Events for March 26 — 42 events found
Museums
Museums
Richard Prince: Spiritual America
Museums
Can an artist simultaneously celebrate and critique pop culture? Those familiar with the incredibly varied work of Richard Prince have seen appropriation, pop culture, and cultural criticism battle it out over the span of his 30-year career. His medium of expression varies greatly, from recreating photography, paintings, reprints of comics, and even collecting clay auto-body molds. The duality of his work is evident in his 1980s photographic recreations of the Marlboro advertising campaign, which celebrates the iconic image of the cowboy and Western landscape, while drawing attention to the hypocrisy that such an image would be used to advertise an addictive, unhealthy vice. His Nurses, inspired by the covers of pulp-fiction hospital romance novel covers, are both alluring and unsettling. Also, regardless of where his aesthetic inspiration takes him, each series of work explores concepts of artistic ownership, as he recreates and sometimes simply reprints photography, imitating iconic corporate symbols, or reprinting text or quotes from writers. Prince forces the viewer to reconsider context, drawing attention to the irony of pop culture, while bringing what is normally left unsaid to the forefront. After Hours Preview Party features food, film screenings of Rendezvous and The Honeymoon Killers, a text-based art activity, and music by Skoal Kodiak for $35 from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday, March 21. — Jessica Armbruster
Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes
Museums
It's hard to explain the suburbs to someone who has never lived in one. Like an exclusive fraternity, the 'burbs are full of cultural tics that influence our culture, political climate, and society in ways we might not even realize. The Walker's "Worlds Away" explores the split personality of the suburbs; how they can be simultaneously hailed as a utopian realization of family values and the American dream, and criticized for being an intestinal tract, shitting out conformity and homogeneity. In this group show featuring 30 artists and architects, works include colorful photography: a man mowing a dead lawn, a woman proudly standing in front of her McMansion in a silk robe, as well as architectural designs proposing the dawn of a new suburban aesthetic. The Walker After Hours Preview Party promises to be far more fun than a soccer-mom ice-cream social thanks to music by the appropriately named Alpha Consumer, and DJ Glen Leslie, and a screening of Jonathan Kaplan's Over the Edge (1979), a flick about a planned community and the teen hooligans who act out against it. Just don't try to make small talk about your sprinkler system or new SUV. The opening party is $35 from 9 p.m. to midnight on Friday, February 15. — Jessica Armbruster
Galleries
Galleries
August Sander: People of the 20th Century
Galleries
Though August Sander's photography runs the gamut from nature to architecture to street performance, he is easily best known for his portraits, including his epic series, "People of the 20th Century." The extensive project of documenting German society began in the 1920s, growing to over 600 portraits of individuals who hailed mainly from the Cologne region. Subjects spanned the full spectrum, including wealthy politicians, homeless artists, farmers, housewives, children, and others. Sander sought objectivity in his photography, striving "to see things as they are and not as they should or could be." Perhaps this is why his work was banned by the Nazis in the 1930s; his frank and matter-of-fact photography captured a diverse, cosmopolitan, and culturally rich country, which conflicted with the Aryan ideology. Though Sander passed in 1964, his work carries on today with his grandson Gerhard, and his influence can be seen in the work of many later photographers, including Diane Arbus and Richard Avedon. The Weinstein Gallery will feature 23 large-format images from original negatives from his collection. Opening reception 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Friday, February 22. — Jessica Armbruster
Deadly Medicine
Eugenics, the practice of changing the composition of a population through sterilization, or discouraging reproduction among people with "undesirable" traits and encouraging it among those with "desirable" traits, is an unsettling concept. But what "Deadly Medicine" shows about eugenics in Nazi Germany is downright terrifying. Organized and circulated by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the display demonstrates that eliminating non-Aryans or unwanted members of society from the German population was not and could not have been a solely military or government operation. It took the efforts and compliance of scientists, anthropologists, geneticists, and doctors to plan and execute a path toward eugenics, forced sterilization, and genocide. "Deadly Medicine" shows this tragedy of the rise of eugenics in Germany from before the Nazi regime to its peak through video of survivors, photographs, propaganda, and objects. Throughout the display's run, the Science Museum will host a lecture series with experts discussing the ideas "Deadly Medicine" presents. On April 10, Eva Kor, survivor of Dr. Josef Mengele's harsh experiments on twins at Auschwitz, will speak about her process of forgiveness. — Ben Palosaari
Enemy Within: Terror in America 1776 to Today
