PAST ARTIST PROJECTS

Read about completed Creative CityMaking and Creative Response Fund projects, and learn about interactive public art projects chosen for the Creative City Challenge program.

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Photo: Northern Spark


 Creative CityMaking

2020 Census Complete Count (2019–2020)

Department of Neighborhood & Community Relations
Artists: Roxanne Anderson and Anna Meyer
City staff: Karen Moe and Alberder Gillespie

The census has long been a tool used by government to organize and provide resources to communities, but it has undercounted the same communities that are also underrepresented in decision-making.

By collaborating with community artists on the 2020 census, the City is acknowledging the historic racism of this tool and data collection process and is evaluating how racial equity can become an organizing principle of the City’s census activities.

Hearing Tenant Voices (2015–2019)

Department of Regulatory Services
Artists: Mankwe Ndosi, Reggie Prim and Griffen Jeffries
City staff: Kellie Jones, Nuria Rivera-Vandermyde, Karen Moe and Rose Lindsay

The Hearing Tenant Voices team gave a platform to tenants in Minneapolis around decisions involving housing inspections. The artists analyzed the department’s work in tenant engagement and created a three-phase project.

While all three phases were completed in 2019, the artists continue to consult with Regulatory Services.
Phase 1: Interactive theater workshops for Regulatory Services staff to promote deep personal reflection and build intercultural competency.
Phase 2: Community engagement activities to directly interact with and listen to tenants.
Phase 3 : Collaborative learning that brought City staff and tenants together to work on relevant housing issues.

Midtown Greenway Creative Wayfinding (2019–2020)

Department of Public Works
Artists: Molly Van Avery and Masanari Kawahara
City staff: Julieann Swanson

The greenway in the middle of Minneapolis needs both traditional and unconventional wayfinding elements so more people use it, particularly communities near the trail that are unaware of it or don’t feel welcome to use it.

Artists are providing creative insight into community needs and expanding the definition of wayfinding to include access and connection to the greenway for underserved and underrepresented communities.

Southside Green Zone Initiative (2019–2020)

Office of Sustainability
Artist: Rory Wakemup
City staff: Kelly Muellman

The Southside Green Zone initiative works to promote environmental health and justice in the Phillips and Cedar-Riverside neighborhoods. These low-income, high-BIPOC communities are overburdened with environmental issues.

The project artist is collaborating with City staff and community organizers to co-create and organize community-led solutions for:

• Green economy and anti-displacement
• Air, water and soil quality
• Healthy food access
• Environmental health and energy efficiency in housing

Creative Asset Mapping (2015–2017)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artists: Sha Cage and E.G. Bailey
City staff: Haila Maize and Kjersti Monson

This artist-staff partnership helped shape neighborhood planning by identifying important community strengths in Cedar-Riverside, a Minneapolis neighborhood that’s been home to new immigrant communities since the late 19th century.

The artists used creative methods to identify meaningful assets such as community celebrations, gathering places, creative activities and businesses, shifting how planners serve that community.

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Digital Equity (2015–2016)

Information Technology
Artists: Kirk Washington Jr. and Peter MacDonald
City staff: Elise Ebhardt and Otto Doll

The artist team promoted the development of digital literacy skills with a technology/arts festival in the Harrison neighborhood. The festival brought together a unique mix of community residents, technology professionals, local performers and neighborhood artists.

The gathering successfully created a transformational space centered on building relationships and community connections while increasing access to technology.

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Electoral Engagement (2015–2016)

City Clerk
Artist: Jeremiah Bey Ellison
City staff: Anissa Hollingshead and Casey Carl

The artist created a comic book that portrayed the workings of the City Clerk’s office and the City’s legislative process in a clear, simple and engaging way.

The comic book reflected electoral engagement as experienced by the community, not the City, to present itself as a relatable and trusted source of information.

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Dinkytown Small Area Plan (2013)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artists: Sam Ero-Phillips, Caroline Kent and Roger Cummings
City staff: Haila Maize

To increase input on a small area plan for Dinkytown, a neighborhood experiencing tremendous growth, this team of artists biked through the area with a “mobile engagement theater.” They captured the attention and voices of a young and diverse population, individuals who typically are not part of the conversation.

They also interviewed small-business owners along the Dinkytown commercial corridor. The input they gathered represented 40% of the plan data and brought hundreds of new voices to the planning process.

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Linden Hills Small Area Plan (2013)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artists: Sam Ero-Phillips, Caroline Kent and Roger Cummings
City staff: Paul Mogush

This artist team helped develop a small area plan for Linden Hills in southwest Minneapolis.

The artists interacted with neighborhood residents and worked with schools to engage youth as they shaped the long-term vision for land use, transportation and property development in the Linden Hills area.

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Penn Ave BRT Plan (2013)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artists: Ashley Hanson and Wing Young Huie
City staff: Jim Voll

This project was a collaboration between the City of Minneapolis and Hennepin County to rethink land uses and transportation along Penn Avenue North, an important commercial spine in North Minneapolis.

The artists engaged with residents and businesses along the corridor in a variety of ways to help them understand the project and express their needs and ideas for economic development, job creation, housing, beautification and livability. The team then circled back with the community to share what they heard. The project also considered transit access in and through North Minneapolis.

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Historic Capstone Study (2013)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artist: Witt Siasoco
City staff: Joe Bernard

The City wanted to analyze the findings of historic survey work conducted over the past 10 years. To engage residents and get their input on the buildings they thought were important or historically significant, the artist designed and conducted a public engagement campaign.

The campaign had high youth involvement and educated residents, businesses, schools and the general public about the research project and the city’s history. The project highlighted the main takeaways from 10 years of survey work and included an assessment of historic public sculpture throughout the city. This process helped shape preservation policy and development opportunities in Minneapolis for the coming generation.

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Southwest Light Rail Plan (2013)

Community Planning & Economic Development
Artist: Diane Willow
City staff: Beth Elliott and Paul Mogush

The project artist worked with CPED planners on the long-range land use and transportation interface between neighborhoods and businesses at five stations on the Southwest LRT line: Royalston Station, Van White Boulevard Station, Penn Avenue Station, West 21st Street Station and the West Lake Street Station.

The artist helped planners develop creative and impactful community engagement strategies, and she brought a fresh perspective to station area needs for infrastructure and development.

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Blueprint for Equitable Engagement (2015–2017)

Neighborhood & Community Relations
Artists: D.A. Bullock and Ariah Fine
City staff: Ayianna Kennerly and David Rubedor

This artist team used a colorful podium or “Equity Pulpit” to collect public commentary on the department’s five-year strategic plan for engaging all communities in Minneapolis.

The artists used the pulpit at block parties, street corners and neighborhood festivals to collect video comments from community members who were unlikely to take part in traditional engagement methods.

Creative City Challenge

Starting in 2013, this annual public art competition invited architects, landscape architects, urban designers, scientists and artists of all backgrounds to propose ideas for a temporary destination artwork that told a story about the community. The winning artworks showcased local creative talent and became narratives of community identity and the complex relationships within our urban landscape.

More importantly, the experience gave the winning artists valuable career training and development in the delivery of public art. They received a budget of $50,000 to create and install their artwork, and the experience often served as a launching pad to future professional opportunities.

This program was cut in 2020 as part of the City’s revised budget. The budget cuts were in response to the roughly $156 million projected revenue losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We remain committed to artist development and the delivery of public art for and about the community, and we look forward to resuming this or a similar public art program.

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Radical Playground (2019)

Artists: Candida Gonzalez and Mary Anne Quiroz
Location: The Commons

This installation invited participants to heal through play with whimsical interactive “alebrije” — animal sculptures inspired by dream creatures from the Caribbean, Mexico, the Pacific Islands and the Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples and cultures of Minnesota.

The piece was installed in the Commons and hosted programming throughout the summer.

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CarryOn Homes (2018)

Artists: Peng Wu, Zoe Cinel, Preston Drum, Shun Jie Yong, Aki Shibata
Location: The Commons

Made of more than 150 suitcases, this multifunctional pavilion shared the stories of immigrants in Minnesota. Shaped like a house, it was a space for people to come together and explore the concept of home.

The pavilion included interactive sculptures, a healing garden, a photo exhibit, a documentary film and a suitcase wall where people could post handwritten stories. It became a summerlong platform for public events and performances by and for immigrant communities.

