Organized collaboratively between Mia curators, photojournalist Jaida Grey Eagle (Oglala Lakota) and curatorial and community councils, this comprehensive exhibition centers on the work of Native photographers from the Rio Grande to the Arctic Circle. (Oct. 22-Jan. 14, Minneapolis Institute of Art, 2400 3rd Av. S., $16-$20, free for youth 17 and under and for Native people, artsmia.org)
This survey includes experimental artworks rarely seen in America by 100 artists from former Eastern bloc countries, including East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Yugoslavia. With a particular focus on women artists, artist collectives and LGBTQ perspectives, the show considers how artists pushed back against oppressive power structures. (Nov. 11-March 10, Walker Art Center, 725 Vineland Place, $2-$18, walkerart.org)
Using archival photos and video from 1991-2001, Emerging Curators Institute fellow Za'Nia Coleman explores the history of Hollywood Studio of Dance, at W. Broadway & N. Penn avenues in North Minneapolis. (Sept. 16-30, opening reception Sept. 16, 5-9 p.m., Public Functionary, Northrup King Building, 1500 Jackson St., free, emergingcurators.org)
Artist Racquel Banaszak (Bad River Band of Ojibwe) uses imagery of surreal landscapes to explore ways that her Native people have walked through the world's in-between spaces. (Sept. 23-Oct. 29, opening reception Sept. 23 from 6-9 p.m., SooVac, 2909 Bryant Av. S. #101, free, Soovac.org)