Blog

Fresh perspectives on art, life, and current events. From deep dives to quick takes to insightful interviews, it’s the museum in conversation. Beyond the walls. Outside the frame. Around the world.

The Latest

Read the Full Article

Homage to Matisse: Shawn McCann channels the master to accent the exhibition

Henri Matisse, the modern master whose colorful, game-changing art goes on view at the MIA on Sunday in Matisse: Masterworks from the Baltimore Museum of Art, is no longer taking commissions. Luckily for the MIA, Shawn McCann is close at hand. By day, he works in facilities maintenance at the museum, clearing snow, fixing leaks,  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

A modern-day monuments woman, once with the MIA, shares stories from the battlefield

Cori Wegener is the rare curator who can break down a rifle as well as the Prairie School’s influence on architecture. She was in the Army Reserves and an assistant curator at the MIA when she was sent to Baghdad after the National Museum of Iraq was looted in 2003 and to Haiti after the  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Checkmate! What a visitor noticed, prompting a new setup of the Charleston Drawing Room chessboard

He had noticed it for years. And then, after a January visit, for reasons unclear even to him, he was finally moved to say something. “I’m a tournament chess player,” he wrote in an email to the MIA, “and I noticed that the chess set in the Charleston Drawing Room has an unlikely position on  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Honoring the Monuments Men, art saviors of World War II, with a self-guided tour at the MIA (Part II)

The Monuments Men were given an impossible, well, monumental job—which of course is why their story makes for a great book and a great movie. If not set up to fail, exactly, they were certainly looking for needles in haystacks. In fact it’s hard to imagine a more sparsely staffed unit of the Allied war  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Joan of Art: In her own words

In honor of Joan Mondale’s life, and in admiration for the many ways she championed the arts—and artists—of Japan, the United States, and Minnesota, we salute her: her passion, generosity, and contributions as an educator and docent at the MIA. Here, we reprint her words, published in Arts magazine, about one of her favorite places  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Art Inspires: Poet Sun Yung Shin on ghosts, gods, and the bliss of the underworld

Sun Yung Shin, a Minneapolis-based poet and teacher, was inspired by Ksitigarbha and the Ten Kings of Hell, a silk painting on display in gallery 206. 명 부 쩐 – 冥 府 殿 Myeongbujeon, the Hall of the Underworld “The day that makes one an orphan.” —Myung Mi Kim, Works On the day that makes  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Honoring the Monuments Men, art saviors of World War II, with a self-guided tour at the MIA (Part I)

In The Monuments Men, opening February 7, George Clooney is his usual charming self in a dapper mustache and Army officer’s garb, cracking wise in Art Deco cafes and backslapping buddies Matt Damon, Bill Murray, and John Goodman as they race through Europe in the wake of D-Day. Billed as “the greatest treasure hunt in  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

According to "Her," the future of tech is bright, strange, and sexy. Here's how museums may get there first.

In the new movie Her, a lonely introvert played by Joaquin Phoenix begins a relationship with the talking operating system of his computer. Set in the familiar future, it’s been described as a “science fiction romantic-comedy drama,” another way of saying it’s a film by Spike Jonze, who likes to mess with genres not to  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

According to “Her,” the future of tech is bright, strange, and sexy. Here’s how museums may get there first.

In the new movie Her, a lonely introvert played by Joaquin Phoenix begins a relationship with the talking operating system of his computer. Set in the familiar future, it’s been described as a “science fiction romantic-comedy drama,” another way of saying it’s a film by Spike Jonze, who likes to mess with genres not to  ...

Keep Reading
Read the Full Article

Connecting art and earth—literally—with Monica Haller, new artist-in-residence at the MIA

Last summer, I caught up with my friend Monica Haller while she was in the Twin Cities working on an exciting project for Northern Spark, the all-night festival of light. (Working with Molly Reichert, Nick Knouf, and Jonathan Zorn, she set up special listening decks by the Mississippi River for people to hear the sounds  ...

Keep Reading