Lakota Winter Count –– Minneapolis Institute of Art https://new.artsmia.org/programs/teachers-and-students/teaching-the-arts/artwork-in-focus/lakota-winter-count
Shop Lakota Winter Count Winter Count, 20th century Lakȟóta Pigment on canvas GIFT
Shop Lakota Winter Count Winter Count, 20th century Lakȟóta Pigment on canvas GIFT
November 11, 2023 – May 27, 2024 | Galleries 301-304 | Free What happens when Native American and American art is seen together, rather than in separate places? Might we look at these artworks in a new way? What stories and connections emerge from this new way of being together? These are some of the questions that guided a collaboratively reimagined suite of galleries. This Indigenous-led, consensus-based curatorial experiment is based on Dakota philosophies and ways of being
Lamar Petersen American, born 1974, The Late Spring Arrival, 2022 Oil on canvas, Gift
June 15, 2019 – November 24, 2019 | Gallery 203 | Free Exhibition The history of Chinese art is chiefly a history of painting. That’s because in China, painting has always been regarded as supreme—the only visual art form pure and lyrical enough to stand on an equal footing with poetry and contemplative thought. In traditional Chinese culture, paintings provided pleasure for the eye and, more significantly, an opportunity for learning and spiritual cultivation
Reimagining the Lystra Scene, 2016 Ink on paper 118 1/8 × 78 3/4 in. (300 × 200 cm) Gift
Gift of Funds from Andy and Meg Ubel in honor of Mia’s Docent class of 2015. © Christi
permanent collection galleries with visitors; January 2015 Matching Gifts Make your gift
Ladd Collection, gift of Herschel V.
March 23, 2019 – April 26, 2020 | Mary Griggs Burke Gallery of Japanese Art (Galleries 251, 252, 253) | Free Exhibition From the golden age of Japanese ceramics at the turn of the 17th century to the avant-garde movements in the postwar era and up to the present day, Japanese ceramicists have sought inspiration in the natural world. This exhibition highlights the work of more than a dozen living Japanese women clay artists whose primarily nonfunctional works represent diverse evocations of or responses to the natural world
Aya, Japanese, born 1989, Physarum, 2017, glazed stoneware, 39 × 35 1/2 × 27 in., Gift
Gift of funds from Ziegler Inc. 79.10 Print Study Picks: Pride!