"Awesome! This is beautiful," said a delighted visitor as three kids watched her scroll through iPad images at the "Family Day" opening last Sunday of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts' refurbished African art galleries.
Her overheard endorsement seemed to echo throughout the gallery as treasure-hunting kids chattered about gold weights, couples gaped at a fantasy coffin shaped like a giant lobster, and other visitors studied rugs and pottery, jewelry and weapons, royal regalia and fanciful musical instruments.
In one of those periodic upheavals that rumble through art museums, the MIA has totally reworked its African art collection, buying new things, sending others to storage, adding technological whiz-bang, and reinstalling it all in renovated galleries.
The result is a stripped-down display of about 125 objects, roughly half the number previously on view and only a sliver of the 2,100-piece African collection. Arranged thematically, they are a mix of masterpieces and utilitarian objects from across the continent. To give visitors an intimate experience, the museum has largely dispensed with display cases, instead setting most things on wide, open-air platforms that people can stroll around.
"It's a little risky, but we hope people will behave," said curator Jan-Lodewijk Grootaers, the museum's African expert, who oversaw the redesign.
Plans for the $745,000 renovation were developed by museum staff and architects from Minneapolis-based VJAA in consultation with local teachers, national scholars and members of the African diaspora, particularly the Twin Cities' Ethiopian and Somali communities.
Intended as a teachable introduction to African art and culture, the show incorporates touch-screen maps, iPad pictures and videos, and engaging, jargon-free labels with handy drawings to help visitors navigate the many cultures, histories and art forms.
Thematic threads
Several recent acquisitions are spotlighted in the "form and function" section consisting of about a dozen large ceramic vessels — beer pots, vases, a stylized teapot — surrounded by beautiful Berber rugs from Morocco, including a dramatic abstraction, a colorful patchwork of recycled cotton, and what appears to be a densely woven landscape of undulating hills and villages.