
Above: Sculpture artist Aldo Moroni left, and author Penny Petersen spoke during a press conference in 2017 about public art in Minneapolis. Photo: Jerry Holt.
There's no time like the present. This weekend Minneapolis artist Aldo Moroni stages a retrospective of his 45-year career in his renovated studio space, called Legacy Makers Place, in the California Building.
The three-day exhibition beginning Friday will be one of his last. Moroni is in the late stages of pancreatic cancer.
Moroni is known for recreating civilizations at a small scale, which he calls "mock civilizations." These structures are meant to engage viewers in conversation about how people live in cities, where civilizations come from, and the tradeoffs and darker consequences of creating urban environments.
This weekend's event — part of a larger open-studio weekend in the California Building and elsewhere in northeast Minneapolis — includes the release of a limited edition art book by Moroni, "The Synoptic Codex of Mesoamerica." It chronicles the creation of his latest mini-civilization, "M.EX. — Mesoamerican Experience."
For "M.EX.," he has created thousands of petite ceramic buildings that chronicle the history of Mesoamerica, Olmec, Maya, Toltec, Mixtec, Aztec, Spanish imperialism, the Republic and contemporary Mexico.
He will unveil that work on Nov. 8, the 500th anniversary of the meeting between Aztec emperor Montezuma and Spanish conqueror Cortez.
This weekend's events are a celebration of Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), and will include food, live music, and a lecture from Moroni about his art career.