Events for May 02 — 93 events found
The Pose of Poetry and Prose: Aristide Maillol Interprets the Artist's BookMuseumsDaily from Sat., December 1 until Sun., May 18
Minneapolis Institute Of Arts
- 2400 3rd Ave. S Minneapolis
When an artist specializes in drawing people in furry suits and designing plushy toys, it's probably pretty easy to veer off into the realm of "too cute." Erin Currie manages to avoid this world of pastel overkill by culling inspiration less from Hello Kitty and more from old (and very dark) folklore tales. "Curster's Fantastico," her first gallery show, features paintings and fiber sculptures of imps, octopuses, and balloons filled with plumes of colors. Just like cruel, old-fashioned fairy tales, some images feel safe, happy, and celebratory while others have a certain wariness and unease to them. Aesthetically, imagine a fantastical dreamscape where
The Life Aquatic,
Where the Wild Things Are, and Stewie from
Family Guy all meet. As a child Currie dabbled in the art of rosemaling, a traditional Norwegian decorative painting style, which combined with her ominously bright and cute subjects creates an odd carnival mix of old world and new.
— Jessica Armbruster
I'm usually not one for recounting tales of great shows seen (memory is fickle, and mendacious), but in 1996 I found myself at the American Repertory Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for a production of Eugene O'Neil's
Long Day's Journey into Night that insinuated itself into the way I see life. It's a tough pill to swallow, this story of a family in thrall to addiction, bitterness, and the ash-end of great passion, but it's told with astonishing depth of feeling, and a sense of a great talent throwing all caution to the wind (it was never published during O'Neil's life, per his wishes, so intense were the truths it contained about his own life). This Theatre in the Round production features Maggie Bearmon Pistner in the role of Mary, the drug-addicted mother of the Tyrone clan, with direction by Lynn Musgrave.
— Quinton Skinner
Will
Lutefisk Sushi ever reach Volume Z? It's possible but hard to imagine, considering each box set is a massive collection of original comic art and mini-comics. Volume C will feature work by around 50 artists including Kevin Cannon, who will also be premiering a special limited edition of his graphic novel
Far Arden at the reception at Altered Esthetics. Part book launch, part art show, other aspects of the gallery event include "The Potty Humor Exhibit," which will feature crude and dirty-humored artwork in, of course, the bathroom, and a hand-crank zoetrope constructed by
Sushi contributor Ken Avidor. The opening reception, from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, May 2, will also serve as a fundraiser for Altered Esthetics, with a silent auction, first edition prints by Adam Turman, live music, and the unveiling of an art vending machine, which we'll take over a pop machine any day.
— Jessica Armbruster
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
Model home explosions, children dancing in Scottish kilts, men playing baseball on donkeys, murder-suicide aftermaths, linoleum, and America Legion parades. Life in Bloomington, Minnesota, during the 1950s and '60s runs the full gamut of the human experience. For years the Norling family made a hobby of capturing it. Using a police scanner for tip-offs, Irwin Norling, his wife June, and their three kids would often beat the press—and sometimes even the police—to gruesome crime scenes, where they would click away. The Norlings, led by father Irwin, captured the grisly as often as they captured the mundane, and though they would provide pics to police, lawyers, and local papers, their motivation mostly derived from the sheer love of posterity. Their prolific documentation of all things Bloomington was almost forgotten and lost to seldom-glanced-at archives, but fortunately, journalist Brad Zellar happened upon this hidden trove of suburban life in 2002 on a random trip to the Bloomington Historical Society. These smatterings of restaurant openings, head-on bridge collisions, and school dedication ceremonies have been reprinted in Zellar's new book, Suburban World: The Norling Photos, and selected images will be displayed at the Minnesota History Center's Library through mid-June. Opening reception 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 1. — Jessica Armbruster
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
6th Annual Spring Garden Show - Works by the Edina Art Center faculty and students.
GalleriesDaily from Thu., April 3 until Fri., May 30
Edina Art Center
- 4701 W 64th St. Edina
A Midsummer Night's Dream - Joe Dowling directs Shakespeare's fantasy fairy tale.
TheaterEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 18 until Sun., June 22, 7:30pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., April 20 until Sun., June 22, 2:00pm
Price: $24-$69
Guthrie Theater
- 818 S 2nd St. Minneapolis
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
BFA/BA Honos Exhibitions - Works from 21 artists.