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Orbacles (2017)

Artists: MINN_LAB
Location: The Commons

This triad of spherical environments connected visitors to the reality of climate change through the story of birds in Minnesota and the language of our senses.

As both a record and a speculation about the future from now through the end of the century, Orbacles communicated the current and anticipated shift of birds’ migration patterns due to species loss and other effects of climate change.

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Wolf and Moose (2016)

Artists: Christopher Lutter, Heid E. Erdrich, Kim Ford, Karl Stoerzinger, Coal Dorius and Missy Adzick
Location: Convention Center Plaza

Animated and illuminated, these spectacle-scale sculptures of a wolf and moose were constructed of found and recycled materials. Interactive features included stationary bicycles that people had to pedal to start animations of the animals breathing, their beating hearts and an illuminated, rotating Earth.

The pedaling also powered a small speaker that played recorded poetry and stories reflecting on our relationship with the animals and the Earth.

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mini_polis (2015)

Artists: Niko Kubota, Jon Reynolds and Micah Roth
Location: Convention Center Plaza

This 50-foot scale model of downtown Minneapolis was created in collaboration with city residents in a series of build workshops. The artist team collected stories and memories of Minneapolis neighborhoods to create a multimedia interface within the model.

The completed project was a landscape of plywood buildings scaled to downtown and surrounding neighborhoods. People could interact with the installation at a multimedia map station, where some of the buildings lit up and played the neighborhood stories and hopes that workshop participants had shared.

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Balancing Ground (2014)

Artists: Amanda Lovelee, Christopher Field, Kyle Waites and Sarah West
Location: Convention Center Plaza

Evoking the concept of balance, this skeletal wooden structure housed six rows of pairs of wooden benches and a playground-style seesaw. Activated by the presence of as few as one or as many as 100 people, this welcoming interactive space was continually transforming.

Motion sensors within the space and on the dynamic seesaw triggered audio of voices talking about balance and the absence of it. Complex shadows, patterns and colors were woven throughout from an overhead canopy of prisms. This was a space for both playful participation and quiet reflective moments. It was a space without walls — open to all — built on a foundation of community voices.

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MIMMI (2013)

Artists: INVIVIA and Urbain DRC – Brad Cantrell, Jack Cochran, Carl Koepcke and Allen Sayegh
Location: Convention Center Plaza

This large inflatable balloon-like sculpture was suspended from a slender structure. Cloud-like in concept, it hovered 30 feet above ground and gathered the mood of Minneapolis residents and visitors from online platforms.

MIMMI analyzed and acted on this input in real time, creating abstracted light displays at nighttime or misting to provide a cooling microclimate during the day. Whether the city was elated following a Minnesota Twins win or frustrated from the afternoon commute, MIMMI responded to social media behavior throughout the city, day and night.

Creative Response Fund 2022 grantees

To provide creative healing and support to Minneapolis communities that continue to be directly impacted by the lasting effects of the pandemic and the ongoing challenges related to the murder of George Floyd, we have created the Creative Response Fund. This allows us to mobilize the unique and specialized skills of artists to respond to community needs and engage with and expand the impact of community healing and support.

These grant dollars were also intended to recognize the often-unpaid labor of artists as they responded to multiple health and racism emergencies and to mobilize their creative resources to address community needs.

To get resources to the artists and the community as quickly as possible, we collaborated with Arts Midwest to act as fiscal agent to manage the funds.

Sydney Latimer (Divinewords) and Meyer Warren (St. Paul Slim)

A Poem for the Southside (Acts of Radical Remembrance)

Sydney Latimer (Divinewords) and Meyer Warren (St. Paul Slim)

A Poem for the Southside project promotes healing through street art focused on ancestry work and remembrance. Divine and Slim will create a series of nine public artworks in the form of temporary shrines and memorials to be displayed on Lake Street to promote community healing. The nine shrines represent one shrine for each minute that George Floyd suffered before he died. These shrines will honor heroes, artists, and other victims of state violence from Minnesota and who are now revered as ancestors.

About Sydney Latimer (Divinewords)

Divinewords (them/they) is an artist, writer, and activist moved by the tragedy of the George Floyd uprisings. Divine quit their job of 13 years in retail (grocery) to become a full-time artist to promote community healing and ancestor work through Radical Acts of Remembrance. Using shrines, memorials, and altars as a form of macabre street art, Divine transforms ordinary places into sacred spaces where people can heal from grief caused by loss, state abuse, and isolation from the pandemic. This unique street art focuses on how ritual, memorials, and shrines help us understand the human condition.

About Meyer Warren (St. Paul Slim)

Meyer Warren (He/him) is an emcee and visual artist. He is the first artist to have his visual art displayed at the State Capitol in the Attorney General’s office and has a permanent installation at The Landmark Center in St. Paul, MN. He was a featured artist at the Hennepin Theater Trust in the ‘Made Here’ series and has had over seven solo art exhibitions. As an emcee he has shared the stage with artists such as Prof, Atmosphere, MC Lyte, A Tribe Called Quest, KRS-1, the Wu-Tang Clan, and Wiz Khalifa.

Ashembaga Jaafaru and Sterling Miller

Art for Liberation

Ashembaga Jaafaru and Sterling Miller

Art for Liberation is a writing workshop that cultivates a safe space for community healing. Ashe and Sterling will also collaborate with artists of different disciplines to positively impact workshop participants and will focus the healing process on the intentional use of words.

The Riverside Park Sound Garden (self-guided) event was presented on May 14, 2022 from noon to 4:00 pm. For details on all events, go to: https://waveletscreative.org/riverside-park-sound-garden/

About Ashembaga (Ashe) Jaafaru

Ashembaga (Ashe) Jaafaru (she/her) is a performer, writer, and creative idea-maker who creates art for liberation. Ashe uses theatrical body wisdom + African diasporic religious concepts to capture the emotions, feelings, and physicality of black folx for healing. Her practices honor family + lineage, mind + body, artistic creation, and help in aiding understandings of the universe within multiple realities.

About Sterling Miller

Sterling Miller (they/he) is an interdisciplinary community healing artist, actor, and raiser of the dead from the unseated territory of the Dakota and Anishinaabe people. Miller’s practice is rooted in storytelling via the medium of poetry, theatrical performance, and movement. Miller strives to create space that is safe for all black folx, aids in building solidarity and supports and displays free authentic speech.

Denzel Belin and Ricardo Beaird

Brunch at the End of the World

Denzel Belin and Ricardo Beaird

Brunch at the End of the World is a theatrical work-in-progress created and researched by Black queer performing artists with a primary focus on addressing the intersectionality of being Black and queer in Minneapolis. The work will be presented to audiences to gather insight and feedback and end with the development of a final script.

About Denzel Belin

Denzel Belin (he/him) is a Black bisexual Minneapolis-based writer, director, actor, producer, and improviser. Belin is a longstanding cast member and writer at Brave New Workshop and a staff writer for AWF magazine. He serves as the Artistic Director for Threshold Theater, whose mission is to produce fresh LGBTQ works. He currently writes and performs for Queer Window an all-queer sketch show based in New York City. Belin recently presented a longform collection of solo sketches and storytelling, With Love, From Washingtonem> for the Blackness Is… Festival in Minneapolis.

About Ricardo Beaird

Ricardo Beaird (they/them) is a Twin Cities-based theater maker originally from Nashville, Tennessee. Their work is informed by the pursuit of healing through storytelling, the unfinished business of ghosts and dis/connection through the internet. Beaird is an advisory council member with the queer-led theater collective Lightning Rod and an artist council member for the 2021 Northern Spark arts festival. Currently, Ricardo is the Community Development Director at Springboard for the Arts, whose mission is to support artists with the tools to make a living and a life and to steward just, equitable communities.

Briauna Williams and Khalif Alogba.
Read more about HeART & Music here.

HeART & Music

Marcela Michelle, Keila Anali Saucedo and Suzanne Victoria Cross

HeART & Music will host several free community collaborative workshops of healing through music and art making. The workshops will be designed for youth and adults on the Northside and will explore storytelling, fellowship and creativity offering participants new tools to help cope with grief, stress, and trauma.

About Briauna Williams

Briauna Williams (she/her) is an acrylic artist, published illustrator, muralist, community engagement artist, teaching artist, and curator of healing events for black/brown youth and families. In 2021 Briauna created a coloring book for Minnesotans around self-care and therapeutic practices.

