For years, Andrea Pierre and her two young daughters counted the elaborate dollhouse at the Minneapolis Institute of Art as one of their favorite weekly destinations.
The girls eagerly led their mother through the museum's main floor before turning down a long corridor into the bustling family center, filled with children's laughter. There it was, three stories high, protected by glass, offering intricate delights from top floor to bottom.
Yet, Pierre always braced herself as she approached the 12-room dollhouse from the early 20th century, a gift from the estate of arts patron Mary Griggs Burke. Along with a music room featuring a miniature piano, a dining room with tiny silver platters and candelabra and a nursery with a baby in a crib, her inquisitive girls, Millicent, 9, and Josephine, 8, also shifted their gaze toward the kitchen.
There, a white man and a white woman sat at a long table. Two helpers, both white and male, faced the table, seemingly waiting for instructions.
And a black woman stood at the sink, her back to visitors, her hair covered in a white bonnet, faceless and marginalized.
Then, suddenly, the doll was gone.
"It's always a ping whenever I see a doll like that," Pierre said. "I'm not embarrassed by it, but it's somewhat painful."
Many museum visitors, it turns out, had expressed similar pings. "A stream of complaints that the doll was offensive," was how Kim Huskinson, the museum's senior manager of audience engagement, described it.