GalleriesDaily from Mon., April 28 until Fri., May 16
Regis Center For Art
- 405 21st Ave. S Minneapolis
Black/White [and Read] - Book art using no colors other than black and white.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 19 until Sat., June 21
Minnesota Center For Book Arts
- 1011 Washington Ave. S, Ste 100 Minneapolis
Cabaret - This new production depicts the decadent world of 1930s Berlin.
TheaterEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday from Fri., May 2 until Fri., May 16, 8:00pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., May 4 until Sun., May 18, 2:00pm
Price: $48-$65
Ordway Center For The Performing Arts
- 345 Washington St. St. Paul
Quilting has long been an art form that spans both ends of the practical-whimsical spectrum. Sure, they're great for cuddling underneath on cold nights, but they also brighten rooms, commemorate life events, document family history, and build community. But, as the Fiber Arts Study Group at the Textile Center has discovered, even tradition cannot escape contemporary concerns. Ten members of the group are exhibiting their climate change-centric quilts. Focusing on the psychological effects of global warming, much of the work is, not surprisingly, bleak. Kimber Olson's
Point Zero looks like a Doppler radar triptych trimmed in caution tape in which all the landforms are masses of gray and black. More surprising is the streak of hopeful, bright colors that runs through some of the pieces such as Dawn Carlson Conn's
Wind, which features dark silhouettes of wind turbines against a pastel sunset. But perhaps the deeper irony is in the very nature of such a show. Will there be a day when quilts serve only as decorative reminders of cold winter nights? Opening reception 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday, April 18.
— Rhena Tantisunthorn
Dancing With a Contagion - This new work combines American outsider visionary art with traditional Japanese puppet forms. For tickets call 612.874.6338.
TheaterPrice: $12-$15
Open Eye Figure Theatre
- 506 E 24th St. Minneapolis
Feminist artist Judy Chicago is primarily known for her 1970s project
The Dinner Party. It's composed of an almost 50-foot-long triangular dinner table for 39 guests. Each setting is for an important woman—some are famous, some are not—from history, and features a personalized china plate and placemat for each. The women represented begin with the primordial goddess, then move through the rise of Christianity and civilization up to the 21st century, with the last plate devoted to artist Georgia O'Keefe. The tile beneath the table is engraved with the names of 999 other notable women from history. The installation is permanently housed at the Brooklyn Museum, and it would be a major pain in the ass to bring to Minneapolis, but studies of each of the plates and a DVD exploring the entire piece are on display at Flanders Contemporary Art. Opening reception from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, April 24.
— Ben Palosaari
Everywhere Signs Fall - Gremlin Theatre presents a modern noir set in a steamy motel room in Phoenix. For tickets call 651.228.7008.
TheaterPrice: $16-$18
The Loading Dock Theater
- 509 Sibley St. St. Paul
Forever Plaid - Old Log presents this musical about the 1950s.
TheaterEvery week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Thu., April 10 until Sat., September 27, 8:00pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., April 13 until Sun., September 21, 2:00pm
Price: $27-$32
Old Log Theater
- 5175 Meadville St. Excelsior
From Beyond: The Undersea Watercolors of Martha IsermanGalleriesDaily from Sat., March 1 until Sun., June 1
Shoebox Gallery
- Robert's Shoes 2948 Chicago Ave. S Minneapolis
Gem of the Ocean - Penumbra Theatre Company presents this Lou Bellamy-directed production of a play by August Wilson.
TheaterEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 25 until Sat., May 17, 7:30pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., April 27 until Sun., May 18, 1:00pm
Price: $24-$69
Guthrie Theater
- 818 S 2nd St. Minneapolis
History and Her Story After 150 Years - Paintings by George Bettelyoun and photos of the Twin Cities Healthy Nations Program.