About Khalif Alogba

Khalif Alogba (he/him) is a DJ, curator and aspiring photographer working from the lens of Nigerian culture and bridging the gap between Black Americans through events, food, and discussions. Khalif specializes in sharing the love of Afro beats and has curated Nigerian cultural festivals celebrating Yoruba fashion, food, and music.

Lupe Castillo and Teresa Ortiz.
Read more about HeartSpeaks Healing Circles here.

HeartSpeaks Healing Circles

Lupe Castillo and Teresa Ortiz

HeartSpeaks Healing Circles will offer facilitated healing spaces for under resourced LatinX/BIPOC youth and families. Healing will be offered through writing and poetry workshops with themes such as Strength, Resistance and Resiliency. HeartSpeaks writing and poetry workshops will be LatinX centered. They will affirm identity through activities that include culturally relevant traditional healing, self-reflective writings, and ongoing mentorship so that writers can deepen their self-awareness, sense of power and purpose.

About Lupe Castillo

Lupe Castillo, La Poetress (XicanaIndia/she/her) has created HeartSpeaks Poetry and Spoken Word Arts Activated Radical collaborations. Co-creating sacred spaces to strengthen racial justice and healing is her life’s work. Historical community resistance to racism and systemic refusal of resources calls for HeartSpeaks within the communities most impacted by racism and system barriers to well-being.

About Teresa Ortiz

Teresa Ortiz (she/her) is a writer, spoken word poet, and educator. An immigrant from Mexico in Minnesota and a member of Palabristas. Teresa writes in English and Spanish to honor her ancestors and her loved ones, aiming to describe her identity, the land where she has lived and the lives that have touched her own. Her work as a writer includes a book of testimonials of Maya women, and several poems and short stories published in chapbooks and anthologies. She has performed her spoken word poetry at many venues, events, and festivals throughout the Twin Cities.

Susana De León and Olinca Acosta

Semillero: Sowing Artful Healing

Susana De León and Olinca Acosta

The Semillero: Sowing Artful Healing project will instruct and engage participants in the creation of individualized, functional pieces of art that are appropriate for each participant’s personal and collective circumstances. Four areas of learning will be offered to promote healing, each based on how mindfulness and identity reaffirmation can be applied in conjunction with different art media. Each session will allow participants to connect to an ancient culture that remains alive and ever evolving. Building on the creative process, participants will incorporate healing practices and other acquired knowledge to face stressors and approach self-healing.

About Susana De León

Susana De León (she/her) is a traditional healer, community organizer, cultural activist, and nationally recognized immigration attorney. Susana co-founded the movement of Aztec Dance primarily focused on the impact that learning Indigenous arts and culture has on the wellbeing of youth and their families in Minnesota. She leads community healing circles and teaches Indigenous approaches to creating connections with ancestral medicine and expanding daily practices to strengthen the spirit. She has co-founded several arts as medicine dance groups in urban and rural Minnesota and is an elder mentor to young dance leaders in Chicago, Seattle, and California.

About Olinca Acosta

Olinca Acosta (she/they) is a community organizer, Aztec dancer, and traditional healing apprentice in South Minneapolis. Her transnational upbringing in Mexico and the United States allows for her work to focus on, and advance, multicultural and multigenerational approaches to climate legislation in the state of Minnesota. She has assisted in healing circles and ceremonies and has led beadwork workshops that allow participants to create their own medicine protection and medicine through art.

Aaron Johnson Ortiz and Gustavo Boada.
Read more about Metamorfosis here.

Metamorfosis

Gustavo Boada and Aaron Johnson Ortiz

Metamorfosis channels the Mexican tradition of Alebrije art into a process of community-engaged cultural reawakening for the Latino/a/x/e communities in Minneapolis, with a strong focus on East Lake Street. Artists Gustavo Boada and Aaron Johnson-Ortiz will create four works of public art (puppets, movable murals, or installations) in collaboration with the community to help process and heal years of trauma after the murder of George Floyd, community uprising and COVID-19. Metamorfosis will uplift and heal with a strong focus on revitalizing Latinx peoples through cultural heritage and artistic traditions.

About Gustavo Boada

Gustavo Boada (he/him) is a theater-based multidisciplinary Peruvian artist with more than 25 years working in professional theater in Peru, Chile, Puerto Rico, New York, Vermont, and Philadelphia. Since moving to Minneapolis in 2007, he has created countless puppets for Mayday Parades at Heart of the Beast, BareBones Theater, and others. He co-founded Little Coyote Puppet Theater and has toured puppet shows for diverse community organizations throughout Minnesota. In 2021, Gustavo created four giant Catrina puppets that were presented in two Day of the Dead parades on Lake Street, and at the Midtown Global Market and Mercado Central.

About Aaron Johnson-Ortiz

Aaron Johnson-Ortiz (he/him) is a Mexican/Latino cultural organizer, public artist, and muralist. His art focuses on workers’ struggles, immigrant rights, Latino/a/x/e culture, and Mexican identities. His Workers United in Struggle mural was named as 2018’s Best Mural by City Pages. He has 15 years of experience working in the fields of community and union organizing, collaborative arts co-creation, and cultural advocacy. Most recently, he served as Director of Arts and Cultural Engagement at CLUES (Comunidades Latinas Unidas En Servicio), and amongst other projects, coordinated several Latinx arts and cultural-engagement initiatives on Lake Street.

Melodee K Strong and Ariane Jackson

Northside 365

Melodee K Strong and Ariane Jackson

Northside 365 is a year-long project that includes healing workshops focused on Northside youth to create a collaborative mural about healing through storytelling and sharing. The artist team will work with community to generate ideas for the future of the Northside and then work with youth to develop and implement a mural design. Once a design is confirmed, the mural will be painted with the Northside community at a location along the West Broadway corridor where the majority of the uprising occurred following the murder of George Floyd.

About Melodee K Strong

Melodee Strong (she/her) received her BFA from MCAD in Illustration. and she also holds a Master's in Arts-Education from the University of Minnesota. She teaches visual art in North Minneapolis and is an adjunct faculty member at Minneapolis College of Art and Design (MCAD), Augsburg University, Metro State University, and the University of Minnesota. When she is not teaching, she is a freelance illustrator and mural maker. Melodee has participated in gallery exhibitions, public speaking events, and community art projects. Her multicultural illustrations in children's’ books have earned her many awards and she has completed over 60 murals in the Twin Cities and abroad.

About Ariane Jackson

Ariane Jackson (she/her) is a self-taught artist who paints portraits. Originally an infant caregiver and volunteer in the community, Ari has blended her art skills with her eighteen years of community service, bringing about her two passions of art and community building. Ari enjoys celebrating and uplifting those around her through the arts. Ari's involvement with the community has allowed her to paint at the State Capital, in celebration of the Nations within Minneapolis and St. Paul. Recently, Ari has assisted with murals in south Minneapolis, following the George Floyd protests.

Missy Whiteman and TopBear

OWAMNI: Expanded Cinema Experience

Missy Whiteman and Thomasina TopBear

OWAMNI: Expanded Cinema Experience is a new form of visual Indigenous storytelling and collective healing infused with Film, Public Art, XR experience utilizing 360 VR, music performances, dancing, and community participation. During this multifaceted event Missy and Thomasina will collaborate with other artists to create two live painted 8’ x 8’ murals, specially designed seed packets and educational coloring pages about Owámniyonni – along with healing performances by Native artists. This gathering welcomes all people to come together at this Dakhóta sacred site.

About Missy Whiteman

Missy Whiteman (he/her) (Northern Arapaho and Kickapoo) is an Emmy nominated writer, director, producer, interdisciplinary publiX artist and curator. Whiteman understands her work to be a voice for her ancestors’ stories, ancestral wisdom, practice of art as ceremony and healing through creative process.

About Top Bear

TopBear (she/her/winyan) (Oglala Lakota and Santee Dakota Nations) is a self-taught artist specializing in large-scale murals. Thomasina has organized several events focused on empowering and creating safe spaces for fellow artists to practice their crafts. She draws influences from her culture while using art to express thoughts on community, social justice, spirituality, and togetherness. TopBear co-founded City Mischief Murals, an all BIPOC artist collective centered on healing through art and is a board member of the international all female crew Few & Far Women.

Sanford Moore and Greta Oglesby

Roots

Greta Oglesby and Sanford Moore

Roots are two concerts offered to the North Minneapolis community as a healing balm using the unifying power of music to ease collective pain. The artists will curate and weave together a moving, inspiring, and spirit-filled tapestry of songs designed to heal the soul. The pay-what-you-can concerts will take place at the Capri Theater on West Broadway, in Minneapolis and will feature Spirituals, Jazz, Blues, and Gospel music.

