It's as if the entire Twin Cities reopened this month. With the mask mandate gone and nearly half of Minnesotans fully vaccinated, art galleries and museums are inviting people back inside with new shows and hand sanitizer galore.
Coincidentally, three of the five exhibitions in the following roundup specifically allow — and even encourage — people to touch the art or physically interact with it in some way.
Rayyane Tabet at Walker
A blue light welcomes Walker Art Center visitors to Tabet's installation "Deep Blues" — the Beirut/San Francisco-based artist's first commissioned work for a U.S. museum. Inside the gallery, a cascade of decommissioned IBM Eames chairs hang from the ceiling, forming a downward-sloping, pyramid-like shape that feels at once monumental and corporate.
Blue, of course, is IBM's signature color. Ten shades of blue create an encompassing atmosphere while a computerized voice guided by artificial intelligence recites IBM's history. It ends with a couple coincidental facts about Minnesota superstar Prince: He was born on June 7, 1958, three months before IBM's campus opened in Rochester and one month before U.S. Marines first invaded Lebanon. And he finished his song "Computer Blue" one day before Tabet was born in Beirut.
The project was sparked by Tabet's discovery of an Eames chair in his home that came from the Rochester facility. The possibility of "coincidence" feels like a search for meaning somewhere between globalization and destiny, yet in a true twist of fate, the story leads back to the artist, which feels both spiritual and absurd. Simultaneously, America's global influence feels the same way, making Beirut feel close at a time when physical location is more like an abstract concept in our increasingly remote world. (11 a.m.-9 p.m. Thu., 11-8 Fri.-Sat., 11-5 Sun. through Oct. 24, 725 Vineland Place, Mpls., $2-$15, 612-375-7600, walkerart.org)
In an introductory video to Scott's show "Shakin' Off the Blues," the New Mexico artist passionately explains how afraid she felt to paint dogs because maybe it wouldn't be taken seriously, but she had to take the leap. She fingerpaints dogs shaking themselves, and explains how it can be a very emotional process.
You might think the video is a parody if some of the paintings weren't selling for $43,000. Like petting a dog, visitors are encouraged to touch the paintings. While it must be hard to fingerpaint, this gimmick has become highly profitable. At least some real dogs will be helped — 5% of proceeds go to the Animal Humane Society. (11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tue.-Sun. through July 17, 775 E. Lake St., Wayzata, 952-473-8333, burnetart.com)
Eric-Paul Riege at Bockley
Riege's first solo show feels like entering into a friendly brain filled with a hanging loom and three sets of giant, plush, touch-friendly earrings.