GalleriesDaily from Fri., May 2 until Tue., May 27
Hennepin County Government Center
- 300 S 6th St. Minneapolis
A lot has changed over the past 20 years. We've gone through three presidents. Macs became cool, then lame, then cool again. Alternative music became corporatized, then turned into emo. A lot has changed over the years for the Soap Factory as well. One of the oldest galleries in the Twin Cities for modern visual art, the Soap Factory began in 1988 as No Name Gallery, a smallish space in the Warehouse District of Minneapolis. After a name change and a move to the former National Purity Soap Company, the gallery has continued to thrive, supporting the local arts community during the months of April to November, when the space is open, as well as sponsoring other events and shows around the city. Some of the more interesting side projects hosted by the Soap Factory include the Art Shanty Projects on Medicine Lake, and the haunted basement, a Halloween event so creepy they make you sign a waver before entering. For this retrospective exhibit, curator Andy Sturdevant has pored over thousands of flyers, documents, and photos, many taken from slides that haven't seen the light of day in decades. Artists from the past have also been asked back to share their work and experiences with the gallery, including Mark Nielsen and Ilene Krug Mojsilov, who were the first artists to exhibit in the space two decades ago. Featured artists rotate each month, and the show promises to be an interesting exploration of how the Twin Cities' art community has expanded, developed, and matured over time. Opening reception 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, April 19.
— Jessica Armbruster
In Full Bloom - Ceramic art by Norma Hanlon and Kirsten Walstead.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 26 until Sun., June 1
Gallery 360
- 3011 W 50th St. Edina
Incorruptible - Michael Hollinger's farce is about an order of down-and-out medieval monks.
TheaterEvery week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., February 22 until Sat., June 7, 8:00pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., April 13 until Fri., June 6, 2:00pm
Price: $24-$30
Old Log Theater
- 5175 Meadville St. Excelsior
Landscapes X 4 - Paintings.
GalleriesDaily from Tue., April 8 until Tue., June 24
Premier Gallery
- 141 7th St. S Minneapolis
Living Beyond Poster Project: The Portrait Show - Portraits of 20 famous people who have lived or live with mental illness by artists with mental illness.
GalleriesDaily from Fri., May 2 until Fri., June 27
Hennepin County Medical Center
- 730 S 8th St. Minneapolis
Love, LLP - Watercolors.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 26 until Mon., May 26
Java J's Coffee
- 700 N Washington Ave. N #100 Minneapolis
Married Alive! - This musical comedy depicts married life.
TheaterEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 2 until Sat., September 6, 8:15pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., May 4 until Sun., August 31, 7:00pm
Price: $49-$60
Chanhassen Dinner Theatres
- 501 W 78th St. Chanhassen
Media Ontology: Mapping of Social and Art History of Novi Sad - Art from Serbia.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 19 until Sat., May 24
Midway Contemporary Art
- 527 2nd Ave. SE Minneapolis
MN 150 - Celebrating 150 years of Minnesota Statehood.
EventsDaily from Sat., October 13 until Wed., December 31
Price: $8
Minnesota History Center
- 345 W Kellogg Blvd. St. Paul
'night, Mother - Workhouse Theatre presents a drama about the bonds between a woman, her mother, and the impact of the past.
TheaterPrice: $8-$12
The Warren
- 4400 Osseo Rd. Minneapolis
Once on This Island - Ten Thousand Things presents this musical based on the Caribbean story of a peasant girl who rescues and falls in love with a wealthy man. For tickets call 612.203.9502.
TheaterEvery week Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Fri., May 2 until Sun., May 18, 8:00pm
Price: $20
Open Book
- 1011 Washington Ave. S, Ste 200 Minneapolis
Once Upon a Mattress - This musical comedy is based on the fairy tale "The Princess and the Pea."
TheaterEvery week Friday, Saturday from Fri., April 18 until Sat., May 17, 8:00pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., April 20 until Sun., May 18, 2:00pm
Price: $17-$19
Lakeshore Players Theater
- 4820 Stewart Ave. White Bear Lake
Painful Adventures - This story of a performance artist combines Shakespeare with PowerPoint.
TheaterPrice: $10
Bryant-Lake Bowl Theatre
- 810 West Lake St. Minneapolis
St. Paul's Rocky Roots - A look at stone use in Minnesota buildings.
GalleriesDaily from Thu., March 27 until Sat., May 31
Landmark Center
- 75 W 5th St. St. Paul
Rockstar Storytellers: Undressed CabaretReadings & LecturesFirst Friday of every month from Fri., March 7 until Fri., June 6, 10:00pm
Price: $10
Bryant-Lake Bowl
- 810 W Lake St. Minneapolis
Run! Jump! Fly! Adventures in Action! - Action activities.