About Greta Oglesby

Greta Oglesby (she/her) is an esteemed veteran of the American theater community. Her performances have been described as ravishing, indelible, powerful, magnificent, heartbreaking, and brilliant. She has performed in major roles on the stages of Ten Thousand Things Theater, Penumbra Theatre, the Guthrie Theater, and the Children’s Theatre Company. Greta published a book in 2012 entitled Mama ‘N ‘Nem, Handprints on My Life. In 2016 she wrote the play Handprints as a companion to the book, which was produced as a film by Ten Thousand Things Theater Company and Freestyle Films.

About Bayou Bay

Bayou Bay creates Affirmation Mirrors, artworks composed of mixed-media art. Themes embody nature from the micro to the cosmic, black and collective liberation, healing trauma, time, portals, geometry, setting intentions for affirmations, asking questions, symbols, and identity exploration. The waters of the HaHa Wakph (Mississippi) inform the artist’s thematic work and are a major influence in their life. They also create murals, art installations, and digital illustrations.

Teddy Grimes and Kimani Beard.
Read more about Summer Cypher here.

Summer Cypher

Teddy Grimes and Kimani Beard

Summer Cypher will create authentic hip-hop spaces where people in community can immerse themselves into a process of self-exploration and critical reflection within the raw elements of hip-hop culture. Self-exploration and having a critical analysis of the world and its impact on oneself, is a major part of the process of mastering any aspect of hip-hop; dance, graffiti, Djing, MCing, even history and philosophy. Summer Cypher will provide intentional space for the community to explore the raw, uncut, and authentic expressions of hip-hop in a safe, all inclusive, interracial, intercultural and intergenerational healing environment.

About Teddy Grimes

Teddy Grimes (he/him) is a multi-disciplinary artist and co-founder of Summer Cypher. For him making art was a choice between life and death. Seeing his community consumed with addiction, he dreamt of ways out of the cycle. He trained in video production in high school and profiles the people, art, and movements that can relate to struggle and share an intrinsic need for expression to survive. Grimes documents the culture of hip-hop, from the inside which gives his work a unique outlook and intimacy.

About Kimani Beard

Kimani Beard (he/him) is an artist and co-founder of Summer Cypher whose passion is connecting with community. His work expresses the true core values of grass-roots hip-hop culture and meaning. This connection has guided Kimani on his path to understand people through the sound-art and vibrations that are part of natural self-healing. Summer Cypher was created to provide healing and relate to community through their daily struggles and adversities.

Marcie Rendon, Sigwan Rendon and Serene Eidem

Unconquered nation

Marcie Rendon, Sigwan Rendon and Serene Eidem

Unconquered Nation is a workshop series providing skilled leadership tailored to support Native women known as Little Earth Protectors so they can process recent traumatic events. The workshops consist of facilitated creative writing with publication and Reiki healing sessions.

About Marcie Rendon

Marcie Rendon (she/her) (White Earth Ojibwe) is an accomplished author of three adult novels and children’s books as well as poems featured in numerous anthologies. She has 40+ years of experience working in communities, introducing women’s leadership training with Meyer Warren (aka St. Paul Slim). In 2013 and 2020 Rendon, in collaboration with poet Diego Vazquez, taught poetry and spoken word skills to incarcerated women in three county jails. The team published 46+ chapbooks of the women’s poetry and in 2017 received the Spoken Word Immersion Fellowship to curate an exhibit by incarcerated women and held at The Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis.

About Sigwan Rendon and Serene Eidem

Sigwan Rendon (she/her) (Bois Forte Ojibwe) and Serene Eidem (she/her) (White Earth Ojibwe) are beadwork artists, writers and trained Master Reiki healers who are building relationships with the women of Little Earth Protectors. Sigwan is knowledgeable in traditional plant medicines and Serene is a healing touch practitioner who has collaborated with Rendon in the support group processes. Both are also mother’s and deeply invested in the healing of Native women.

Creative Response Fund 2021 grantees

To provide creative healing and support to Minneapolis communities that continue to be directly impacted by the lasting effects of the pandemic and the ongoing challenges related to the murder of George Floyd, we have created the Creative Response Fund. This allows us to mobilize the unique and specialized skills of artists to respond to community needs and engage with and expand the impact of community healing and support.

These grant dollars were also intended to recognize the often-unpaid labor of artists as they responded to multiple health and racism emergencies and to mobilize their creative resources to address community needs.

To get resources to the artists and the community as quickly as possible, we collaborated with Arts Midwest to act as fiscal agent to manage the funds.

Samuel Ero-Phillips and Jordan M. Hamilton

A Budget is a Moral Document

Samuel Ero-Phillips and Jordan M. Hamilton

The primary objective of A Budget is a Moral Document is to create public art via murals and zines as a backdrop for civic engagement by community members around how the budget for the City of Minneapolis could affect them in various ways. Samuel and Jordan's goal will be to represent a new vision for the budget reflecting the desires of people on Lake Street.

About Samuel Ero-Phillips

Samuel Ero-Phillips is an artist, designer and educator. He holds a bachelor’s degree in architecture and studio arts from the University of Minnesota, a master’s in architecture from the University of Illinois and a Fulbright fellowship to Nigeria. Samuel has actively participated in the Twin Cities art community for years.

About Jordan M. Hamilton

Jordan M. Hamilton is a multi-disciplinary visual artist. His work explores the embodiment of spirit and expression of cosmic and elemental energy through semi-abstract narratives. Since 2003, his artistic practice has been rooted in graffiti art, followed by mural making, sculpture, installation and digital arts.

L to R: Nimo Farah, JG Everest and Chavonn Williams Shen

Art + Nature

JG Everest, Nimo Farah and Chavonn Williams Shen

Art + Nature is a series of free outdoor community workshops created by artist organizers Charonn Williams Shen, JG Everest and Nimo Farah. Local community members will be led by a team of teaching artists in creating a site-specific Spring Sound Garden sound + performance installation at Riverside Park in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood in Minneapolis.

The Riverside Park Sound Garden (self-guided) event was presented on May 14, 2022 from noon to 4:00 pm. For details on all events, go to: https://waveletscreative.org/riverside-park-sound-garden/

About JG Everest

JG Everest is a composer and multidisciplinary artist and creates immersive, interactive outdoor sound installations. Designed to cultivate healing in community, his work invites audiences into a deeper relationship with the natural world and with their own qualities of inner peace. He is a 2019 McKnight Artist Composer Fellow.

About Nimo Farah

Nimo Farah is a storyteller and artist. With a deep understanding of the power of storytelling, she seeks to affirm and empower the leadership potential of Somali youth via stories informed by Somali traditions and culture. Nimo works to understand how to better use arts and culture to engage immigrant youth in making the challenging transition of living in a dual culture. She is a recipient of a 2014 Bush Fellowship.

About Chavonn Williams Shen

Chavonn Williams Shen is a teaching artist at Upstream Arts. She teaches English at Century College, poetry classes at The Loft and in the MN Prison Writers Workshop. She was a first runner-up for The Los Angeles Review Flash Fiction Contest and a Best of the Net Award finalist.

L to R: Ifrah Mansour, Alison Osberg and Sagirah Shadid

Archway Healing

Ifrah Mansour, Alison Osberg and Sagirah Shadid

Archway Healing presents multi-media sculptors celebrating BIPOC communities’ and their intimate healing practices. Participants are invited to sit beneath archways and listen to audio stories that will emanate from lanterns above each archway. Audio recordings will be developed from community events and story sharing. Recordings of community members and elders will share healing stories promoting a sense of belonging and well-being.

About Ifrah Mansour

Ifrah Mansour is a multimedia artist and educator. Her artwork explores trauma through the eyes of children to shine a light on refugee resilience. Her critically-acclaimed works include the play How to Have Fun in a Civil War; her first national museum exhibition, Can I touch it; her visual poem I am a Refugee and the film My Aqal.

About Alison Osberg

Alison Osberg is a non-binary and queer artist, fabricator, and carpenter. They have performed at Bedlam Theatre, Open Eye Theatre, and In the Heart of the Beast Theatre, as well as The Freezer Theatre (Rifi, Iceland), AIDA Gallery (Osaka, Japan), and Café Concret (Montreal, Quebec).

