Announcing Indigenous Projection Art Project coming this Winter


Public art in the (virtual) neighborhood 


A Message From Our Founder, Steve Dietz


Spring Howl 2020: A Virtual Art Experience

Join us (online) for a Spring Howl!

Spring Howl: a virtual art experience
Available online April 4 – 30

 Online Art Experience Ticket: $25

Click here for tickets. 

 

Featuring: 

a coming together: a performance for our time 

By Hawona Sullivan Janzen and Kathy McTavish

 

Due to the changes around is in light of COVID-19, Spring Howl is no longer a public event.

Log on in the month of April for a virtual poem born out of our complex times. This poly vocal, kaleidoscopic animation and sound project is a collaboration between digital artist and musician Kathy McTavish and poet Hawona Sullivan Janzen, originally commissioned to do separate projects for Northern Light.mn’s Spring Howl fundraiser. 

Tickets to this new, online form of Spring Howl are still on sale, and may be purchased from Eventbrite now through midnight on April 29th.

If you have already purchased a ticket, your ticket will automatically convert to a digital Spring Howl ticket. Refunds will be available for those who decline the digital version, although we encourage you to consider keeping your ticket to access the online artwork and to support our work at Northern Lights.mn. Check your inbox for further communication.  

Your support is more important than ever as we work to think strategically, involve others in our planning and make sure that when Northern Spark returns in 2021 it is more sustainable and just as innovative, joyful and community-building as it’s always been! 

Tickets

Online Spring Howl art experience: $25

Artists at Spring Howl

Kathy McTavish is a media composer and installation artist. She has a long history with Northern Lights.mn. She presented two projects at Northern Spark 2015: Map It and Requiem for Solo Instrument Distance. In 2017, she presented A Hole in the Sky with Zeitgeist. Most recently McTavish was an Art(ist) on the Verge 10 Fellow.

Hawona Sullivan Janzen is a St. Paul-based poet and performance artist. Hawona’s experience with Northern Lights began started at Northern Spark 2019 with a re-presentation of Rondo Family Reunion. She is also a member of the 2019 – 2020 Program Council. Hawona is commissioned to write and perform a poem for Spring Howl.

In response to the cancelation of Spring Howl as a public event, Hawona and Kathy are collaborating for the first time to create a new poetic, visual, sonic artwork to be experienced in the digital realm.

 

Many thanks to Fulton for their support of Northern Spark.  

Thanks also to  Hennepin & Co for their ongoing support of Northern Lights.mn


Northern Spark Community Survey

“[Northern Spark] exposes me and the community to a variety of art forms we wouldn’t otherwise see – in a space that creates a shared experience and brings people together.”
–Northern Spark Community Survey Respondent

As we reflect and plan for the future of Northern Spark, we want to hear from you! Please tell us why Northern Spark is important to you, what you would like to see change or stay the same in the future, and your favorite Northern Spark memory (or two).

Take the Northern Spark Community Survey here.


Announcing our 2019-2020 Program Council!

Our Program Council members are hard at work! These seven artists are working to review, plan, and envision strategies for the future of the Northern Spark festival.  This strategic focus will culminate in a Strategic Framework for Community Engagement at Northern Spark that will inform planning processes for the festival in 2021 and beyond.

Each member of 2019-2020 Council has direct experience with Northern Spark either as a commissioned festival artist or previous Program Council member, or both! They also hold relationships and histories with communities in the city of Saint Paul, which is an additional focus of our research and reflection year.

Meet the Program Council members here!

Thank you to Cultural STAR for supporting the Program Council and our partnerships in Saint Paul.


Press Release: Northern Lights.mn to Take a Year Off from the Northern Spark Festival in 2020 to Plan for the Future 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 22nd, 2019

Northern Lights.mn to Take a Year Off from the
Northern Spark Festival in 2020 to Plan for the Future 

The free public art festival will return to the Twin Cities in June 2021 after a year of strategic planning and leadership transition

(Minneapolis, MN) October 22, 2019 — Northern Lights.mn is announcing a strategic, one year hiatus from its flagship program, Northern Spark, while the organization undergoes a leadership transition in 2020. Since 2011, the free annual late-night public art festival has captured the hearts of tens of thousands of festival attendees in a dozen neighborhoods throughout the Twin Cities, showcasing the innovative art of more than 2,300 artists. In order to reflect on the previous nine years of dynamic and ever-changing Northern Spark festivals and plan for the festival’s long-term sustainability and equity, Northern Lights will take a year off from producing Northern Spark in 2020, returning with a renewed vision for the festival in 2021.

