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X-WR-CALNAME:The Arts Partnership: Cultivating Community Through The Arts
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://theartspartnership.net
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Arts Partnership: Cultivating Community Through The Arts
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DTSTART:20240101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250211T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20271231T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T083845
CREATED:20260105T201421Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260105T201421Z
UID:33313-1739260800-1830272400@theartspartnership.net
SUMMARY:'Land to Table: Food Stories of Clay County'
DESCRIPTION:Land to Table: Food Stories from Clay County explores the history and stories associated with food in Clay County. Whether it be Potato Days in Barnesville\, spaghetti dinners in Dilworth\, breweries in Moorhead\, or the revival of Native American cuisine throughout the Red River Valley\, food plays an important role in all of our lives and plays a key role in our identities. Land to Table highlights these and ways food has shaped the lives of Clay County residents. \nFocal points of this exhibit include: \n\nA selection of church and other local group cookbooks.\nInteractive experiences where you can leave your own favorite recipes and learn about the food grown in Clay County.\nVideos explaining different foodways in Clay County
URL:https://theartspartnership.net/event/land-to-table-food-stories-of-clay-county/
CATEGORIES:Community,Culinary,Culture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTSTAMP:20260406T083845
CREATED:20260105T201156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260105T201156Z
UID:33310-1751328000-1782086399@theartspartnership.net
SUMMARY:'Treasures from Norway" exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Treasures from Norway honors the Norwegian immigrants that settled this region during the middle part of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These new Americans came to the United States with little more than the clothes on their back and a few personal effects. These personal items\, tangible reminders of family they were leaving and the old country\, will be displayed from July 1\, 2025 to June 22\, 2026. \nObjects on display include clothing\, furniture\, and household items that were brought over on the hundreds of immigrant ships that came to the US from Norway. Items of special significance include the Syverson family hardanger fiddle\, created by the grandfather of Gunner Helland. Gunner Helland lived in Fargo starting in 1930 and passed his knowledge of fiddle making on to Bud Larsen. Bud\, who now lives in Brainerd\, is teaching new students in the Fargo-Moorhead area his techniques so future generations can create their own fiddles. \nA small wooden rosemal box\, owned by Inger Peterson (nee Hansdatter) will be on display as well. Born in Telemark\, Norway\, Inger moved to the United States after she married her husband\, Peter Peterson. The couple arrived at Moorhead on May 28\, 1880. Peter would die by the end of the decade\, but Inger would live until April 1939 when she passed away at 92. \nThis exhibit is part of a larger series of efforts across the country to commemorate the bicentennial of Norwegian immigration to the United States. On October 9\, 1825\, the sloop Restauration arrived in the United States with 52 Norwegian Quakers. This marked the first organized instance of Norwegian immigration to the United States – although Norwegians settlements in the US date as far back as the early 17th century. Since 1935 the federal government has marked October 9 as Leif Erikson Day.
URL:https://theartspartnership.net/event/treasures-from-norway-exhibition/
LOCATION:Hjemkomst Center\, 202 1st Avenue North\, Moorhead\, MN\, 56560\, United States
CATEGORIES:Community,Culture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20260217T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20260705T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T083845
CREATED:20260217T193533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260217T193533Z
UID:33795-1771315200-1783270800@theartspartnership.net
SUMMARY:Alicia Hauff presents 'Homing: Radical Renewal' at Plains Art Museum
DESCRIPTION:Homing is a solo exhibition featuring the work of regional multidisciplinary artist Alicia Hauff. This body of work examines the disconnect between contemporary life and the ecological\, ancestral\, and somatic systems that have sustained human and non-human communities. Homing refers to “an ability to return to a place or territory after traveling a distance away from it.” The foundational aspects of home include a sense of rootedness\, connectedness\, belonging\, safety\, and mutual care. Homing is a re-membering\, recovering\, and re-commitment to the greater whole of interconnected\, interdependent life. Re-membering relates to the embodied act of becoming whole\, putting ourselves back together again in care and community. For Hauff\, homing begins with getting to know those beings all around us\, every day. \nThrough fluid acrylic washes\, graphite portraiture\, and organic materials gathered from the land\, Hauff guides viewers into a practice of attunement: noticing the languages of birds\, the cycles of wildflowers\, the shifting textures and energies of place. Her work invites viewers to slow down\, listen\, and rediscover the animacy of the world\, ultimately reminding us that our bodies know the way home. \nSince transitioning from community nursing to a multidisciplinary art practice in 2021\, Alicia Hauff has been re-rooting and re-membering ancestral ways of moving and sensing in today’s fast-paced society. She brings her healing science background into her current work to mend our connection to the land\, and ultimately\, the connection to our wildest\, most natural selves. Her work spans painting\, drawing\, foraging-based processes\, and interdisciplinary research\, often incorporating materials and observations gathered directly from the environments she studies. She lives in Fargo with her husband and three sons\, which she affectionately refers to as the Hauff fraternity.
URL:https://theartspartnership.net/event/alicia-hauff-presents-homing-radical-renewal-at-plains-art-museum/
LOCATION:Plains Art Museum\, 704 1st Ave N\, Fargo\, ND\, 58102
CATEGORIES:Galleries,Visual Arts
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