About Sagirah Shadid

Sagirah Shahid is a Black American Muslim poet, arts educator, and performance artist. A recipient of awards and fellowships including; The Loft Literary Center, Minnesota Center for Book Arts, The Twin Cities Media Alliance, and Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture & Design.

Laura Mann Hill and Daren Mann Hill

Ayeeyo Youth Stories

Marcela Michelle, Keila Anali Saucedo and Suzanne Victoria Cross

Through Ayeeyo Youth Stories, three Speaking Out Collective (SOC) artists will deepen their relationship with Ayeeyo, a Somali family-owned daycare on E. Lake Street. SOC artists will tell and create original stories with Ayeeyo youth and will integrate hands-on activities to promote healing for staff and youth. Daren Mann Hill will create a new mural on the family’s building next door, and make needed repairs on an existing mural on the Ayeeyo building.

About Laura Mann Hill

Laura Mann Hill is a theatre artist, director, arts educator, administrator and member of Speaking Out Collective. She, along with Maria Asp has been engaged in critical literacy, storytelling, creative writing and theater programming for children for over 25 years.

About Daren Mann Hill

Daren Mann Hill is a multi-disciplinary visual artist. His artistic practice includes mural making, painting, sculpture, photography and digital art. Daren works with multiracial, economically diverse and multigenerational communities. He has been the lead muralist on several projects in Minneapolis and St. Paul.

Brujería for Beginners opening night at Mixed Blood Theatre Company. Photo by Kristen Stoeckeler

Brujería for Beginners

Marcela Michelle, Keila Anali Saucedo and Suzanne Victoria Cross

Brujería for Beginners (Witchcraft for Beginners) written by Keila Anali Saucedo was performed November 5th - 20th, 2021 at the Mixed Blood Theatre Company. The play presented a cultural gathering in the form of a bilingual play. Directed by Marcela Michelle in her directorial debut and Suzanne Victoria Cross, a team of artists presented the story of Griselda and her family in transition - experiencing loss, grief and ultimate renewal and awakening. Creative workshops and design tours were also planned.

About Marcela Michelle

Marcela Michelle is the artistic director of 20% Theatre Company Twin Cities. She is also the artistic co-director of Lightning Rod, a transgender-led arts organism dedicated to legacy, development, and opportunities for QTGNC (Queer Trans Gender Non Conforming) artists. Her solo practice focuses primarily on simultaneity, im/mutability, and the platonic ideal host.

About Keila Anali Saucedo

Keila Anali Saucedo is a playwright, performing artist and theatre maker. They have been writing, storytelling, lying, and creating travesura (mischief) since their childhood. They have presented work with Patrick's Cabaret, Lightning Rod, Mother Goose's Bedtime Stories, Teatro del Pueblo, 20% Theatre Company, and Pangea World Theater.

About Suzanne Victoria Cross

Suzanne Victoria Cross is an actor, teaching artist and stage manager. She has worked with many local theater companies including touring with CLIMB Theatre as an Actor-Educator, Penumbra Theatre Company’s Education and Outreach Program, Lyric Arts Academy and Teatro del Pueblo. She is currently the Production Manager of Pangea World Theater and the Resident Stage Manager for Lightning Rod.

L to R: E.G. Bailey, Tahiel Jimenez Medina and KOBI

CellFilms

E.G. Bailey, Tahiel Jimenez Medina and KOBI

Film is a powerful medium for telling stories and revealing hard truths. CellFilms will offer classes to community members who would like to learn cellphone filmmaking as a tool for empowerment and as a medium to share their own stories. Participants will learn how to create short documentaries about themselves and their communities.

About E.G. Bailey

E.G. Bailey is an artist, filmmaker and co-founder of Tru Ruts Endeavor, Freestyle Films, and the MN Spoken Word Association (MNSWA). His latest film Keon was nominated for Best Short Narrative by Blackstar Film Festival in 2020. E.G. Bailey was named one of the New Faces of Independent Film in 2017 by Filmmaker Magazine.

About Tahiel Jimenez Medina

Tahiel Jimenez Medina is a Colombian first-generation immigrant director. He tells stories in dedication to migrant mamas. His current work focuses on the representation of immigrant and Colombian culture through a spiritual and personal lens. His project Día a Día, 2020: A Day at a Time was selected by Twin Cities PBS: TPT as part of their highly competitive “The 2020 Project.”

About KOBI

KOBI is a multidisciplinary Liberian/Ghanian artist working primarily in film and photography. An alumnus of St.Cloud State University, he studied Integrated Media and Film production. He believes that the art we make is an extension of who we were, who we are and who we want to become. “The truth is tricky, and the goal is not to create an absolute truth but rather provoke conversations that question how we think.”

Alfred Sanders and Prakshi Malik

Forgotten Souls

Alfred Sanders and Prakshi Malik

Forgotten Souls is a short documentary film about police brutality and the traumatic effect it has on families and communities. The story of Abuka Sanders, who was killed by Minneapolis police on November 1st, 2000 will be highlighted. The film strives to create a space for storytelling and healing from intergenerational trauma caused by police brutality.

About Alfred Sanders

Alfred Sanders is the co-founder of Black Table Arts Cooperative. He has over a decade of experience in the education and non-profit sectors, and has worked directly with special education students living with emotional and behavioral disorders on how to navigate the educational system.

About Prakshi Malik

Prakshi Malik is a filmmaker and dancer creating cinema with and for BIPOC and immigrant communities. Prakshi was awarded the 2020 Short Film Grant by Austin Film Society for her short film, BAAHAR. Her previous short, EMBERS, screened at film festivals including PBS Short Film Festival and the Black Harvest Film Festival & Regent Park Film Festival.

Photos L to R top row: Kashimana Ahua, ShaVunda Brown, Brittany L. Wright, Sarah O’Neil. Bottom row: Kamisha Johnson, Aja Parham and Glory Yard

Mamas Ignite Fireside Circle

Kashimana Ahua, ShaVunda Brown, Brittany L. Wright, Sarah O’Neil, Kamisha Johnson, Aja Parham and Glory Yard

Mamas Ignite Fireside Circle is a series of events whereby BIPOC mothers can ignite their creativity and healing by participating in songwriting, poetry, visual art and sound healing - coupled with reflection, affirmations and food; culminating in a final concert of the new works ignited by the mothers.

About Kashimana Ahua

Kashimana Ahua is a mother, musician, vocalist, composer, producer and teaching artist. She is a 2021-22 Jerome Hill Artist Fellow. Kashimana creates expressive spaces that encourage audiences to tap into their musical creativity and storytelling strengths.

About ShaVunda Brown

ShaVunda Brown is an award-winning spoken word artist, actress, organizer, and spirit guided writer. She writes to empower and shed light on raw truths with a sharp social consciousness using her knowledge of African diasporic spirituality, history, mythos, and the Southern folklore of her upbringing.

About Brittany L. Wright

Brittany L. Wright is a digital storyteller, social Impact strategist, and creative who fiercely advocates for equity and Black liberation. She’s a published writer, freelance journalist and podcast host who focuses on the nuances of Black life and motherhood.

About Sarah O'Neil

Sarah O’Neil is a singer and performer. She began her vocal journey and love of music singing in her second grade school choir.

About Kamisha Johnson

Kamisha Johnson is a practiced healer, conduit, reiki master, social worker, therapist, mother and friend. She has facilitated healing circles inclusive of women and girl empowerment, childhood sexual trauma, LGBTQIA + Youth groups, and Mommy Medicine (group for Mothers).

About Aja Parham

Aja Parham has been recognized by The Current as “one of the Twin Cities most well-versed singers.” She has performed with the Minnesota Opera, Skylark Opera, Penumbra Theatre, and the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts. She performs throughout the Twin Cities.

About Glory Yard

Glory Yard is a drummer and percussionist and plays with local and international acts. In 2019 she played with Lizzo who performed “Truth Hurts” on Saturday Night Live. Glory’s percussive and versatile style blends elements of gospel, jazz and rock.

Paige Reynolds and Bayou Bay

Power Tree Quilting and Affirmation Mirrors

Paige Reynolds and Bayou Bay

Power Tree Quilting and Affirmation Mirrors are projects focused on fostering healthy, collaborative relationships with and in community. Paige Reynolds and Bayou Bay will identify eight locations in different neighborhoods throughout Minneapolis for continued quilt making sessions in tandem with Affirmation Mirrors healing art collaborative projects.

