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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.

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Celebrating sex? Why some people find promiscuity immoral and others not so much

Gustave Caillebotte was sleeping with this woman. And the artist, a married man, got quite the scolding from 1880s Paris upon showing this painting of her, his infamous “Nude on a Couch” (now in the MIA’s collection)—not because he was sleeping with her, of course, but because she didn’t appear particularly ashamed of her sexuality  ...

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17 days, two curators, one red-hot Asian art scene (Part II): Jogja

We hurtled down the steep mountain, leaving behind thousand-year-old temples and the pungent sulfur springs of the verdant Dieng Plateau. It was a long drive, and when we reached the city of Yogyakarta (Jogja) it was already late afternoon. Just in time for rush hour—urban Indonesia at its frenetic finest. This marked a new stage  ...

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Dogwood's Greg Hoyt and Stephanie Ratanas talk myths, mummies, and their surprising new single-source coffee

The new release from Dogwood Coffee hails from the farm of Nodier Andrade in Colombia. Dogwood Coffee, based in Minneapolis, has been hailed as one of America’s finest artisanal coffee companies. Late last year it opened its second retail location—in the MIA lobby. The partnership between a museum and a coffee company makes sense as  ...

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Dogwood’s Greg Hoyt and Stephanie Ratanas talk myths, mummies, and their surprising new single-source coffee

The new release from Dogwood Coffee hails from the farm of Nodier Andrade in Colombia. Dogwood Coffee, based in Minneapolis, has been hailed as one of America’s finest artisanal coffee companies. Late last year it opened its second retail location—in the MIA lobby. The partnership between a museum and a coffee company makes sense as  ...

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Salesman or Lawyer: Who is Grant Wood’s Sentimental Yearner?

It was difficult to pick just one piece from “Marks of Genius: 100 Extraordinary Drawings from the Minneapolis Institute of Art” to write about. In the end, I settled on Grant Wood’s Sentimental Yearner. One of nine commissioned illustrations (two townscapes, seven characterizations) for a limited edition of Sinclair Lewis’s Main Street, this work is  ...

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Eric William Carroll explores mysteries of the universe in G.U.T. Feeling, Vol. 2

Are we all connected? If so, are we smart enough to understand why? These are some of the big questions of science that Eric William Carroll constantly explores—despite his knowledge being limited to what he learned in high school science class. The Minneapolis-based artist (who also teaches at Macalester College) channels his curiosity about the  ...

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The invention of drawing

This week, while installing the MIA’s summer exhibition Marks of Genius: 100 Extraordinary Drawings—a show that spans nearly 600 years of drawing—I’ve been thinking about the origins of the medium. Its beginnings, like the beginnings of art, are murky, mythical, and lost. According to the ancient Roman writer Pliny the Elder, both the Egyptians and  ...

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World Cup Flashback: 4 objects that dig up the ancient roots of soccer

Soccer buffs abound in the Twin Cities during the heat of the FIFA World Cup. But how many know about where soccer all began? These MIA pieces (all on view in the Robert and Carolyn Nelson Gallery) show the ancient game that evolved into the modern sport everyone is talking about.  1. Figure   This  ...

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17 days, two curators, one red-hot Asian art scene (Part I): hip meets history

It was May, the peak of heat and the start of the rainy season in Asia, when I landed in Hong Kong with Liz Armstrong, curator of contemporary art at the MIA. We had 17 days to investigate the red-hot art scene in Southeast Asia, consider the relationship between historical and contemporary artworks there, and  ...

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The family that visits museums together: A Family Day flashback

Let’s assume those are props. Right? The MIA would never actually have allowed kids to horse around with real spears and helmets, like those on loan from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in the third floor hallway. Right?? They sure look real, though. That was a long time ago (well past the statute of limitations  ...

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