City: A language we Spoke!

It was a good problem to have! Rosemary Ann Davis curated and organized a reading for the Susan Hensel Gallery last night.

City: A language we Spoke. Twelve readers, including Susan Hensel, read about cities they have known and loved. There were actually too many people to all fit inside for the festivities. Luckily, it was our first balmy night of spring.

Crown Coffee, the new shop next door, stayed open late selling their Fair Trade coffee and putting out lawn chairs for the overflow. Reader’s read. Listeners listened. Jaipur, Seoul, Istanbul, San Francisco, Buenos Aires, McMurdo Station, Cairo, Quetzaltenango, Paris, St. Petersburg, and The Cities That Marco Polo Left Behind was all represented. Don’t let the serious faces fool you. There was, as usual, much laugher, much levity.

Susan Hensel Gallery

The focus of Susan Hensel Gallery is on compelling objects, meaningful use of materials, and engaging sculpture. It is a gallery where experimental ideas and works of the hand join to create unique sensory experiences. Opened September 10th, 2004 Susan Hensel Gallery is a gallery/ workspace presenting 5-6 shows per year in an intimate space. with hardwood floors and high tin ceilings.

In 2013 the interior space reverted to a working studio for Susan Hensel where she continues to work on small and largescale artwork that engages. Both sculptural and cultural space. You can find her current work at www.SusanHenselProjects.com. The Susan Hensel Gallery is now a large window gallery on Cedar Avenue. The main thoroughfare in south Minneapolis and an online venture represented on Artsy.net.

Mission

The focus of Susan Hensel Gallery is on compelling objects, meaningful use of materials, and engaging sculpture. It is a gallery where experimental ideas and works of the hand join to create unique sensory experiences. Opened September 10th, 2004 Susan Hensel Gallery is a gallery/ workspace presenting 5-6 shows per year in an intimate space, with hardwood floors and high tin ceilings. In 2013 the interior space reverted to a working studio for Susan Hensel. Where she continues to work on small and largescale artwork that engages both sculptural and cultural space. You can find her current work at www.SusanHenselProjects.com. The Susan Hensel Gallery is now both a large window gallery on Cedar Avenue, the main thoroughfare in south Minneapolis and an online venture