Black History at Mia –– Minneapolis Institute of Art https://new.artsmia.org/art-artists/explore/making-connections/black-history-at-mia
History at Mia Black History at Mia Celebrate the
History at Mia Black History at Mia Celebrate the
History at Mia Black History at Mia Celebrate the
September 23, 2020 – March 15, 2021 | Community Commons Gallery, First Floor | Free Exhibition In Summer 2020, Mia partnered with All Nations Indian Church, Indigenous Peoples Task Force, and SAMHSA Native Connections to help create a mural with the Keep the Fire Alive theater troupe. Watch the video below to learn more about the mural. From the Keep the Fire Alive theater troupe We are a Native youth theater troupe. Social distancing cancelled our performances. However, the need to express emotions, celebrate culture, and connect did not end
important to the group: traditional medicines, equality (Black
is Beautiful Celebrate Black History Month by learning
Oh, and DJ was black. ••• We know that museums can
An elaborate example of the Southern Black tradition
An elaborate example of the Southern Black tradition
work is vibrant and playful in composition, subject matter
October 26, 2019 – April 4, 2021 | Gallery 375 | Free Exhibition A collaboration of Mia and the Cultural Wellness Center, „The Enduring Soul“ presents artwork by African and African American artists that honors the connection between ancestors and the living, and between what is seen and the invisible. The artworks on view hold historical, personal, and community memory. Mia and the Cultural Wellness Center work to co-create methods for each organization to transform mainstream institutions
required for the African To emerge victorious No matter
an archivist in New York, and capture the changing lives