MuseumsDaily from Sat., February 23 until Sun., September 14
Minnesota Children's Museum
- 10 W 7th St. St. Paul
Ruth Kolker; Deb Grossfield: Merging Forms - Photography; mixed media.
GalleriesDaily from Thu., April 10 until Thu., May 29
Sabes Jewish Community Center
- 4330 S Cedar Lake Rd Golden Valley
Shana Kaplow; Judit Kurtag - Paintings; videography.
GalleriesDaily from Fri., April 11 until Sat., May 24
Franklin Art Works
- 1021 E Franklin Ave. Minneapolis
The Jewish-American identity has become increasingly blurred in the past decades as Wonder Bread substitutes for Challah, and Christmas trees rest beside the Menorah. But not speaking Hebrew or observing Shabbat doesn't discount the heritage Jewish-Americans still hold. Lynne Avadenka, Robyn Stoller Awend, and Geraldine Ondrizek come together to drive right at the heart of this identity crisis with their joint exhibit, "Speaking in Code," which adapts the Hebrew alphabet, Jewish texts, images, and symbols of Jewish ceremonial life in various art forms. Fabric, letterpress printing, book, and installation art are all utilized to get at the essential, perhaps unsolvable, questions of who we are, where we come from, and where we are going. The result is stark and eerie; the work abounds with blank spaces on print sheets and a circular hole that cuts through the center of a mock prayer book made from linen and silk. But the art is also alive, pregnant with the loaded emotion that lies between a jumble of English letters and one from the Hebrew alphabet, floating aimlessly, trying to find its place. Public reception 6-9 p.m. Saturday, May 3. — Amy Liberman
Studies From Life: Costume and Object Portraits from the Collections of the Hennepin History Museum - Photographs of the museum's costume collection.
MuseumsDaily from Thu., May 1 until Sun., August 31
Hennepin History Museum
- 2303 3rd Ave. S Minneapolis
The American Pilot - Walking Shadow Theatre Company presents the story of an American pilot who crash-lands in a war-torn country. For tickets call 612.375.0300.
TheaterEvery week Thursday, Friday, Saturday from Fri., May 2 until Sat., May 24, 7:30pm
Every week Sunday from Sun., May 4 until Sun., May 18, 3:00pm
Price: $14-$16
Minneapolis Theater Garage
- 711 W Franklin Ave. Mpls
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 Lure of Shoes: Cultural Connections 1840-2007 - A collection of shoes worn by various people.
MuseumsDaily from Thu., May 1 until Sun., August 31
Hennepin History Museum
- 2303 3rd Ave. S Minneapolis
The Mystical Magical Worlds of Sindibad and Rijah - Paintings showcasing the artists' collaboration.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 26 until Sun., May 18
Stevens Square Center For The Arts
- 1905 3rd Ave. S Minneapolis
The Shape of Time - A history of postwar modernism and its alternatives.
MuseumsDaily from Tue., June 13 until Sun., August 3
Walker Art Center
- 1750 Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis
Thirty Days in Frogtown - with Colleen Kruse & Karen Paurus
Every week Friday, Saturday, Sunday from Fri., May 2 until Sun., May 25, 6:00pm
Jitters Martini Bar And Cabaret
- 205 E Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis
Trisha Brown is an artist of and for our time, and has been for over 30 years. She began walking on walls and dancing on New York City rooftops in the hectic post-modern era of the 1960s. Since then she has made excursions into opera, visual art, even robotics. Her movement suggests the fluid architecture of, say, a liquefied Weisman museum: flowing in eccentric and unpredictable ways while maintaining a clarity of design that dazzles both the mind and the eye. This week, the Walker Art Center inaugurates "The Year of Trisha" with a show of her drawings that opens with a live performance by Brown in which she synthesizes dance and drawing by improvising movement across a large piece of paper with charcoal and pastel. Next week her company of superbly articulate dancers performs new and classic Brown works at Northrop Auditorium, including the splendid "Foray Forêt" to the eerie strains of a marching band playing from the lobby; "I Love My Robots" with, yes, honest-to-goodness robots (and one live dancer); and "Present Tense," a new work to music by that iconic innovator John Cage. One of the most articulate artists around, Brown will talk about her career in dance and the visual arts at a "Talking Art and Dance" event on April 22. Then she'll be back in July to remount several site-based works from the 1970s, including a work in which the dancers float on rafts in Loring Pond. Kudos to the Walker and Northrop for bringing us so many aspects of Brown, a major 20th-century artist who is still rocking and invigorating the 21st. Opening reception with dance/drawing performance by Brown is free at 7 p.m. (tickets available at 6 p.m. in the Bazinet Lobby) Thursday, April 17; free artist's talk 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 22; dance performance is $25-$42 at 8 p.m. Friday, April 25 at Northrop Auditorium (84 Church St. SE, Minneapolis; call 612.375.7600 for tickets).