Power Tree Quilting is an art making project that connects community members with a tangible place to share stories, uplift narratives, honor loved ones, process grief and imagine liberation.

The Affirmation Mirrors project begins with a mirror composed mostly of fabric wrapped wood, yarn and beads and displayed at healing events. Community members are invited to write and create affirmations which are then placed around the mirror.

About Paige Reynolds

Paige Reynolds is a cultural worker, theatre maker and healer. Her work centers Black liberation and building community power through arts-based dialogue. A member of the Million Artist Movement cooperative that embraces collaborative and collective liberation, she creates experiences that center Afro-diasporic healing practices and ancestral wisdom. Reynolds earned a BFA in Theatre Arts Administration from Howard University and is currently the Civic Engagement Manager at Minnesota Opera.

About Bayou Bay

Bayou Bay creates Affirmation Mirrors, artworks composed of mixed-media art. Themes embody nature from the micro to the cosmic, black and collective liberation, healing trauma, time, portals, geometry, setting intentions for affirmations, asking questions, symbols, and identity exploration. The waters of the HaHa Wakph (Mississippi) inform the artist’s thematic work and are a major influence in their life. They also create murals, art installations, and digital illustrations.

Rise Up! Cinderella! Actors L to R: Gabbie Curry as Drilla; Emmanuel Franklin as Prince; and Jazmine Curry as Staysha.
Read more about Rise Up! Cinderella! here.

Rise Up! Cinderella!

Tanya L. Eubanks and LaTanya Cannady

Rise Up! Cinderella! A community theatre, dance and singing performance produced and directed by Tanya L. Eubanks and choreographed by LaTanya Cannady. With a nod to the classic tale, Tanya Eubanks’s original story places her “Rella” in an urban community landscape navigating social injustices, power players and opportunists. Finding solidarity and healing in her neighborhood garden, along with the perfect timing of her godmother, Rella climatically rises up to discover and use her own voice.

“I hope my story brings hope, transformation, healing and learning for all who are suffering within their environments and notably after the traumas so many have endured.” — Tanya L. Eubanks

Read the interview with Tanya L. Eubanks and LaTanya Cannady, Rehearsals Capture the Charisma of Rise Up! Cinderella! under the News & Events tab.

Rise Up! Cinderella! was performed on Saturday, March 26, 2022 at 6:30 pm and Sunday, March 27, 2022 at 4:00 pm at Lundstrum Performing Arts – 1617 N. 2nd St. Minneapolis, MN 55411

About Tanya L. Eubanks

Tanya L. Eubanks is an artist and licensed therapist. She has worked as a dance artist creating a voice for the arts for many years. Expressing her belief that healing through the arts is therapy, she offers dance lessons voluntarily through various productions all which bring performing arts to the streets and community.

About LaTanya Cannady

LaTanya Cannady began her dance journey studying Liturgical dance at age three. LaTanya is a second year Timberwolves Dancer and has worked with various artists both locally as well as nationally known. LaTanya has training in contemporary/modern, hip-hop, broadway, ballet, jazz and Urban heels. She has since established her own open classes within the Twin Cities dance community.

Maria Isa Perez and Charlie Thayer

Resiliency Through Soliloquy

Maria Isa Perez and Charlie Thayer

Resiliency through Soliloquy will highlight the collective voice of healing in the Twin Cities through drum, dance and song via a public art performance. Drum work will center on the importance of the connection between heart, body and land utilizing music in activism, arts and healing. The project will center the Native community in South Minneapolis through collaborations with Little Earth of United Tribes and the Latinx community.

About Maria Isa Perez

Maria Isa Perez is an award-winning Boricua singer, songwriter, actress, rapper, activist and international recording artist. She incorporates passionate vocals, attitude infused raps, virtuoso percussion work and astute sociopolitical commentary into her work. She has studied with master musicians of Afro-Boricua music of Bomba and Plena of Puerto Rico. She is a 2019-2020 recipient of a Mcknight Fellowship for musicians.

About Charlie Thayer

Charlie Thayer is a White Earth/Lac Courte Oreilles Anishinaabe. Through his work with Indigenous communities, Charlie utilizes art based activism and curation to bring awareness to Indigenous issues throughout Turtle Island. As a recipient of a 2014 Bush Fellowship, his work focused on creating a platform from which the voices of the seventh generation could educate, advocate and strengthen their communities through art and storytelling.

The Give Get Sistet

Serenading the Wounded Spaces

Sarah Greer and the Give Get Sistet

In Serenading the Wounded Spaces, the vocal group Give Get Sistet will gather to commune and sing in five places in Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 where Black people have experienced hurt, pain or wounding (i.e. killings, injustices, etc.) in Minneapolis.

Artist Collective

The Give Get Sistet is an expandable, improvisational chorus of Black women (including non-binary) based in the Twin Cities with ties around the world. Using a cappella singing and vocal improv, we entertain, educate and empower communities from a wide variety of backgrounds and cultures.

Star Clan Girl performance: Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra and Magdalena Kaluza. Photo of performance by Pierre Ware.
Read more about Star Girl Clan here.

Star Girl Clan

Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra and Magdalena Kaluza

Star Girl Clan was performed on Friday evening October 9th, 2021 at the corner of E. Lake Street and Chicago Avenue. Using magical realism and a journey into the Maya cosmovision, an intergenerational story of emergence and healing transformation was presented. The performance called on ancestors and cellular memory to inspire a new generation of descendants to look up into the stars and to care for the earth.

Read the interview with artists Magdalena Kaluza and Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra, Indigenous Futurisms as Healing Take the Stage in Minneapolis under the News & Events tab.

About Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra

Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra is a Twin Cities-based antidisciplinary artist, musician (Lady Xøk), and culture bearer whose work is rooted in Indigenous Futurisms. She is a 2021-22 Jerome Hill Artist Fellow. Rebekah creates immersive multimedia interdisciplinary and experimental storytelling. With deep gratitude to local collaborators, her ongoing installation performances have been developed in part by Redeye Theatre, New Native Theatre, Monkeybear’s Harmolodic Workshop, Catalyst Arts, and ArtShanty. See her perform at the La MaMa Puppet Fest, Oct. 21-24, at La Mama Experimental Theatre Club in New York City.

About Magdalena Kaluza

Magdalena Kaluza is a queer cultural worker. The child of a Maya k’iche’ political refugee and a white working class activist, Magdalena facilitates participatory processes and co-creates art around radical imagination and healing. As a member of Palabristas, they’ve performed and hosted writing workshops throughout Minnesota. They practice community muralism with Creatives After Curfew and Power of Vision, a collaboration between Hope Community and the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Magdalena does puppetry with Monkeybear’s Harmolodic Workshop, New Native Theatre, and Star Girl Clan.

L to R: Kiya Arkadie, Tamiko French, curator and creator of the The Rock Royalty Experience. Photos by Pierre Ware.
Read more about The Rock Royalty Experience here.

The Rock Royalty Experience

Tamiko French, D'MChelle and Baba Onayemi Ogunkoye

The Rock Royalty Experience was a public healing event held on Saturday, Sept 25, 2021 designed for George Floyd Square that synergized three worlds: Earth science, ancestral alternative healing practices and functional fashion. In addition, the work of three functional jewelry artisans, four clothing designers and a healing mall were showcased. Healing foods from various vendors were also available. A runway-style sharing of functional jewelry and clothing crowned the event. Community members experienced wellness treatments, practices and services to develop a new relationship with practitioners and wellness practices.

About Tamiko French

Tamiko French is a functional jewelry creator, sound and crystal healer. She is accredited with the International Natural Healers Association, featured at the Mother Baby Center and volunteers at George Floyd Square. She currently provides services at Walker Community Church.

Jada Pulley and Shoshana Alexander-Daniels

Unscripted

Jada Pulley and Shoshana Alexander-Daniels

UNSCRIPTED uses improv theater to promote healing and to empower youth to take charge of their own stories. In partnership with Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis; UNSCRIPTED will offer workshops that mine for joy, hone skills that extend beyond the stage and prepare students to perform in public showcases.

Artist Collective

The UNSCRIPTED organizing team is a collective of three Black improv theater teaching artists who are active in the intersections between identity, art, and healing. Unscripted is connected to HUGE Improv Theater, the only theatre dedicated to improv in the state of Minnesota and one of a few improv theaters openly committed to social justice.