Leadership Transition

Last spring, Northern Lights announced the planned departure of founder Steve Dietz in the spring of 2020. For the past year and a half, Sarah Peters and Steve Dietz have worked as Co-Directors, preparing for a leadership transition with Peters taking the helm. As part of this transition, Northern Lights is looking at all of the organization’s programs, including Northern Spark, and deciding how they need to transform into the future.

“We have experimented with many different models for Northern Spark over the years,” says Peters. “This has been wild and rewarding, and allowed us to produce the event in divergent places, under myriad themes, and with many neighborhood and city partners. In the life cycle of such an event, it is time to focus all of this innovation and figure out what to take forward that is efficient, equitable and joyful.”

Northern Lights’s work with the Program Council (see below) is key to this strategic planning, along with work that staff and board are undertaking to refresh the organization’s vision for the next ten years.

Goals: Equity and Sustainability

In the past several years, Northern Lights has stepped up efforts to make participation in the festival more inclusive for both artists and attendees.

As part of the transition year, the third Program Council, a group of independent artists addressing racial equity within Northern Lights’ programming, specifically with Northern Spark, will work on building a Community Engagement Strategic Framework for use in future Northern Spark festivals. This framework will create a process for how to best engage collaborators and determine festival locations to ensure that Northern Lights supports artists and communities equitably into the future.

Producing an annual festival requires significant costs, including artist fees, staffing, equipment rental, permit fees, marketing, security, electricity, recycling and port-a-potties, among other expenses. Creating a plan for new, equitable models of revenue generation will help Northern Spark’s long-term sustainability and decreased reliance on grants, while maintaining the accessibility of the event that is important for its success and sense of community.

This year of work will result in a plan for the future that foregrounds equity for artists and communities who participate, and creates a model for long-term sustainability of the festival.

The Creative City Challenge will also Take a Year Off in 2020

The Creative City Challenge will also be on hiatus in 2020. Through a partnership between Northern Lights, the Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy of the City of Minneapolis (ACCE) and The Commons, Creative City Challenge winners have created temporary artworks and two months of participatory programming, encouraging a sense of connectedness to the city and its rich cultural and natural offerings. For the last seven years, the Creative City Challenge winning projects have been launched as part of Northern Spark.

In 2020, ACCE will evaluate the Creative City Challenge program, including the challenges and opportunities of implementation. The evaluation will look at how the Creative City Challenge can better work towards equitably serving emerging public artists of color, immigrant and Indigenous artists, Minneapolis neighborhoods as well as the downtown core. The Creative City Challenge will return in 2021.

Northern Spark 2021

Northern Spark will return in the summer of 2021. Northern Lights will engage with artists, partners, community members, and the public during the transition year to inform the vision for the festival’s future. Members of the public are invited to give feedback and stay connected through:

  • Community Survey. Northern Lights has always been inspired to continue producing Northern Spark because of the stories of wonder, curiosity, connection and joy we hear from attendees. We invite you to tell us why Northern Spark is important to you, what you would like to see change or stay the same in the future, and your favorite Northern Spark memory (or two) through this Community Survey.
  • A public feedback event will be announced in the near future.
  • Spring Howl, a celebration and fundraising event in late March 2020.
  • Northern Lights newsletter
  • Northern Lights on Facebook
  • Northern Lights on Instagram
  • Northern Lights on Twitter

Other Northern Lights.mn Programming Continues

Northern Spark is the largest program produced by Northern Lights, but it is not the organization’s only program. Additional Northern Lights programming will continue in 2020. This includes:

  • Art(ists) on the Verge, the annual, intensive, mentor-based fellowship program for 4-5 Minnesota-based, emerging artists working experimentally at the intersection of art, technology, and digital culture with a focus on network-based practices that are interactive and/or participatory. The Art(ists) on the Verge 10 exhibition with work by Lindsy Halleckson, Essma Imady, Kathy McTavish, Khadijah Muse, and Chris Rackley in currently on view through Feb. 8, 2020 at Rochester Art Center. Art(ists) on the Verge 11 projects will take place in public spaces between September and November 2020.
  • The Program Council (see above).

For more information visit the FAQ page here.

