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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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Arms and the man: Delacroix goes on a limb for his lions

Eugène Delacroix’s 1829 lithograph of a lion munching a rabbit looks like a stuffed animal next to the animated creatures he painted some 30 years later in Lion Hunt (1861), the signature image of “Delacroix’s Influence: The Rise of Modern Art from Cézanne to van Gogh” (on view in Mia’s Target Galleries, now through January  ...

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Once at Mia: Entertaining Eleanor

Eleanor Roosevelt was never entirely comfortable being a Roosevelt. The famous family burdened her with one tragedy after another, from an absent, alcoholic father to a mother who belittled her appearance, and both parents died young. She was an orphan when she married Franklin, her cousin, whose extramarital affairs pushed them apart early on. Yet  ...

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Full STEAM ahead: How Mia is helping spread design thinking around the world

A beekeeper and a waste management specialist walk into an art museum. They, along with an elected park commissioner and a water quality expert are at Mia to be interviewed by 21 teenage girls. These remarkable young women meet at the museum weekly for “Girls Design the World: Supporting Green Communities with STEAM,” a partnership  ...

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Once at Mia: The life of libraries

There weren’t many places to go. Not if you wanted to catch up on what Picasso and Matisse were up to or go deep into art history. In 1931, when this photo was taken of Mia’s library, there wasn’t any cyberspace and there weren’t any encyclopedias floating around in it. There were only books, and you  ...

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Once at Mia: Holiday shopping in the ’60s

The museum shop at the Minneapolis Institute of Art reopened two years ago as the Store at Mia. The selection is now more carefully curated, in keeping with the overall ethos of a museum, and isn’t limited to books, postcards, and other materials directly linked to exhibitions or the collection. Many of the items are handmade as  ...

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Once at Mia: Our woman in Egypt

To look for Lily Place is to peel back the bandages of a mummy. She was once, for a few incandescent years in the 1920s, seemingly everywhere—London, Paris, Cairo, New York, and Minneapolis. And always at the right time. She donated to Mia all the art and artifacts filling the corridor in the photo above from  ...

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Once at Mia: Saved from Nazis

They were some of the greatest works of western civilization. Paintings by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Botticelli, Titian, Manet, Velazquez. Monuments to human imagination. And they were in as much danger from Hitler’s mania as anything else in Europe. The Monuments Men, as George Clooney’s 2014 movie revealed, saved thousands of artworks stolen by the Nazis from  ...

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Once at Mia: The woman who knew everything

She seems more apparition than woman, as though conjured in a séance. But she was very real: Miriam McHugh Taney. And for years she seemed to be the museum’s all-purpose lecturer—onstage, in the galleries, on WCCO Radio. In weekly talks at the museum, she tackled everything from medieval France to the Italian Renaissance. A professional  ...

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Once at Mia: Disguised as art

Maybe it’s the woman’s mischievous look. Or something to do with clowns. But there’s a portent about this image—you sense the innocent child will somehow vanish behind the frame, as though passing through a portal. A trick of Edgar Allan Poe’s imagination. The woman was facilitating make-believe—pretend you’re a painting!—with a stash of dress-up clothes at Mia’s 1981 Rose Fete.  ...

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Art Inspires: Adam Levy on good, evil, and the roots of imperialism

This painting, Destruction of the Beast and the False Prophet, has always drawn me in: the high drama, the fanaticism, the eeriness of the beasts. Painted by Benjamin West in 1804, it sits somewhere between neoclassical and Romanticism, a transitional piece. Classical/Biblical in subject matter and composition, but Romantic in its emotional and psychological content.  ...

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