learn about our history. Be sure to read their safety guidelines before visiting.

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden is the perfect way to spend time outside while perusing some iconic art pieces. Don’t forget to get your Instagram photo next to the Spoonbridge and Cherry!

Travel the globe through art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Admission is free but timed tickets are required. They’ve also added extra safety precautions so you can peruse the galleries without worry.

 

 

3. Grab some takeout and have a picnic

Forget the big cooler and all the preparation. Make your picnic easy by grabbing some local takeout! Then head to one of our many parks to enjoy your food while you watch the sunset, overlook the Mississippi River, or take in views of the downtown skyline.

 

 

4. Shop local at one of our farmers markets

UPDATE: Minneapolis Farmers Markets are currently open to the public under specific conditions that help prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Grab a bite to eat, sip on a perfectly brewed coffee and peruse local goods and produce. Think the farmers market is just for getting groceries? Not in Minneapolis! Our farmers markets have local and hand-made goods from art pieces to jewelry to ceramics, plus plenty of baked goods if all of the fresh food is making you hungry. Check out our farmers market guide to see which one suits you!

 

 

5. Dine and unwind on one of our many patios

When we say “dine on a patio” what we really mean is eat a burrito on a Ferris wheel, go lawn bowling on a rooftop, nosh on brunch with a view of the downtown skyline, sip a cocktail on the river, watch the sunset with some sushi, or enjoy tacos by a waterfall. Yes, you can do all of these and more in Minneapolis. You could say we’re a little over the top when it comes to our outdoor dining. We wouldn’t have it any other way.

*Some restaurants have new protocols, like requiring reservations. Check their website before visiting.

Labor Day Weekend

Love Local: East Isles Farmers Market – Uptown Minneapolis

Love Local: East Isles Farmers Market – Uptown Minneapolis

The East Isles Residents Association is in partnership with The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board to create the first-ever Farmers Market in a park on Park Board property. The Farmers Market is the brainchild of the East Isles Residents Association and was established as a means to further our mission of building community, promoting green spaces, and fostering neighbor relations.

East Isles is a destination in the summer months and the location for the market is a trifecta for residents, visitors and potential vendors.

With the Walker Library and transit stop to the east, Uptown/Lagoon Avenue to the south, The Greenway running parallel, and East Calhoun Parkway/Lake of the Isles just down the block to the west, the East Isles Farmers Market is a prime location for easy access to locally sourced food and fun.

 

EIFM Veggies

Our Mission

The East Isles Farmers Market inspires a healthy community by bringing local, sustainable, and mostly organic or pesticide-free produce to our high-density neighborhood. It’s accessible by bike, foot, or skateboard.

We Love Local

  • We contribute to the success of local food growers, bakers, and makers by supporting local entrepreneurs and artisans.

  • We strive to include women and minority-owned businesses to further an equitable marketplace. More than half of our vendors are women-owned businesses.

  • We vet the quality of sourcing, production and growing practices of our vendors.

  • We provide educational opportunities related to food, rain gardens, sustainability and zero waste.

  • We promote the Minnesota Cottage Food Law by encouraging residents and neighbors to participate in our Pickle Booth.

We’re on the homestretch! Don’t miss our upcoming markets:

September 3rd

September 10th

September 17th (last market of the season).

SEE OUR FOOD TRUCK SCHEDULE TOO

Follow us on Instagram and like us on Facebook!

Save His Name: The Grassroots Race to Preserve George Floyd Murals

Save His Name: The Grassroots Race to Preserve George Floyd Murals

Kenda (left) and Quinn Zellner-Smith at their storage space in early August                  Emily Utne

CityPages: In the days that followed George Floyd’s murder, Minneapolis and St. Paul boarded up. A forest of plywood covered windows as business owners shut their doors, prepped for unrest, crossed their fingers, and hoped for the best.

It could’ve made the metro feel closed-off, abandoned, even condemned. It didn’t, because the people of the Twin Cities—from small children wielding paintbrushes to bona fide graffiti artists—saw in the boards temporary canvases, and covered them with art. Bright, bold lettering screamed, “Justice for George,” “Black Lives Matter,” “Dismantle Systemic Fascism.” Floyd’s portrait was plastered on buildings from Uptown to the Midway.