Northern Spark Background

Since 2011, thousands of Minnesotans and visitors have enjoyed Northern Spark, an annual arts festival illuminating public spaces in Minneapolis and St. Paul. In early June, tens of thousands of people gather to explore giant video projections, play in temporary installations in the streets, and enjoy experimental performances in green spaces. Late into the night the city surprises you: friendly crowds, glowing groups of cyclists, an unexpected path through the urban landscape, the magic of sunrise after a night of amazing art and experiences.

Northern Spark began as a dusk-to-dawn event. In 2018 we introduced a new model for attendees to experience the artful magic of Northern Spark for two nights in a row until 2 am.

Memorable projects from past Northern Spark festivals include Chris Larson’s Celebration/Love/Loss, Jim Campbell’s Scattered Light, Luke Savisky’s Ex-MN, Pramila Vasudevan’s Census and In Habit: Living Patterns, Jonathan Thunder’s Manifest’o, and countless other projects from artists such as: Ananya Dance Theater, Marina Zurkow, HOTTEA, Miko Simmons, Piotr Szyhalski, May Lee-Yang and Million Artist Movement.

Northern Spark is produced by Northern Lights.mn, a Twin Cities non-profit arts organization whose work ranges from large-scale public art platforms like Northern Spark to Art(ists) On the Verge, a year­long mentorship program for 4-5 emerging artists working with digital culture. We support artists in the creation and presentation of art in the public sphere, such as at St. Paul’s Union Depot (Amateur Intelligence Radio), “choir karaoke” at the Minnesota State Fair (Giant Sing Along) and Illuminate South Loop, a mini outdoor festival of nine interactive projects in Bloomington, MN’s South Loop in the days leading up to the 2018 Super Bowl. Through projects such as Aquanesia, a location-­based environmental mystery game, and large scale festivals themed around social issues, our work helps audiences explore expanded possibilities for civic engagement through art.

MEDIA CONTACT
Amy Danielson, 612.245.2020 amy@northern.lights.mn
northern.lights.mn
Photo Highlights
Facebook: facebook.com/NorthernSparkMN
Twitter: @NL_mn
Instagram: @Northern Lights.mn
#northernspark


Frequently Asked Questions – Northern Spark Hiatus

FAQs 

Northern Lights.mn has announced a one year hiatus from our flagship program, Northern Spark, while the organization undergoes a leadership transition in 2020.  (Read the full announcement here: https://northern.lights.mn/2019/10/important-news/ )

We are doing so in order to reflect on the previous nine years of dynamic and ever-changing Northern Spark festivals and plan for the festival’s long-term sustainability and equity. 

Read below for answers to some common questions. 

 

Why is Northern Spark taking a break in 2020?

  • Northern Lights.mn is taking a break from organizing the festival in 2020 in order to reflect on the previous nine years of dynamic and ever-changing festivals and plan for the long-term sustainability of Northern Spark.
  • We announced last spring that Northern Lights founder Steve Dietz would be stepping away from the organization in the spring of 2020. A significant part of this leadership transition is looking at all of the organizations programs and figuring out how they need to transform into the future.
  • Northern Lights is a lean organization, and the festival is a significant undertaking. Deeply engaging in important strategy work with staff, board and our Program Council requires a year off from planning Northern Spark.

 

 

Is Northern Spark in financial trouble?

  • Producing an annual festival requires significant costs, including artist fees, staffing, equipment rental, permit fees, marketing, security, electricity, recycling and port-a-potties, among other costs. Creating a plan for new, equitable models of revenue generation will ensure Northern Spark’s long-term sustainability and decreased reliance on grants, while maintaining the accessibility of the event that is important for its success and sense of community.

Who funds Northern Spark?

  • Northern Spark is supported by a mix of foundation, local and state government grants, individual donations, corporate sponsorships, and fees from food vendors and presenting partners. Within this mix, foundation grants are the largest piece of the pie, and while we are so grateful for this support, competitive grants are not a stable source of income year after year. 
  • Northern Lights also receives Operating Support from the Minnesota State Arts Board and McKnight Foundation which in turn supports Northern Spark and all of our other programming.

 

 

How can I get involved in planning for the future of Northern Spark?

 

 

What is the plan for Northern Spark in 2021?

