Impact Report
Jan 2020 - Jul 2021
Video footage © University of Minnesota and © Gian Lorenzo.
When I think about this last year and a half it plays out very much like a novel in my mind complete with a strong opening, interspersed with a balance of tension and release, joy and sorrow, loss and growth, and culminating in an ending that will leave each of us changed. In March 2020, the world shifted and live performances shut down. It felt like we were making plans based on what we were seeing in a cracked crystal ball, so to move forward, we looked to the firm foundation of our mission to guide us. Northrop’s role as a performing arts presenter at the heart of a great University is that of a connector – creating intersections between arts and education, bringing together artists and audiences, and bridging our inner and outer worlds. That identity as a connector remains constant even as the world around us changes. In fact, it is in times of adversity when we most need the unity, healing, and hope that the arts provide. In telling Northrop’s story over these past 18 months the themes that shine through are those of resilience, fortitude, creativity, and innovation. Ultimately this is a story of people, connection, and the perseverance of the human spirit. Thank you for taking this journey with us. —Kari Schloner, Director of Northrop
Photo © Tim Rummelhoff.
Ballet West in Emeralds. Photo © Beau Pearson.
The conclusion of Northrop's 2020 in-person winter performances enraptured audiences.
“Northrop is taking big leaps. In a time when many people are reluctant to return to theaters and concert halls, [Northrop] is offering a livestream option for every event, up to and including the season finale in May 2021. It has committed to high-quality, multi camera, professional productions. And it has commissioned new work from companies whose appearances were canceled.” |
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Northrop pivoted its season from in-person to livestream and on-demand events.
Photo still and video footage from the film.
Photo still and video footage © Jeff Nohner.
Photo © Anne Michele Mallory
Northrop’s imaginative Film Series featured free, award-winning films with artistic voices from around the world, providing deeper insight and context into Northrop’s 2020-21 Dance Series programs.
In searching for ways to support artists whose performances were postponed and cancelled because of COVID-19, Northrop developed the Northrop Centennial Commissions program. This initiative supports new dance works through residencies and financial support while creating opportunities for our communities to engage with the artists at the same time that the work is being created. The culmination of this transformational program will occur during Northrop’s centennial anniversary in 2029.
In its third season since the historic Aeolian-Skinner pipe organ restoration, Northrop was able to offer both in-person and online organ concerts, following Minnesota state's health guidelines.
“If I'm going to be inside a concert hall, it may as well be one in which the hall itself feels like a musical instrument. And that's what an organ concert at Northrop is like.” —Star Tribune, Apr 2021 |
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Supporting the University of Minnesota, the Twin Cities community, and more.
Using the boundless power of arts and education to ignite transformation in each individual, Northrop and U of M student and academic partners proudly presented events and learning opportunities that represent a variety of community voices.
41 Audio Captions, Nine Live Captions, Five ASL Interpreters, Two Audio Descriptions
Photo © Tim Rummelhoff.
Photo still and video footage © Gopher Photo.
Photo courtesy of UMN College of Science and Engineering.
Photo © Tim Rummelhoff.
Photo © Tim Rummelhoff.
Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE in Grace. Photo © Julietta Cervantes.
“Our 5th grade classes just watched the performance—it was great! We missed the thrill of getting on the bus, entering the theater and cozying into the plush velvet seats but everything else was a joy! Thank you for making this opportunity available.” —Teacher, Falcon Heights Elementary School |
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Photo courtesy of Kutztown University.
Northrop is proud to serve as an intersection for arts, culture, and education, where U of M students gather for dance performances, lectures, concerts, film screenings, and other arts-related events—as well as convocations, graduations, and other student ceremonies and activities. When the world shifted, Northrop discovered new ways to prioritize students and create meaningful experiences with our campus partners.
Photos © Tony Nelson.
Copyright © 2019 Regents of the University of Minnesota. All rights reserved.
Photo © Jennifer Taylor.
Photo © Tim Rummelhoff.
Northrop brings the arts beyond the walls of our organization into our communities to provide mutually inspiring engagement experiences at many levels.
“Amplifying Solidarity includes multiple elements highlighting the importance of the Black Lives Matter Movement while encouraging students to educate themselves and take a stand against systemic racism.” |
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Lady Midnight. Photo © Teddy Grimes.
“I definitely have a new expanded vision on the music and the dance. I feel like I've been contaminated with the joy and love of it. I hear the music differently; I see the dance differently." |
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American Ballet Theatre performance. Photo © Jayme Halbritter Photography.
One year, four months, and eleven days after Northrop's last live presentation of a dance company for an in-person audience, Northrop was one of eight cities nationwide to present American Ballet Theatre in ABT Across America. Enthusiastic audiences filled the lawn with their picnic blankets and chairs in front of ABT's 40' x 76' stage (that unfolded from an 18-wheeler semi-truck!), at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum, in anticipation of experiencing America's National Ballet Company under the prairie sky. Reporters from Ovation TV, The New York Times, and many others, lined up to tell the story of this return to live dance performances. But it was the crowds of fans, numbering 4,000, with their smiles, cheers, standing ovations—and a few joyful tears—who best reflected the depth of feeling that comes from experiencing live arts—together.
“If we have learned anything from our time in isolation and quarantine, closed doors and ghostlit stages" wrote attendee and reporter Pamela Espeland from MinnPost, "it's that we're more alive, more aware, more open to emotion in each other's presence.” |
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Photo still and video footage © Sky Candy Studios Michael Welsh.