“Our city also looks like this,” one City Pages editor tweeted, challenging the narrative that rioters had turned Minneapolis into a bombed-out husk. It might have been burnt down and boarded up, but it was more colorful than ever.

Then, as the unrest settled and businesses reopened, the boards started to disappear. A few weeks after the uprising, Kenda Zellner-Smith remembers a co-worker’s casual remark that nearby plywood murals were coming down.

“That day, on my lunch break, I ducked away on my phone and made the Instagram account,” Zellner-Smith says. “Not even really thinking anything about it, I was just like, ‘I want to save the art, and we need to have this conversation.’”

The Instagram account is @savetheboards_mpls, where Zellner-Smith started posting pieces that caught her eye in mid-June. In her captions, she’d address important questions about the art: How can we keep it in the community? How can we preserve it? How do we make sure it remains accessible to Black and brown people?

Emily Utne

Emily Utne

“When the art was first up it was healing for me. And it’s not any more, only because I’m hyper-aware of it disappearing,” Zellner-Smith says. “I’m very aware of groups of people trying to take it and not make sure it’s still here for the Black community.”

When she started Save the Boards, Zellner-Smith wasn’t planning to become a grassroots conservationist. She’d just moved and started a new role at work, and she didn’t have a background in the arts, or preservation, or history.

But interest in her movement grew, and the account quickly amassed followers. (It has nearly 2,000 now, less than two months after she made her first post.) After she shared a few posts with ideas for keeping the art accessible, Paper Salon in south Minneapolis’s Corcoran neighborhood reached out via Instagram. They were removing their murals and wanted to know if Zellner-Smith had any interest in picking them up.

She did. And after she posted about that first collection, more and more people started reaching out. Soon she was regularly borrowing her dad’s truck and filling it with plywood, bringing it back to her parents’ place. Walking around their yard in early August, she guesses she has about 20 on their property, with another 40 or so in storage. She’s done dozens of pickups herself, with occasional help from friends, family, and roommates.

Zellner-Smith isn’t the only one collecting and protecting boards. She recently connected with Leesa Kelly of Memorialize the Movement, another young Black woman who’s been gathering boards and getting them to the African American Heritage Museum and Gallery in north Minneapolis.

“I just felt so hopeful seeing the boards, seeing the plywood murals coming up, seeing the art around 38th and Chicago,” Kelly says. “I thought, ‘If we could use this to tell the story of what happened here this summer, we could really make an impact and keep this movement going.’”

Kelly raised just shy of $5,000, which she donated to the museum in June. She and Zellner-Smith have since become conservation collaborators, texting ideas back and forth, seeing if one can pick up a mural for the other, and figuring this thing out as they’ve found themselves in the position of board stewards.

“It’s like, we don’t know what we’re doing, but cool,” Zellner-Smith laughs.

“That’s really true!” adds Kelly. “We’re both like, is this a thing we should be doing? Where do we go from here? I think for both of us, we did not expect this project to blow up the way that it did or be received so positively.”

Zellner-Smith has lived on Minneapolis’s south side her entire life; Kelly moved to the Twin Cities from Chicago in 2017, not long after the murder of Philando Castile.

“It fills me with so much sadness, because you would not think Minneapolis and St. Paul are the type of cities where this would happen because they’re so progressive,” Kelly says. “You see that like, it doesn’t matter where you are, Black lives still don’t matter to cops, and to a lot of people.”

“People were just done,” Zellner-Smith says. “To see it happen, again, on video, again, it was just like, when does it stop? When does one acknowledge what’s really happening?”

And again, already, there’s the worry that people are forgetting. As the boards disappear, so does the visual reminder of what Minneapolis went through. The two share concerns about where the art is going; Zellner-Smith says a number of people have been out taking pieces without a second thought about where and to whom they belong.

One artist recently reached out and said they wanted Save the Boards to have their work—but when they asked the business where their work was displayed about getting it back, they were directed to “some random white guy” who took it because he wanted to put it up. That artist is still trying to reclaim it. Zellner-Smith has encountered other people—often white—who’ve been collecting boards for “auctions” or fundraisers, though when she asks for specifics, their answers have been vague.

She thinks that shouldn’t be allowed to happen; it’s not what the boards are about.

In addition to collecting murals, Leesa Kelly raised nearly $5,000 for the African American Heritage Museum and Gallery.