  • We are currently working with the Program Council to develop a Community Engagement Strategic Plan for Northern Spark to use for the 2021 festival and beyond. We won’t know the who, what and where of Northern Spark 2021 until that work is complete and conversations begin with potential Neighborhood Partners in both Minneapolis and St. Paul. We plan to return to the 2nd weekend in June with presentations of the multidisciplinary, participatory, spectacular and intimate art that people look for during Northern Spark.

Who creates Northern Spark?

  • Northern Spark is produced by Northern Lights.mn, a non-profits arts organization. We are a lean organization with roughly 1.5 full time equivalent year round staff. A core team of temporary staff of fewer than 10 people are hired to organize Northern Spark each year, along with upwards of 30 additional weekend-of festival roles such as production assistants and a zero-waste team. 
  • We also work with numerous Neighborhood, Venue and Presenting Partner organizations each year who produce their own artistic programming for the festival.
  • For the 2017 and 2019 festivals, the Program Council, a rotating group of independent artists, worked with us to develop the festival’s open call and juried artist projects commissioned by Northern Lights.
  • And of course, artists create Northern Spark. Northern Lights commissions between 10 and 30 artist projects for each festival, depending on the year. Presenting Partners contribute additional artist projects each year.

Important News about Northern Spark

Northern Lights.mn to Take a Year Off from the Northern Spark Festival in 2020 to Plan for the Future

The free public art festival will return to the Twin Cities in June 2021 after a year of strategic planning and leadership transition.

(Minneapolis, MN) October 22, 2019 — Northern Lights.mn is announcing a one year hiatus from its flagship program, Northern Spark, while the organization undergoes a leadership transition in 2020. Since 2011, the free annual late-night public art festival has captured the hearts of tens of thousands of festival attendees in a dozen neighborhoods throughout the Twin Cities, showcasing the innovative art of more than 2,300 artists. In order to reflect on the previous nine years of dynamic and ever-changing Northern Spark festivals and plan for the festival’s long-term sustainability and equity, Northern Lights will take a year off from producing Northern Spark in 2020, returning with a renewed vision for the festival in 2021.


Leadership Transition

Last spring, Northern Lights announced the planned departure of founder Steve Dietz in the spring of 2020. For the past year and a half, Sarah Peters and Steve Dietz have worked as Co-Directors, preparing for a leadership transition with Peters taking the helm. As part of this transition, Northern Lights is looking at all of the organization’s programs, including Northern Spark, and deciding how they need to transform into the future. 

“We have experimented with many different models for Northern Spark over the years,” says Peters. “This has been wild and rewarding, and allowed us to produce the event in divergent places, under myriad themes, and with many neighborhood and city partners. In the life cycle of such an event, it is time to focus all of this innovation and figure out what to take forward that is efficient, equitable and joyful.”

Northern Lights’s work with the Program Council (see below) is key to this strategic planning, along with work that staff and board are undertaking to refresh the organization’s vision for the next ten years.

Goals: Equity and Sustainability

In the past several years, Northern Lights has stepped up efforts to make participation in the festival more inclusive for both artists and attendees. 

As part of the transition year, the third Program Council, a group of independent artists addressing racial equity within Northern Lights’ programming, specifically with Northern Spark, will work on building a Community Engagement Strategic Framework for use in future Northern Spark festivals. This framework will create a process for how to best engage collaborators and determine festival locations to ensure that Northern Lights supports artists and communities equitably into the future.

Producing an annual festival requires significant costs, including artist fees, staffing, equipment rental, permit fees, marketing, security, electricity, recycling and port-a-potties, among other expenses. Creating a plan for new, equitable models of revenue generation will help Northern Spark’s long-term sustainability and decreased reliance on grants, while maintaining the accessibility of the event that is important for its success and sense of community. 

This year of work will result in a plan for the future that foregrounds equity for artists and communities who participate, and creates a model for long-term sustainability of the festival. 

The Creative City Challenge will also Take a Year Off in 2020 

The Creative City Challenge will also be on hiatus in 2020. Through a partnership between Northern Lights, the Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy of the City of Minneapolis (ACCE) and The Commons, Creative City Challenge winners have created temporary artworks and two months of participatory programming, encouraging a sense of connectedness to the city and its rich cultural and natural offerings. For the last seven years, the Creative City Challenge winning projects have been launched as part of Northern Spark. 

In 2020, ACCE will evaluate the Creative City Challenge program, including the challenges and opportunities of implementation. The evaluation will look at how the Creative City Challenge can better work towards equitably serving emerging public artists of color, immigrant and Indigenous artists, Minneapolis neighborhoods as well as the downtown core. The Creative City Challenge will return in 2021.

