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Reading: 23,000-Square-Foot Clasping Arms Celebrate Community Resilience in Minneapolis — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > 23,000-Square-Foot Clasping Arms Celebrate Community Resilience in Minneapolis — Colossal
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23,000-Square-Foot Clasping Arms Celebrate Community Resilience in Minneapolis — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 24 June 2026 19:30
Published 24 June 2026
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Across an expansive lawn at Minneapolis’ Boom Island Park earlier this month, Franco-Swiss artist Saype painted a monumental public artwork directly onto the grass. Part of his Beyond Walls series, which has so far seen 22 iterations around the world, the piece marked the first time the project appeared in the U.S.

Minneapolis found itself in the global spotlight earlier this year when ICE descended on the city and spurred several weeks of turmoil, protests, and violence. Especially tragic were the killings of Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti during interactions with agents. The city is no stranger to the ripple effects of police brutality, especially in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in 2020 and the subsequent surge in Black Lives Matter protests around the world.

What Minneapolis also has in spades is a deeply felt sense of community. It’s the sort of place where neighbors help to shovel each other’s sidewalks and find innovative ways to support one another. A recent study by State of the Nation ranked Minnesota number one in the U.S. for quality of life.

“I found an incredible humanity in Minneapolis—in the welcome of its people, their stories, their kindness. I’m deeply grateful for that,” Saype says. “And this is the power of art: to bring people together. I hope this work will make people dream—here and far beyond.”

Saype’s 310-by-75-foot ground mural stretches across the entire width of the park. It sits adjacent to the Mississippi River, which the Indigenous Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) people treat as sacred and call Misi-ziibi, or “Giant River.” The painting, created with a biodegradable medium the artist has developed over time, is designed to gradually fade as the elements and occasional mowing run their course.

During the first weekend in June, hundreds of residents turned out to see the work in progress and link together in a human chain to demonstrate solidarity, resilience, and togetherness. An official print edition of the completed work is available for purchase on Saype’s site, and proceeds support additional murals. See more on the artist’s Instagram.

a drone shot of artist Saype painting two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis
a drone shot of two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis with a long line of people drifting around it
a drone shot of two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis with people walking around it
a drone shot of two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis
a drone shot of two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis at sunset
a drone shot of two enormous clasping arms on a large lawn in Minneapolis, surrounded by people

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