It turns out Lucille Ball's hair wasn't her only red trait. The FBI had a file outlining its suspicion that Ball was a scheming commie. This little-known nugget of America's history of terror and subversion is just one of hundreds displayed in this exhibit from the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C., "The Enemy Within." Although the all-encompassing term "war on terror" has gained substantial popularity since 2001, administrations have been battling terroristic groups and individuals since the end of the American Revolution. A few prime examples include the 1919 bombing of Attorney General Alexander Mitchell Palmer's home in response to his anticommunist raids, the explosion of the Munitions Depot in New York Harbor in 1916, and the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. In addition to these past terror threats, the exhibit identifies current hate groups functioning inside the U.S. today, and an eight-minute film, Under Siege (no, not the one starring Steven Segal fighting mercenaries on a Navy battleship, although that film would be fitting, too), analyzing current terror threats to America today. As part of the History Lounge series, this Tuesday at 7:00 p.m., author and Minnesota historian Annette Atkins and Minnesota Historical Society Curator Patrick Coleman will discuss how Minnesotans dealt with fear, terror, and government surveillance in the early part of the 20th century. — Ben Palosaari
Galleries
Events
Minnesota History Center - 345 W Kellogg Blvd. St. Paul
Museums
The Birth of Coffee
The categorization of great coffee as a fine art has taken on a new meaning. After hitting Boston, New York, Las Vegas, and Washington, D.C., over the past few years, the traveling photographic exhibition "The Birth of Coffee" is visiting Minnesota until May 7. Journalist and photographer Daniel Lorenzetti's most recent project tries to expand the scope of coffee past consumers' mouths and into the larger, overtly political world in which it is grown. The 40 black-and-white silver prints on display are quite fittingly, and literally, toned in coffee, and depict the lives of coffee growers in Brazil, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Indonesia, and Yemen. Lorenzetti and his wife, Linda Rice Lorenzetti, traveled five different continents doing research that resulted in a co-authored coffee-table book, The Birth of Coffee, and this exhibition, which explore the individuals and unique experiences that contributed to the $4 latte so many people mindlessly gulp each day. — Amy Lieberman
The Prints of Sean Scully
Somehow, Irish-born painter and printmaker Sean Scully makes alternating shades of black interesting. Somehow, he makes 12-foot-wide prints feel intimate and cozy. And somehow, Scully makes simple patterns feel new and innovative, even though he's been creating them for decades. The 65 prints from the Smithsonian American Art Museum—the only collection in an American museum—on display at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts explore these elements of his vast body of work. Scully's use of lines, stripes, and squares in different areas of his prints gives them a geographic, quilted feel. When Scully places black and white checkerboard next to a different white and red checkerboard pattern, which butts into simple black pinstripes, for example, the work doesn't appear to be disconnected; it's an artistic landscape. As part of the opening weekend, on Sunday Scully will speak about his technique (which includes methods with fun names such as spitebite, sugarlift, and aquatint), as well as his subject matter. On April 17, the 25-minute film The Passenger by Robert Gardner will be screened. The film captures Scully's interaction with his 1997 painting by the same name. — Ben Palosaari
Museums
Barfly - 711 Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis
Every week Friday, Saturday, 5:00pm
The Shout! House Dueling Pianos - 650 Hennepin Ave. S, Ste 160 Minneapolis
Nomad World Pub - 501 Cedar Ave. S Minneapolis
Stasiu's - 2500 University Ave. NE Minneapolis
Comedy
Red Sea - 320 Cedar Ave. S Minneapolis
Hunan Garden - 380 Cedar St. Minneapolis
Eagles Club - The Nest - 2507 E 25th St. Minneapolis
Comedy
Grumpy's - 1111 Washington Ave. S Minneapolis
Transmission
Price: free
The hundred-year-old space at 923 Washington Avenue North cleans up real nice. Once an intimidating dive bar frequented by the flashing lights of cop cars, the place was recently rechristened Club Jäger and given a makeover to put America's Next Top Model to shame. The overhaul includes a retro "old-fashioned" look: dark woodwork, gorgeous bar (which stocks a decent beer and wine list), stained glass, a fireplace, palm trees, and a disco ball that harkens all the way back to the Weimar '20s. Weekly events help posh the place up, including Tasty Tuesdays (hosted by L'Etoile Magazine) and free live music Thursdays and Fridays, featuring the loungy likes of Beight, Cadillac Kolstad, and the Bill Lang Trio. This Wednesday, Jäger patrons can check out the return of DJ Jake Rudh's popular Transmission, a sonic gobstopper of indie, French, new wave, electronica, and bossa nova formerly held at the Hexagon Bar. Rudh has won every City Pages readers poll for "Best Club DJ" since 2003, so you know it'll be a good time. Free. 10:00 p.m. — Jessica Armbruster
Dance & Performance
Station 4 - 201 E 4th St. St. Paul
Search Events
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
| 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
| 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
Full Calendar Search
Music

Hexagon Bar
Galleries
Dance & Performance
Guthrie Theater
Museums
A-List Picks
Blogs
The Blotter
News and Notes, Links and Loose Lips
by City Pages Staff
Culture to Go
Music, movie, TV, and other arts news updated every weekday
by City Pages Staff
SXSW Festival
Bloggers on SXSW
Balls! The City Pages Sports Blog
Group sports blog featuring news, chat, and links
by City Pages Staff
Pussy Ranch
Pop culture hog-tied and wrestled into submission
by Diablo Cody
Couch Pundit
The Monday Movie Quiz, plus media culture artifacts on display
by Steve Monaco