Creative Response Fund-Next Phase 2021 grantees

The Creative Response Fund-Next Phase grants support artists funded in 2020 to continue development of their original projects. The intention of this support is to extend artists ability to respond to community needs and expand opportunities for creative healing and support.

Each project receives $5,000 to include new phases into their work, add or change team members and evolve their original idea into the next phase of engagement, participation and understanding.

Photo: Creatives After Curfew

Art for Nervous Systems

Cándida González & Creatives After Curfew

In 2020, Art for Nervous Systems created four instructive murals presenting ways to prepare easily accessible herbs and energetic medicines for self-healing.

Next Phase

The next phase of this project will be to reproduce the completed murals as paper prints with more detailed information on herbs and their medicinal uses. These will then be distributed to communities in South Minneapolis. The practical information provided will add a new layer of interest and access towards healing practices.

About the artists

Creatives After Curfew is a decentralized collective of BIPOC/queer artists and allies that mobilized during the community uprisings in June 2020 to share resources, skills and knowledge as a contribution to the movement. This collaborative group of Minneapolis artists make art to soothe, remember, build and imagine a future rooted in justice and liberation.

Photo: Shá Cage

At the corner of ________.

Shá Cage

In 2020, At the Corner Of was an experimental short docu series highlighting artist/activists at the intersections of art and healing. The series was filmed in specific locations where artist/activists lived, worked or performed their transformative work.

Next Phase

For the next phase of this project, Shá will focus her camera on pairs of artists or duets. Interviews will result in three 3-5 minute docu-shorts which each pair of artists who will then share with their own communities and circles as a way to highlight their work, legacy and connection to place.

About Shá Cage

Shá Cage is a film and theater director, producer, playwright, community advocate and healer. She has been named a Changemaker by Women's Press, and a Mover and Maker by Mpls STP magazine. Recent film credits include: Jasmine Star, KEON, Black Star, At the Corner Of and You’re Home Now.

Photo: Pierre Ware

Haircuts for Change

Mack the Barber

In 2020, Haircuts for Change hosted an artist designed pop-up location for haircuts and self-care along Lake Street to support Black healing, Black beauty and Black community-building in South Minneapolis.

Next Phase

For the next phase of this project 'Mack the Barber', also known as George MacIntyre, will take the lead to host self-care pop-ups in locations that center Black youth. 'Mack the Barber' will work with local artists to provide a creative setting for free back-to-school, picture day, prom and graduation haircuts to students at select Minneapolis Public Schools.

About Mack the Barber

George MacIntyre is a business owner and barber who cuts hair at Urban Touch Barbers located at E. 38th Street near George Floyd Square in Minneapolis. For over 15 years, he has volunteered his talents as a barber offering free haircuts at Northside YMCA, Toys for Tots, and back-to-school events. George collaborated with artist Sam Ero-Phillips in 2020 to deliver Haircuts for Change.

Photo: Keegan Xavi and Sayge Carroll

Harvest Feast

Sayge Carroll and Keegan Xavi

In 2020, Harvest Feast connected arts and healing activities through food, art-making and acts of collective nurturing in the artists’ respective Northside and Southside neighborhoods. Each artist hosted a neighborhood gathering centered around food, music, performance and the distribution of arts activity kits and artist-made dinnerware.

Next Phase

The next phase of this project brings Sayge and Keegan together again to host two events; a harvest feast held in Sayge’s neighborhood and a “Release It” event held in Keegan’s neighborhood. For the “Release It” event, neighbors will use the painted sheets created in 2020 to form a large-scale butterfly using wire, starch and LED lights.

About the artists

Sayge Carroll and Keegan Xavi are Minneapolis-based multidisciplinary artists who collaboratively produce arts-based neighborhood events to respond to trauma, build resiliency and celebrate Black joy as a community.

Creative Response Fund 2020 grantees

In 2020, in the wake of the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent community uprisings, the Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy repurposed resources provided by the Kresge Foundation to support the work of local artists and designers on urgently needed community healing focused projects. ACCE funded 10 project teams and supported a total of 63 artists.

The grant dollars were community-focused and intended to recognize the often-unpaid labor of artists and designers as they responded to multiple community health and racist based emergencies. Funding priority was for Black artists working with communities that have historically experienced the stress and trauma of racial discrimination. The projects of additional artists of color and artists working to heal marginalized communities were also funded.

The projects shown here spoke of grief, trauma, healing, resiliency, self-care and self-empowerment. Film, murals, paintings and storytelling circles engaged and invited community members to share their own words of wisdom, reflections, experiences and contributions. The artists selected created projects that asked for and welcomed the deeper dialogue required to move forward in sustainably healing ways.

Photo: Pierre Ware

Haircuts for Change

Sam Ero-Phillips

Artists hosted pop-up locations for haircuts and self-care along Lake St. and Chicago Ave. to support Black healing, Black beauty and Black community-building in South Minneapolis. The events were held in collaboration with BareBones puppet theater’s fall 2020 performance: “PASSAGES: Mourning the Fires of Lake Street.”

Artists created an intentional and beautiful space that adapts to and supports Black community members from all walks of life — families, elders, people with disabilities, LGBTQ+ folks, children, women and men — to help them process grief. The project helped rebuild communities through micro-interactions, made practices of beauty and self-care accessible, and empowered people to leave with a little more self-love, inspiration and peace.

About Sam Ero-Phillips

Sam Ero-Phillips is an artist, designer and educator who has left his mark on the Twin Cities, Chicago and Lagos, Nigeria. A longtime participant in the Twin Cities art community, Sam has worked in the Community Design Studio at Juxtaposition Arts since 2012 and currently works at LSE Architects. He lives in the Powderhorn Park neighborhood with his wife and two children. Sam holds a bachelor’s degree in architecture and studio arts from the University of Minnesota and a master’s in architecture from the University of Illinois. He has also been a Fulbright scholar to Nigeria.

Photo: Pierre Ware

Communities' Wisdom, Imagination and Connection

Mankwe Ndosi & Griffen Jeffries

Six community events in the fall of 2020 engaged residents of the Phillips, Central, Powderhorn, Bryant, Bancroft, Corcoran and Standish neighborhoods in South Minneapolis. Artists created spaces where participants could share their wisdom, opinions and experiences. Events were outdoors or online and occured in areas affected by the uprisings or in the sanctuaries of unhoused residents.

Community members had the opportunity to pull apart questions of justice, safety, accountability and culture-shifting that help us reimagine how we care for each other.

About Mankwe Ndosi

Mankwe Ndosi is a culture worker who uses creative practice to nurture community, ancestors and the earth. She is a connector, a listener, a synthesizer and an improviser. She’s among a field of artists embedding creative practice into transformative relational work for the generations to come. Her efforts have included regional, national and international performance, arts-rooted community engagement gatherings, serious play for racial equity workshops, and group healing events to support personal transformation from the inside out. Mankwe has been a participant or leader in creativity, healing and organizing in the Twin Cities for 25 years.

About Griffen Jeffries

Griffen Jeffries is a white queer and trans person who works with individuals and groups around shifting patterns of oppression, domination, colonization and trauma. His focus is on facilitating and supporting transformational processes and healing through body-based practices. Griffen has called South Minneapolis home since 2007. He has been part of various community projects including being a co-owner and practitioner at People’s Movement Center and being a participant and facilitator with Hope Community’s SPEAC community organizer training program. He loves big lakes, chocolate and creative play that supports re/connection with ourselves, each other, ancestors, spirit and the land.

Photo: Sha Cage

Photo: Sha Cage

AT THE CORNER OF ________.

Sha Cage

A series of three site-specific videos were based on interviews and reflections with Black and brown community members. The videos met community members where they were in their daily lives — at the intersections of work and community — and gave them an opportunity to express what they were holding in that moment.

Participants could share creatively and speak the truth about their reality. Videos were shared on digital platforms and social media.

About Sha Cage

Sha Cage is a cultural worker, writer, performer, director and activist who has been called a change-maker, one of the leading artists of her generation, and a mover and maker. She has been seen as a leading lady on major stages including Penumbra and the Guthrie, a producer of feature films, a director and writer of plays, and a recipient of career achievement awards. But she is most proud of her work in community healing and transformation through art.

