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Fresh perspectives on art, life, and current events. From deep dives to quick takes to insightful interviews, it’s the museum in conversation. Beyond the walls. Outside the frame. Around the world.

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NewsFlash: Tokyo’s fishmongers on the move

It’s the epicenter of sushi, the slimy storehouse of prized tuna and pie-eyed tourists in Tokyo: the Tsukiji fish market. And it will shortly be moving from its cosmopolitan locale to a climate-controlled distribution center on a manufactured island, according to a story in the New York Times. The world’s largest fish market, Tsukiji occupies  ...

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Lucy Michelle, Jay Z, and the Frankfurt Kitchen

Local musical gem Lucy Michelle and the Velvet Lapelles will be playing a special concert at the MIA on Thursday, September 26. Regulars on the Twin Cities’ venue circuit, why are they so excited to play at the museum? I asked leading lady Lucy to find out… Katie Hill: What makes performing in the MIA  ...

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A lavish moment in Latvia, then and again

A colleague and I recently returned from a week in Latvia, a trip made possible thanks to a wonderful benefactor who has invested in MIA staff innovation. And a week hardly makes me an expert on this Baltic nation, almost continuously occupied—by Russians, Germans, Swedes, Soviets—for the better part of 1,000 years. Still, what struck  ...

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How a museum of failed romance gets to the heart of things

I recently popped in to visit the Museum of Broken Relationships in Zagreb, Croatia. It was a pilgrimage of sorts, as I’d been intrigued by rave reviews of the museum and the fact that in 2011 it won the Kenneth Hudson European Museum of the Year award for “the most unusual, daring and, perhaps, controversial  ...

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Belinda and our bees: A made-for-TV story

There have been a lot of cameras on the museum roof recently. Not to keep an eye on the pigeons. Or even for the great skyline view, though it doesn’t hurt. It’s our bees—some 200,000 at their peak—that have attracted the likes of Andrew Zimmern (his Appetite for Life segment airs October 1 on MSN.com).  ...

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A temple is reunited with its 17th-century doors—via 21st-century wizardry

Ordinarily, museums don’t encourage visitors to take super-high-resolution photographs of the art with the goal of exact replication. But for 10 days, through September 17, a contingent of five technicians from Japan, two reps from the Kyoto Culture Association, and a project manager are hunkered in the MIA’s Visual Resources area doing exactly that. When  ...

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NewsFlash: Not your father’s Bar Mitzvah?

Just as the MIA opens Inscribe These Words, an exhibition drawn from the Judaica collection about writing the word of God, comes this news from the New York Times: leaders of the largest branch of Judaism, the Reform movement, are initiating a reinvention of the bar and bat mitzvah process. The movement stems from a  ...

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Art Inspires: Alec Soth on Ramon Muxter

In the late 1990s, I got a job working in the darkroom at the MIA. My single Sisyphean task was to make seven black-and-white prints of every object in the museum for its various archives. The reward was a chance to peer into obscure corners of the collection. I was particularly taken with the work  ...

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How India's sacred image of the feminine inspires empowerment

Of late, one of the questions I am asked most frequently about India is, “Is it safe?” As a woman who has spent nearly eight continuous years either visiting or living in India, I am saddened by the question. As a result of my travels there, I know much more about the country’s millennium-old stone  ...

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How India’s sacred image of the feminine inspires empowerment

Of late, one of the questions I am asked most frequently about India is, “Is it safe?” As a woman who has spent nearly eight continuous years either visiting or living in India, I am saddened by the question. As a result of my travels there, I know much more about the country’s millennium-old stone  ...

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