2024
We welcomed the year with our second annual winter residency at Camp du Nord, then headed into our summer season of artists! This year kicked-off with our Adopt-A-Highway Alumni weekend and continued with our MN State Arts Board sponsored Family Artist Residency and MN BIPOC Artist Residency and first ever MN BIPOC Arts Educators Residency. We continued to offer our Individual Artist Residencies and welcomed back the McKnight Dancer and Choreographer Fellows, the Playwrights’ Center, New York City based Octopus Theatricals, TLC alum Jinza Thayer’s Restoring the Dancing Body workshop, and hosted our first residency for the Ely Film Festival awardees! We closed out our season at the lake with April Sellers sharing her work in progress with the local community, and in the Cities with our first Alumni Showcase performance at Icehouse in Minneapolis.
2023
2023 was another exciting blend of new faces and old favorites! We kicked the year off with our first winter residency collaboration with Camp du Nord and launched the summer with our Adopt a Highway work weekend before jumping into hosting artists! Our programming included our National Emerging Artists, Family Artists, Individual Artist, and MN BIPOC Artist Residencies. We also hosted organizational retreats for the McKnight Dancer and Choreographer Fellows, Macalester College Theatre and Dance Students, the Playwrights’ Center, Octopus Theatricals, and wrapped up the season with a performance by the April Sellers Dance Collective. It was a season to remember.
2022
In 2022, we welcomed back familiar faces while also meeting many new ones! In addition to our our Individual Residencies, we were thrilled to host our first parent-artist retreat, partnering with Tru Ruts curate their first Black Artist Family Retreat, made possible with support from the Minnesota State Arts Board and the Sustainable Arts Foundation. Some familiar faces that we’re always happy to see at the lake were: April Sellers Dance Collective, Macalester College, Pangaea World Theatre, The Playwrights’ Center, and our Shinrin Yoku Forest Bathers. New faces to the lake included Lightning Rod Theater and National New Play Network.
2021
We were so excited to return to a full season of programming. We launched two new Residency Programs: our National Emerging Artists Program for emerging artists from around the country, and our MSAB Residency Program for BIPOC artists from around the state of Minnesota thanks to the generous support from the Minnesota State Arts Board.
2020
We’re so grateful to have been able to program half of our season, given the restrictions on activity demanded by Covid-19. This gave us the opportunity to respond to artists’ needs. We offered fully-funded residencies for BIPOC artists from Minneapolis and St. Paul, whose livelihoods were affected by the murder of George Floyd. Our Group Residencies focused on Black artists and activists who integrated their creative work with their racial justice work.
2018
In 2018 we celebrated our 10th Anniversary Season. We were excited to launch two new programming weeks: our Ambassadors Week, which brought local and national artistic leaders together to strategize how TLC can broaden our reach to artists and communities of color, and our Shinrin Yoku (Forest Bathing) Retreat, which introduced this growing nature therapy mindfulness practice to our TLC community.
2011
We initiated our community engagement efforts with SPDT’s creation and performance of a community-developed piece called Cast from the Water’s Edge: The Boundary Waters Project, performed by a combination of members from the Ely community and the SPDT dancers at Vermilion Community College.
2008
Our first full season of artistic programming was kicked off with our first public event: a moveable feast/site-specific work by Stuart Pimsler Dance & Theater (SPDT), a national Minneapolis-based dance company, which guided the 20 audience members around the 12-acre site of Norm's Fish Camp.