Art Hounds: New SWANA plays, 5-minute films



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From MPR News, Art Hounds are members of the Minnesota arts community who look beyond their own work to highlight what’s exciting in local art. Their recommendations are lightly edited from the audio heard in the player above.

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Six new plays from Arab American Theaterworks

Deborah Copperud of Minneapolis hosts the podcast “Read Minnesota Books.” She’s looking forward to a new event, the Festival of New SWANA Plays, this weekend.

SWANA stands for Southwest Asian and North African, and it's a culmination of the New Arab American Theater Works Playwright Incubator Program. Open Book in Minneapolis will host staged readings of six new plays by Midwestern SWANA playwrights.

Three play readings happen each day at 1, 4 and 7 p.m. with a moderated audience talkback following each show. Tickets are $15 per day.

Deborah says the plays are all different: There's a psychological thriller, a fairy tale adaptation, a domestic drama and a travel quest.

Sana Wazwaz is a playwright from Minneapolis, and she is presenting “Birthright Palestine” [Saturday at 7 p.m.]. The play was inspired by her experience organizing for Palestinian liberation as a college student.

— Deborah Copperud

5-Minute Film Festival in Duluth

Denise Voie de Vie is a working artist in Duluth specializing in mixed media and acrylics. She’s expecting to be part of a good crowd at Prøve Collective this Saturday for their 5-Minute Film Festival.

The free event will screen 17 or 18 very short films by local artists, ranging in style from animation to documentary to abstract and beyond. Doors open at 7 p.m.

Denise admires the work coming out of Prøve: There is a really lively art scene here in Duluth, and Prøve has carved out that niche for new and upcoming talent.

There are a lot of really young and talented people on the board, and they are willing to take chances on art. It's a place where some of the most exciting things happen.

— Denise Voie de Vie

Art meets healthcare in Med City

Lauren Hutchinson lives in Rochester, having previously worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. She recently enjoyed seeing the exhibition “Forms of Care: The Art of Representing the Body” at Rochester Center for the Arts.

It’s a thought-provoking multi-artist exhibition that explores the field of medicine and its interaction with human bodies as well as the ethics of representing human bodies in medical texts. The show includes 2D work, sculptures and an opportunity for visitors to sit for portraits. It runs through January 2027.

Lauren says: It really makes you question: Can one body be used to represent an entire population of diverse individuals?

I hope lots of doctors and medical staff will get to experience the exhibition and see the creativity and artistry that's hidden behind a lot of their work.

— Lauren Hutchinson



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Do you have a retirement plan?

Do you have a retirement plan?
A new, state-facilitated program called Secure Choice is beginning to automatically enroll small business employees.
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A new, state-facilitated program called Secure Choice is beginning to automatically enroll small business employees, aimed at giving about 300,000 Minnesotans unprecedented access to retirement benefits.

Secure Choice Executive Director Chad Roberts told Morning Edition that the state’s responsibility to help people save — in addition to social security — for life after their careers eases the burden for the rest of the public.

“That social safety net does not have to reach as far, because everybody has their own safety net with retirement,” he said.

More than a dozen states are participating in the program. In Minnesota, the Legislature approved it in 2023, and a staggered rollout began in January and runs through June 2028 based on the number of employees at a business. The default savings rate is 5 percent.

Roberts said the feedback from businesses and employees has been largely positive.

“Employees can opt out, but right now, we're only seeing 16 percent of enrolled employees drop out of the program, and so to us, that's clear evidence that 80-85 percent of Minnesota workers without retirement want this opportunity to save for their own retirement,” he explained.

While money is tight for many right now, “how hard is it going to be at the end of your working career, when you can't generate more income and you don't have anything to buy gas with, to buy groceries with, to pay rent or mortgage with,” he argued. “And money today invested in retirement is worth much more at the time you retire, and so saving a little now gets you a lot later.”



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