Star-like twinkling lights turn from blue to purple to red to green. You don't have to look up at the sky to see them, though — just go to the elevator waiting area on the 10th floor of Minneapolis' new Public Service Building.
"The original inhabitants here come from the stars," said artist Rory Wakemup, who was born Anishnabee but adopted and raised Dakota. "Your Big Bang stories are different from our origin and creation stories."
It's one of 17 new artworks to be found in the city's new building at 505 4th Av. S., which consolidates all of the Minneapolis employees who were formerly scattered among seven buildings the city owned or rented.
"This is kind of a once-in-a-lifetime civic building," said Mary Altman, the city's supervisor of public art. "The last time the city built a major civic building was maybe City Hall," which opened in 1906. "So this is a building that will be around for a very long time."
The city will celebrate Friday with a public unveiling from 4 to 7 p.m. with performances by Mankwe Ndosi, Douglas Ewart and Tamiko French.
Wakemup embedded his "stars" in the creases of sliced up mirrors for "Anangokaa (There Are Many Stars)," a cross-cultural exploration inspired by geometry, water, the night sky and the number 10. He notes that people have 10 digits on their hands, and the number is a basis for counting systems; furthermore, 10 is the product of 2 and 5, which also factor into his work. Two is the yin-yang duality, while 5 represents the shape of water.

Altman feels a building like this "needs to be aspirational in the way major civic buildings are — it represents democracy, good government and public participation."
So the city asked artists to make work that could last for the next 75 years.