Photo: Pierre Ware

Photo: Pierre Ware

CarryOn Homes Northeast

Witt Siasoco and the CarryOn Homes team (Aki Shibata, Zoe Cinel, Preston Drum, Peng Wu and Shun Jie Yong)

The artists created an installation to celebrate immigrant contributions, promote healing through art-making and drive census participation in Northeast Minneapolis. Over six weeks, four events aimed to heal through art-making and to engage residents in the census process.

At each event, artists encouraged neighbors to contribute to a large installation of flags with messages of the importance of immigrants to Northeast Minneapolis.

About CarryOn Homes

CarryOn Homes is a team of five artists from five countries: Zoe Cinel (Italy), Preston Drum (U.S.), Aki Shibata (Japan), Peng Wu (China) and Shun Jie Yong (Malaysia). CarryOn Homes is dedicated to telling the stories of immigrants and refugees in the United States through art. By engaging the public with cross-cultural dialogue, they create spaces for immigrants and marginalized communities to feel a sense of belonging and empowerment. CarryOn Homes was a 2018 winner of the Creative City Challenge.

About Witt Siasoco

For over 20 years, Witt Siasoco has been actively engaged in the intersection of the arts and civic processes through a variety of roles, including as an artist, graphic designer and arts educator.

Photo: Keegan Xavi and Sayge Carroll

Photo: Keegan Xavi and Sayge Carroll

Harvest Feast

Keegan Xavi & Sayge Carroll

This project was a partnership to connect arts and healing activities through food, art-making and acts of collective nurturing in the artists’ respective Northside and Southside neighborhoods. This joint community project connected two Minneapolis neighborhoods with events tailored to each location.

Each artist hosted a neighborhood gathering centered around food, music, performance and the distribution of arts activity kits and artist-made dinnerware. The artists also hosted “Tiny Art” workshops with YO MAMA’S HOUSE and distributed “Tiny Art Kits."

About Keegan Xavi

Keegan Xavi is a visual artist who is passionate about art history and has an insatiable desire for research and learning. Her personal work addresses the emotionally brutal realities of American history and its impact on the present and future — with a recurring broader theme about the human intersection between nature and technology. Art is a vital tool for connection and resiliency, and Keegan uses her strengths as an arts educator to produce community events that unite Northside neighbors through creative action.

Sayge Carroll artist statement

“I am the bloom of my ancestors long ago laid to rest. My roots drink in and carry the stories and the lessons of the past, both theirs and mine. My life is a dream from long ago existing in this present moment, and I don’t want to waste any of it. When I found clay, I knew I was home. I work with clay to create a world I want to live in, a world I co-create with other artists, ancestors, storytellers. I create to bring us together, I use my skills to build what is needed, working in different mediums to create the healing mix. I make for one reason — I work to find my people. This is one offering.”

Photo: E.G. Bailey

Photo: E.G. Bailey

New Neighbors Building Community Through Film

E.G. Bailey

“New Neighbors,” an award-winning film about race, culture, housing, belonging, safety and the policing of Black people, was selected for the 2016 Sundance Film Festival and has been screened at over 115 film festivals across the globe.

For the first time, director and screenwriter E.G. Bailey held a series of screenings in Minneapolis at parks, outdoor spaces and backyards. These screenings included community dialogue around the issues raised in the film and the community’s current issues and needs.

About E.G. Bailey

E.G. Bailey is an award-winning artist who crosses the disciplines of theater, film and poetry. Currently he’s focusing on playwriting, screenwriting and directing. E.G. has been recognized by artists such as Bob Holman, Amiri Baraka and Nikki Giovanni as one of the leading spoken word artists of his generation. Born in Saclepea, Liberia, he’s a founder of several foundational entities in the local and national community including Tru Ruts Endeavors, Arkology, Speakeasy Records and the MN Spoken Word Association.

Photo: Nancy Musinguzi

Photo: Nancy Musinguzi

excited delirium

D.A. Bullock

The artist created a series of five projections of Black artists and performers onto different damaged or destroyed spaces in North Minneapolis and the Bryant Central neighborhood. The projection experiences took place as an exhibition over one week.

The artist documented and delivered the experiences through a written journal and photos, then combined and edited the documentation into a final video.

About D.A. Bullock

D.A. Bullock is an award-winning filmmaker and social practice artist in the field of story-based activism. His films have been featured at national and international festivals including the Toronto International Film Festival and the Chicago International Film Festival. He was the winner of best feature film at the 2003 Urbanworld Film Festival in New York.

Artist statement

“The junk pseudoscience that has been continually proffered by law enforcement as an excuse for their treatment of the Black population, everything from police murder to the forced injections of ketamine to the justification of their fear of the Black body and any furtive movement. We want to reinterpret that term to speak for an excited liminal state of creation and creativity that leads to euphoria, and healing and heightened connection.”

Photo: Caroline Karanja, Wasima Farah & Abla Elmi

Photo: Caroline Karanja, Wasima Farah & Abla Elmi

Africanish

Caroline Karanja, Wasima Farah & Abla Elmi

This project explored the impact of the months of turmoil on the mental health and well-being of East African women and immigrants. The members of the collective shared their personal stories and the stories of the broader community on social media platforms. These stories were then integrated and reimagined as illustration and audio clips in an engaging digital storybook.

People viewing the storybook could comment on it and provide feedback and insight, creating a participatory experience.

About Caroline Karanja

Caroline Karanja is a technology leader with a passion for increasing inclusion and equity and using technology to drive creative initiatives.

About Wasima Farah

Wasima Farah is a Somali digital artist based in Minnesota. Her work varies from vibrant illustrations centered on women of color to graphic design and videography. She is inspired by women’s empowerment and uses primary colors to express a bold and confident message. Wasima’s goal is to create art with a message that others can understand, relate to and be motivated by.

About Abla Elmi

Abla Elmi is a native Minnesotan who works to combine art and storytelling to create positive social change. In her work in the media and humanitarian sectors, she has noticed that people from marginalized and vulnerable communities often have no ownership over their stories or how they’re told. After finishing her master’s degree in London in 2019, Abla returned to Minnesota to found Elmi House Productions, a company that tells stories based on an inclusive method that she created. The method aims to answer one question: What would stories look like if the people whose stories are being told were included in the storytelling process?

Photo: Creatives After Curfew

Photo: Creatives After Curfew

Art for Nervous Systems

Candida Gonzalez & Creatives After Curfew

Artists created a series of four instructive healing murals aimed at making knowledge about simple herbal/energetic medicines accessible to the public. The murals shared information about medicine that can help our communities in this time of change and healing.

Subjects included how to identify and use plantain weed to cure bug bites, common plants that grow in Minneapolis and the benefits of using them for tea, a simple meditation exercise and an energy-clearing exercise. The project not only provided useful information, but also affirmed the existence of non-monetized indigenous healing knowledge.

About the artists

Creatives After Curfew is a decentralized collective of BIPOC/queer artists and allies that mobilized during the community uprisings in June 2020 to share resources, skills and knowledge as a contribution to the movement. This evolving collaboration between Minneapolis artists creates art to soothe, remember, build and imagine a future rooted in justice and liberation.

Photo: Roxanne Anderson and Anna Meyer

Photo: Roxanne Anderson and Anna Meyer

Rising From the Ashes

Roxanne Anderson & Anna Meyer

The artists engaged in creative healing and support with communities directly impacted and affected by the escalation of trauma, stress and violence after the murder of George Floyd. Their project supported local queer, trans, Black, brown and Indigenous artists who were creating art during the uprising in Minneapolis.

The project artists facilitated a short series of online group sessions of healing support and dialogue with the community artists to support their own healing and creativity. They also curated an online art exhibit featuring the community artists’ work.

About Anna Meyer and Roxanne Anderson

Anna Meyer and Roxanne Anderson are both community artists who have dedicated their lives to mobilizing, healing and training communities. Recently they were selected to work alongside the City’s Neighborhood & Community Relations Department on the WeCount Minneapolis census 2020 project.

Roxanne has won countless awards for their work, including the University of Minnesota’s Community Excellence Award and BIPOC LGBTQI2’s Beautiful Human Award, and is a 2018 Bush Fellowship recipient. Anna has years of experience working for local and national LGBTQ and BIPOC communities, including two decades with youth and families experiencing homelessness in the Twin Cities and in Washington, D.C.

Anna and Roxanne manage and create platforms through their work with RARE productions, and together owned the beloved Cafe Southside. Roxanne is now the director of the Minnesota Transgender Health Coalition. Anna works for healing justice and is a biodynamic craniosacral therapist.