— Linda Shapiro
U.S. Women's Open Figurines - Life-size figurines of the world's top female golfers.
GalleriesDaily from Tue., April 15 until Mon., June 30
Galleria
- 69th St. and France Ave. Minneapolis
One doesn't need a use Twitter account, an emoticon on a LiveJournal entry, or a link to Google maps to understand that the ways we express and comprehend the meaning of "where" is changing with new technology. This is the general premise of Intermedia Arts ongoing show, "W(e are)Here," a multimedia exhibit that explores the new frontier of "place" physically, technologically, and emotionally. Works include artistic visualizations of hard data, interactive elements, and emotional renderings of location. This Thursday, from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., guests can partake in a "Psychogeographic Mapmaking Party," which, while it sounds like a mouthful, is really more of an adventure. Participants will be sent off in small groups on tours where routes will be dictated by a rolling of dice. Using a wall canvas, Google Earth, a wall projector, and some booze, tour details and memories will then be layered onto one another to create a map of experiences. An art party featuring live music, food and drinks, and a presentation of the final map will be celebrated the next day from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. — Jessica Armbruster
Whose Piss is This? - Prints by Aesthetic Apparatus.
GalleriesDaily from Sat., April 26 until Tue., May 20
First Amendment Gallery
- 1101 Stinson Blvd. NE Minneapolis
Chris Castle - in the Gallery
Every week Friday
Price: free; $8 after 10:30 pm
The Lounge
- 411 2nd Ave. N Minneapolis
Competitive ImprovComedyEvery week Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 8:00pm
Every week Friday, Saturday, 10:30pm
Price: $8-$12
ComedySportz Comedy Club
- Calhoun Square Minneapolis
Cornbread HarrisEvery week Friday, 6:00pm
Loring Pasta Bar
- 327 14th Ave. SE Minneapolis
DJ Mr TimEvery week Friday
Picosa
- 65 Main St. SE #143 Minneapolis
DJ Sarge - in the Cathedral
Every week Friday
Price: free; $8 after 10:30 pm
The Lounge
- 411 2nd Ave. N Minneapolis
Dueling PianosEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 7:00pm
Every week Friday, Saturday, 5:00pm
Price: $4-$8
The Shout! House Dueling Pianos
- 650 Hennepin Ave. S, Ste 160 Minneapolis
Frisky Fridays - with DJ D. Mil; DJ Jesse
Every week Friday
Price: $6
Jersey's Bar And Grill
- 6449 Concord Blvd. E Minneapolis
Front Porch Swingin' Liquor PigsEvery week Friday, 7:00pm
Eagles Club - The Nest
- 2507 E 25th St. Minneapolis
Jake Encinas - in the Main Room
Every other week Friday
Price: free; $8 after 10:30 pm
The Lounge
- 411 2nd Ave. N Minneapolis
James WallaceEvery week Friday, 6:00pm
Loring Pasta Bar
- 327 14th Ave. SE Minneapolis
Jeremy Boettcher TrioEvery week Friday, Saturday, 7:00pm
Giapponese Sushi
- 10060 Citywalk Dr. Woodbury
Jet - pop; house
Every week Friday, 9:00pm
Price: $5
Barfly
- 711 Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis
Kilt Night & Traditional Irish SessionFirst Friday of every month
Merlins Rest
- 3601 E Lake St. Minneapolis
Ray EvangelistaEvery week Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, 7:00pm
Price: free
Hunan Garden
- 380 Cedar St. Minneapolis
Salsa NightEvery week Friday, 10:00pm
Dixie's On Grand
- 695 Grand Ave. St. Paul
Wagon QuizEvery week Friday, 5:30pm
The Little Wagon
- 420 S 4th St. Minneapolis