ICE OUT NOW at Lagoon Cinema window, Minneapolis
January 2026 — "ICE OUT NOW!" in the windows of the Landmark Lagoon Cinema. Uptown Minneapolis January 29, 2026
Explore photos tagged Theater.
January 2026 — "ICE OUT NOW!" in the windows of the Landmark Lagoon Cinema. Uptown Minneapolis January 29, 2026
August 2025 — A Metro Transit B-Line bus crosses Hennepin Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis.
August 2025 — Looking down Hennepin Avenue at the Uptown Theater. The theater has Jerry Cantrell coming up.
April 2025 — Street vendor at Hennepin and Lagoon in Uptown Minneapolis on a warm spring day.
January 2025 — A beautiful mid January sunset behind Target Field Station in the North Loop Minneapolis.
September 2024 — A lit up Uptown Theater sign on Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis.
September 2024 — Signs outside the Uptown Theater reminding ticket holders there will be No Moshing allowed at tonight's Cuban Buena Vista Social Orchestra show...
September 2024 — Sepultura on the Uptown Theater marquee in Uptown Minneapolis.
July 2024 — Sneaky Pete's Wild West Dinner Show in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin.
June 2024 — Heavy road construction on Hennepin Avenue and Lake Street in Uptown Minneapolis.
May 2024 — Music Box Theatre on Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis. Built in the 1920s the theatre was recently purchased by Miracle City church.
May 2024 — Music Box Theatre on Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis. Built in the 1920s the theatre was recently purchased by Miracle City church.
May 2024 — Music Box Theatre on Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis. Built in the 1920s the theatre was recently purchased by Miracle City church.
May 2024 — Music Box Theatre on Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis. Built in the 1920s the theatre was recently purchased by Miracle City church.
May 2024 — Music Box Theatre on Nicollet Ave in Minneapolis. Built in the 1920s the theatre was recently purchased by Miracle City church.
January 2024 — The Uptown Theater after renovations in Uptown Minneapolis in January 2024.
December 2023 — Recently re-opened Uptown Theater in Uptown Minneapolis. At the corner of Lagoon and Hennepin avenue.
September 2023 — Target Field, home of the Minnesota Twins, seen from the railroad tracks.
September 2023 — Beetlejuice at the Orpheum Theatre in downtown Minneapolis in September 2023.
August 2023 — Uptown Theater at Hennepin and Lagoon in Uptown Minneapolis. As seen in August 2023.
June 2023 — After closing during pandemic closures, the Uptown Theater in Uptown Minneapolis opens after renovations.
June 2023 — Opening night at the Uptown Theater in Minneapolis following a renovation and owner change.
May 2023 — The Uptown Theater during renovation. It's set to open next month as one of the largest music venues in Minneapolis.
October 2022 — The missing uptown theatre letters. The developer says they are rehabbing them.
October 2022 — Gwar on the marquee of the Skyway Theatre in downtown Minneapolis.
January 2022 — Uptown Theatre in Minneapolis as it goes through a major renovation turning it into a concert hall.
November 2021 — Construction happening at the former Uptown Theatre in Uptown Minneapolis.
October 2021 — ReVamp! Salonspa on Hennepin Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis.
September 2021 — The illuminated marquee of the Jungle Theater in Minneapolis’s Lyn-Lake neighborhood, photographed at night. The Jungle has been a cornerstone of the area’s performing-arts culture since its founding in 1991, known for intimate productions and a focus on contemporary and classical works presented in a small black-box setting. Its signage—bold white lettering over a backlit panel—has become a recognizable part of the neighborhood’s streetscape and nightlife. The theater emerged during a period of renewed investment in the Lyn-Lake district, when independent venues, restaurants, and arts organizations were helping to define the neighborhood as a creative corridor between Uptown and Whittier. Over the decades, the Jungle has developed a reputation for staging artist-driven performances and supporting local talent, contributing to the broader evolution of Minneapolis’s community-based theater movement that gained momentum in the late 20th centur
September 2021 — Letters from the Uptown Theatre marquee after they were taken down as Landmark Theatre moved out after closing during the pandemic.
July 2021 — Smoke in Minneapolis from the Canadian wildfires makes the view of downtown hazy. Seen from Minneapolis North Loop.
May 2021 — Ely's Historic State Theater located at 238 E Sheridan St. Ely, MN.
October 2020 — Ford Center and Broadway Avenue in North Minneapolis.
June 2020 — Minneapolis Police on bikes patrol outside the Uptown Theater while hot rudders gather in the area. The streets were closed after nights of street closures.
June 2020 — Gunfire breaks windows at the Uptown Theater on June 21, 2020.
June 2020 — Mural located on Hennepin Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis by Adam Turman. The boards on Uptown Theatre read “Do the right thing” “Love MPLS” “Justice for George Floyd”.
June 2020 — State Theatre marquee in downtown Minneapolis with an MLK quote.
June 2020 — Boarded up Uptown Theater in Uptown Minneapolis with boards reading “Silence = Violence” and “Wake Up White People”.
May 2020 — Broken windows at the Uptown Theatre on Hennepin Ave during the 3rd day of protests in Minneapolis following the death of George Floyd.
May 2020 — The Ford Center building in the Minneapolis North Loop.
March 2020 — Uptown Theatre on Hennepin Ave and Lagoon Ave in Minneapolis during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
March 2020 — Hennepin Avenue in Uptown Minneapolis, Minnesota during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
March 2020 — Hennepin Ave and Lake St in Minneapolis during the covid-19 shutdown.
March 2020 — Orpheum Theatre on Hennepin Ave in Downtown Minneapolis during Minnesota’s Stay At Home order. Marquee reading “Stay Safe. Stay Tuned”.
December 2019 — The illuminated Target Field sign overlooks the Warehouse District in downtown Minneapolis, where the city’s historic brick warehouses meet modern transit and redevelopment. Below, the Metro Green and Blue Line trains stop at Target Field Station, a multimodal hub linking light rail, commuter rail, and bike paths. The brightly lit Ford Center and preserved brick structures along 5th Street North illustrate the district’s mix of 20th-century industrial architecture and contemporary urban life, framed against the cold clarity of a Minnesota winter night.
September 2019 — Opened in 2014, Target Field Station is a multimodal transit hub serving the METRO Blue and Green light rail lines, Northstar commuter rail, and several Metro Transit bus routes. It sits adjacent to Target Field, home of the Minnesota Twins, and doubles as a public gathering space with an amphitheater, green plaza, and year-round programming. In this night view, the glowing red canopy and bold “Target Field Station” signage stand out against the dark sky, framed between the historic Ford Center (left, built in 1912 as an assembly plant) and a modern office building (right). A freeway bridge cuts through the foreground, symbolizing the layered infrastructure of the city. This mix of historic brickwork, modern transit, and illuminated signage captures Minneapolis’s ongoing balance of industrial heritage and urban redevelopment.
September 2019 — Incubus and Dane Cook at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
September 2019 — Neon lights at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.