Northern Spark 2021

Northern Spark will return in the summer of 2021. Northern Lights will engage with artists, partners, community members, and the public during the transition year to inform the vision for the festival’s future. Members of the public are invited to give feedback and stay connected through:

  • Community Survey. Northern Lights has always been inspired to continue producing Northern Spark because of the stories of wonder, curiosity, connection and joy we hear from attendees. We invite you to tell us why Northern Spark is important to you, what you would like to see change or stay the same in the future, and your favorite Northern Spark memory (or two) through this Community Survey
  • A public feedback event will be announced in the near future.
  • Spring Howl on in late March, 2020, a celebration and fundraising event.

Other Northern Lights.mn Programming Continues

Northern Spark is the largest program produced by Northern Lights, but it is not the organization’s only program. Additional Northern Lights programming will continue in 2020. This includes:

  • Art(ists) on the Verge, the annual, intensive, mentor-based fellowship program for 4-5 Minnesota-based, emerging artists working experimentally at the intersection of art, technology, and digital culture with a focus on network-based practices that are interactive and/or participatory.
    • The Art(ists) on the Verge 10 exhibition with work by Lindsy Halleckson, Essma Imady, Kathy McTavish, Khadijah Muse, and Chris Rackley in currently on view through Feb. 8, 2020 at Rochester Art Center.  
    • Art(ists) on the Verge 11 projects will take place in public spaces between September and November 2020. 
  • The Program Council (see above).

More information check out our FAQ page here.

Northern Spark Background

Since 2011, thousands of Minnesotans and visitors have enjoyed Northern Spark, an annual arts festival illuminating public spaces in Minneapolis and St. Paul. In early June, tens of thousands of people gather to explore giant video projections, play in temporary installations in the streets, and enjoy experimental performances in green spaces. Late into the night the city surprises you: friendly crowds, glowing groups of cyclists, an unexpected path through the urban landscape, the magic of sunrise after a night of amazing art and experiences.

Northern Spark began as a dusk-to-dawn event. In 2018 we introduced a new model for attendees to experience the artful magic of Northern Spark for two nights in a row until 2 am.

Memorable projects from past Northern Spark festivals include Chris Larson’s Celebration/Love/Loss, Jim Campbell’s Scattered Light, Luke Savisky’s Ex-MN, Pramila Vasudevan’s Census and In Habit: Living Patterns, Jonathan Thunder’s Manifest’o, and countless other projects from artists such as: Ananya Dance Theater, Marina Zurkow, HOTTEA, Miko Simmons, Piotr Szyhalski, May Lee-Yang and Million Artist Movement. 

Northern Spark is produced by Northern Lights.mn, a Twin Cities non-profit arts organization whose work ranges from large-scale public art platforms like Northern Spark to Art(ists) On the Verge, a year­long mentorship program for 4-5 emerging artists working with digital culture. We support artists in the creation and presentation of art in the public sphere, such as at St. Paul’s Union Depot (Amateur Intelligence Radio), “choir karaoke” at the Minnesota State Fair (Giant Sing Along) and Illuminate South Loop, a mini outdoor festival of nine interactive projects in Bloomington, MN’s South Loop in the days leading up to the 2018 Super Bowl. Through projects such as Aquanesia, a location-­based environmental mystery game, and large scale festivals themed around social issues, our work helps audiences explore expanded possibilities for civic engagement through art.


Art(ists) on the Verge 11: Artists announced!


Be an Art(ist) on the Verge!


Northern Spark by the numbers

45,398 visits to the Northern Spark 2019 website

11,808 steps walked by a NS volunteer in the Commons

4,500 printed maps

3,442 free Metro Transit rides

600 Americans for the Arts conference attendees

297 Poetry People / People Poetry photos taken

240 sandbags deployed

60 walkie talkies used

55 Production team members

46 volunteers

31 artist projects

15 programming and venue partners

15 Festival Apprentices

8 venues, including 3 libraries

4 trucks to haul signage, tents and materials

4 families hired!

  • 3 Payer sisters on zero waste crew, tech crew & curatorial apprentice
  • 2 Heckt brothers on social media
  • 2 Freemans (mother & daughter) as volunteer coordinator & volunteer/daytime ambassador
  • 2 Thunders; one as artist, one as police officer

3 neighborhoods

2 nights