← NewsAll
Winnipeggers make art for Minneapolis fundraiser
Summary
Winnipeg's Art City hosted a workshop that produced artwork to be sent to Minneapolis group Articulture, with proceeds intended to support families affected by actions by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Minneapolis.
Content
Art City on Broadway in Winnipeg held a workshop where community members created pieces to be sent to a Minneapolis group called Articulture. The event brought together artworks with messages of solidarity, unity, love and hope. Organizers said the pieces are intended for use in a future fundraiser to help families affected by recent actions by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Minneapolis. Leaders from both organizations described the effort as a way to show support across the border.
Key details:
- Art City hosted the workshop and will send the finished work to Minneapolis-based Articulture.
- The pieces are planned for a future fundraiser intended to benefit families impacted by ICE operations in Minneapolis.
- Art City artistic director Eddie Ayoub said the group wanted to use art to build community and offer moral support to people facing fear and harm from those operations.
- Articulture executive director Liz Greenbaum said proceeds are intended to help with rent and lost income for families where breadwinners have been detained, and that people are reported to be afraid to leave their homes.
Summary:
The project is presented as a cross-border expression of solidarity and a fundraising effort for families affected by immigration enforcement actions. Art City will send the work to Articulture for use in a planned fundraiser, though the article does not specify a timeline for that event.