In addition to collecting murals, Leesa Kelly raised nearly $5,000 for the African American Heritage Museum and Gallery.

 

“It’s greedy, in a sense,” Zellner-Smith says. “Black pain, trauma, and healing—it shouldn’t be profitable in any capacity.” At this point, if she sees boards lying around, she grabs them, photographs them, and tries to find the artist. “I’m saving anything I see on the ground, or I deem a board that doesn’t have a home. It’s a fight for the boards.”

And sometimes it really is a fight. A few weeks ago, she and a friend pulled up to the Hi-Lake Shopping Center near the epicenter of the riots, where some of their favorite pieces were and where many of the boards are already gone. While they flipped through a pile of boards in the back by a dumpster, a security guard came over and told them they were trespassing.

“It’s a hunt,” Zellner-Smith says. “And when you do find them, it’s like finding a gem.”

Kelly still goes out with the Jeep on occasion, but says that right now, it’s more about maintaining relationships with businesses that haven’t taken the boards down yet and staying connected with the handful of other organizations—like Victoria Theater Arts Center and Springboard for the Arts—that have been collecting pieces. “Looking toward the future of what everyone’s doing with their boards, and reminding them, softly, ‘Hey, we want to make sure the only Black-owned museum in the state has an opportunity for this,’” she says.

Eventually, her hope is to have an exhibit at the African American Heritage Museum, but that’s going to take some time to plan. The museum is small, and the boards are very much not. She doesn’t want to cram a bunch of plywood and people together, so the show might happen later this year or sometime in 2021.

And beyond collecting and preserving the boards, Zellner-Smith is figuring out what making them accessible to the community means. One of her early ideas was to turn them into Little Free Libraries: “But that’s not realistic. We live in Minnesota.” Many of these murals are not painted on high-quality wood; people were hastily pulling materials out of musty basements at the last minute.

“I’ve had to transition from wanting the actual physical boards to be in the community permanently into: How can we value the life of the art, and then death of it, but still have it remain?”

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What if instead, we built new Little Free Libraries, and artists who painted boards memorializing George Floyd painted an outline—like a coloring book—then let people from the community paint them in? She’s teamed up with the Stevens Square Community Organization, and they’ve agreed to help build three little libraries. Zellner-Smith hopes that in one, they’ll have strictly Black literature; another could hold personal care items and hygiene products; the third could store nonperishable food items.

“Things that we can have accessible, and restock, and have right here in the community—and that will help with growth here, help anyone in need.”

Another project in the works is to blow up photos of the murals into massive banners that could hang on, say, the Basilica of St. Mary, where they’re widely visible and not so easily forgotten. There are so many photos of the murals; what about a digital archive? Is there a way to connect people who took pictures of pieces that have gone away since May and form a complete collection of the works that sprung up during that time? (A pair of professors at the University of St. Thomas are currently trying to do that with the George Floyd and Anti-Racist Street Art map.) Or maybe, businesses that don’t need plywood protection anymore would be willing to display a decal in their window of the mural that was once there while the pieces themselves stayed protected in storage?

“It’s hard because in time, they are going to start to wither away, no matter how much we try to garnish and plaster them,” Zellner-Smith says. “They’re just not material that will last.”

She imagines bringing the pieces outside once a year, on the anniversary of George Floyd’s death, for a community-wide remembrance—“Not a celebration, but just making sure we remember what our city went through, what our community went through, what his family is going to go through for the rest of their lives.” It could be an outdoor exhibition where the pieces are laid out like a map: Here’s Hennepin you’re walking down now; here’s Lake Street. Black vendors and small-business owners would sell food and art.

“It adds a lot more value and significance to the pieces, I think, if in 10 years I could go to this show on May 25 with my kids,” Zellner-Smith says. “Let’s bring them out on his death anniversary. Let’s honor his life, his legacy—and honor the uprising of Minneapolis that ignited the rest of the country and the world and made everyone listen.”

“People are still out protesting. Kenda and I are doing this work. You’ve got all these organizations who have sprung up out of this—people like me and Kenda who were regular civilians working 9-to-5 jobs and going about our lives have stopped everything in support of this movement,” Kelly adds. “That’s really inspiring. That’s really powerful. I’m honestly really surprised that it happened here, but I’m so proud to be a part of it.”

Emily Cassel in Arts & Leisure

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