Hanging from every wall and tucked into every corner of a room in Valerie Castile's house is the face of her son, Philando, rendered in paint and pencil.
The artworks began arriving soon after a St. Anthony police officer fatally shot him nearly two years ago, the aftermath captured and narrated by his girlfriend in livestream video that transfixed the world. The art kept coming.
Paintings, drawings, posters. A pair of handmade teddy bears.
"Each one of these pieces has its own story," she said, unrolling an 8-foot-tall canvas.
The images gave Valerie Castile comfort as she grieved. Castile, 62, is a spiritual woman, and a voice — God? Philando? — kept nagging her to share the artworks with more Minnesotans so that they, too, might be comforted. Last year, she called the Minneapolis Institute of Art's general line and left a voicemail.
That cold call launched an exhibit.
"Art and Healing: In the Moment," which opens this weekend, showcases 15 works from Minnesota artists, created in response to Castile's shooting. The show, in the small Cargill Gallery off the museum's entrance lobby, includes portraits, videos and a ceramic sculpture of a broken heart, the word " why" patterned over its right atrium. There are protest posters, too. One, depicting a raised fist, was signed by dozens of students after the death of the 32-year-old elementary school cafeteria supervisor they called "Mr. Phil."
Along with the art, the exhibit features a sold-out talk Friday evening by attorney and author Bryan Stevenson, founder of Alabama's Legacy Museum on slavery, lynching and racial segregation.