Art in Bloom exhibits imaginative floral interpretations of selected works of art from Mia’s permanent collection, created by more than 100 individual and commercial florists.
…
Art in Bloom, the annual celebration of art and flowers, presented by the Friends of the Institute. Free and open to the public, Over the course of the four-day festival, everyone is invited to experience the floral beauty and fragrance throughout the museum, take a free guided tour, and enjoy family activities for our younger guests. Admission to the museum will remain free during Art in Bloom. Tickets are now available for additional events including Party in Bloom and special lectures.
…
Join the Friends
Art in Bloom is presented by the Friends of the Institute. For over 100 years, this dedicated group of volunteers has been supporting, enhancing, and sustaining Mia’s collections and programs.
The outdoor music series returns for five fridays over the summer.
…
Over five Fridays this summer, the animals at the Minnesota Zoo will be serenaded when the Wild Nights outdoor concert series returns.
The annual series of outdoor shows boasts a lineup of nationally renowned local groups that will put folk, hip-hop, indie rock, jam bands, and DJs on the Apple Valley stage.
The lineup, unveiled on Tuesday, includes Nur-D, Cloud Cult, Wookiefoot, The Cactus Blossoms, and The Big Wu as headliners.
…
The Cactus Blossoms
Photo by Aaron Rice
…
The Friday night get-togethers kick off on Friday,June 13th and pop up once every two weeks through its closing night on Friday,August 8th.
North House Folk School’s annual Wood Week is just around the corner and will be log jam-packed with everything the woodworker’s heart desires. Choose from 11 courses in a variety of areas: from several types of carving to restoring and protecting tools, there’s a course for anyone who loves working in wood.
This year’s Featured Guest Instructor is Lara R. Domeneghetti, a highly accomplished woodcarver teaching for the first time in the US. Lara hails from an Italian multigenerational family of woodcarvers and gilders, but found her artistic home and passion in medieval Norwegian-style carving.
Wood Week at North House Folk School explores the many ways wood can be shaped into useful, beautiful and satisfying objects. Each course offering dives deep into a particular form or tool, but a shared interest in what can be made from trees links everyone who joins in on the fun.
The annual lecture will take place on Tuesday, April 8th at 3 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Sue Heinz will present “You’ve Got a Friend Named Elmer.”
…
The show will include the traditional exhibition showcasing the work of the Dakota County Star Quilters, as well as quilt challenges, a small quilt auction, and the very popular DCSQ boutique takeover in our gift shop.
Imagine a world where every seam you stitch is perfect…every block true to size. Can you also imagine precisely matching stripes, accurately piecing circles (with ease!), and eliminating bias stretch forever? Wanna dream even more? Imagine never having to rip again! Sue Heinz guarantees you will achieve your wildest piecing dreams when you use this simple technique that requires no pins, clips, or gadgets. A MUST-SEE lecture that will ROCK your piecing world! (About an 80-90-minute lecture) this will include showing finished quilts using this method of piecing.
Sue’s passion is teaching, and she brings to each of her lectures and classes a Fine Arts and Education background, over 25+ years of quilting experience, a sense of humor, design expertise and a commitment to help each of her students reach new levels of quilting experience. She has authored five books, each brimming with fresh design ideas for free-motion quilting, patented several innovative marking tools and has designed some awesome free-motion rulers-all to intrigue, delight and surprise.
…
Quilt by Sue Heinz
Tickets for the lecture are available through DCSQ for 3pm and 6:30pm.
A local artist specializes in metalsmithing and beadwork to create works inspired by her ancestry.
…
Madison Holler grew up surrounded by a family of artisans. “When I was a little kid, I just assumed everyone had a craft,” she says. “My mom, dad, aunts, and uncles all had studios where they practiced their passions—like re-caning chairs, stained glass work, antique furniture restoration, moccasin making, beading, what have you. I just thought that when you grew up, you had a day job, and you had art on the side.”
Holler would go on to dabble in myriad mediums, including painting, woodworking, graphic design, photography, and ceramics, and use art therapy and repetitive crafts as treatment and meditation to calm her ADHD and OCD. “I never stopped,” she says.
Today, while she says she’ll never really pick a lane, she’s made a name for herself through the business she runs under the moniker Rubinski Works. Her bread and butter is one-of-a-kind glass and metal seed bead art and jewelry that blends her Anishinaabe, Scandinavian, and Dutch heritages.
So many of her experiences are informed by her cultural background and what her family instilled in her. “Both sides of my family crossed over a lot, learning each other’s trades and creating a beautiful cultural mix of my Indigenous, European, and Scandi DNA,” says Holler, who draws on the synchronicities found in traditional Scandinavian embroidery and Native Ojibwe beading techniques to inform her folklore designs. “It’s a really cool exchange.”
…
…
Nature is also an important driving muse. Motifs ingrained in her work nod to the landscapes, flora, and fauna found in both central Minnesota’s Wahpekute and Anishinabewaki lands (where Holler grew up) and scenes from her cabin in Ontario.
Through each collection, which can take several weeks to complete, Holler believes there should be an energetic exchange between the creator and the person who gets the beadwork. “I always say there’s prayer in every bead,” she says. “I mean that on a spiritual level—I’m putting prayer and hopes for the wearer in every stitch, hopefully resulting in a piece that will last a lifetime.”
A forewarning: Holler’s creations sell incredibly fast. She feels fortunate to have the camaraderie and community of people who have shown up to support her. “That’s the way it’s always been in Indigenous circles,” she notes. “I always think about the aunties and uncles that I had on the powwow circuits who always knew their customers. I feel like I have that but on an internet level.”