Dear Chicago Arts Partner VOTE Daily to support the Bronzeville Arts District

"Art is Business"


We’re excited to share that USA Today’s 10 Best Readers & Choice Awards has nominated the Bronzeville Arts District as America's Best Arts District!

This is a huge opportunity to shine a national spotlight on Bronzeville’s incredible businesses, vibrant community, and diverse art scene. 

As you know, the Bronzeville Arts District has held its annual Trolley Tour for two decades. We also host dozens of visual arts exhibits and musical, dance, and spoken word performances yearly. This nomination demonstrates the incredible power of our South Side arts community. We would love to inform the nation what we’re up to by being named NUMBER ONE!!

Courtesy of Raymond A. Thomas Studio

We’ll win by earning the most votes, so how about your love for our community? Vote daily
until February 17. As a valued arts partner, we’d also appreciate your spreading
the word to your network.

Let’s bring this recognition home!
Here’s the link to vote: 
Thanks so much.



Bridgeport’s Zhou B Art Center Hosting Black History Month Festival Of The Arts

"Art is Business" reposted: by Grace Xue,   January 17, 2025, Bridgeport, Chinatown, McKinley Park

Bridgeport’s Zhou B Art Center Hosting Black History Month Festival Of The Arts
The local non-profit OH Art Foundation is bringing 27 African American artists together for a month of visual art and live performances.

Visitors looking at artwork at Zhou B Art Center Credit: Provided/Facebook
BRIDGEPORT — Twenty-seven African American artists will transform the Zhou B Art Center this Friday as the OH Art Foundation launches its inaugural Black History Month Festival of the Arts.

The festival, hosted by the Bridgeport-based nonprofit, invites visitors to explore reimagined themes of identity, strength, and vulnerability through diverse artistic expressions, ranging from paintings to orchestral compositions.
“In The Valley of The Sun” and other works by Bronzeville-based acrylic artist Jeffery Beckham will be featured in the Black History Month Arts Festival. Credit: Provided

The opening-night celebration starts at 7 p.m. Friday and will include musical performances by Marvin Hathaway, the Ari Brown Quintet, and Emoni Brown-Bey. Another reception on Feb. 21 will feature performances by Taalib-Din Ziyad, Coco Elysses and Draizig, Edward Wilkerson Jr., and Donovan Mixon. More information is available on the OH Art Foundation website.


“In The Valley of The Sun” and other works by Bronzeville-based acrylic artist Jeffery Beckham will be featured in the Black History Month Arts Festival. Credit: Provided
The OH Art Foundation has become a vital addition to the cultural fabric of Bridgeport and Chicago’s South Side. Located in the Zhou B Art Center, 1029 W 35th St. — a former industrial building transformed by the Zhou brothers into a creative hub in 2004 — the foundation continues to expand the center’s artistic legacy.


InJung Oh, daughter-in-law of the elder Zhou brother, founded the OH Art Foundation; the name stands for “Open Horizon,” reflecting its mission to inspire creativity and broaden perspectives through diverse cultural arts.

Since founding the organization in 2013, Oh said she has been exploring ways to celebrate cultural diversity through the arts. After the pandemic, she envisioned hosting festivals during various cultural heritage months. However, initially relying solely on personal funding, she said the organization struggled to finance even a single festival.

The Black History Month Festival of Arts exhibition space by OH Art Foundation is on the second floor of Zhou B Art Center. Credit: Grace Xue/Block Club Chicago

In 2023, after receiving grants from the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events and the Illinois Arts Council, the foundation celebrated its first Asian Pacific American Heritage Festival of the Arts. After that success, the foundation added a Hispanic Heritage Month celebration last year.

With this year’s Black History Month festival, Oh said she hopes to establish these three cultural celebrations as annual traditions as she continues applying for grants for future years.

“Living in Bridgeport for the past 15 years, I’ve seen many changes in its cultural diversity,” Oh said. “In the past, you didn’t see many artists of color, but now, places like the Bridgeport storage have turned into an art center, and the Ramova Theatre just opened last year … It’s really good to have community leaders who believe in us and want to support the arts in the neighborhood.”


Staff installing artwork for the Black History Month Festival of Arts on the second floor of Zhou B Art Center. Credit: Grace Xue/Block Club Chicago

“Reimagining Black Identity”

Renee Baker, a celebrated visual artist, composer, curator, and co-curator Wisdom Baty, curated the exhibition, “Reimagining Black Identity, Strength and Vulnerability.”

Baker emphasizes the importance of showcasing the range of Black art, from abstract works to performance art, challenging monolithic stereotypes that limit Black art to representations of Black people.

“The Black imagination is limitless,” she said. “It was gratifying to see that Black artists, like all artists, were not allowing themselves to be pigeonholed because the expressions were all across the spectrum.”

“Father I Stretch My Hands” by Bronzeville-based acrylic artist Jefferey Beckham. Credit: Provided

Among the featured artists is Jeffery Beckham, a Bronzeville-based acrylic artist and CEO of Chicago Scholars. His contributions include “TU Flyboys,” a tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen; “In The Valley of The Sun,” a work dedicated to brotherhood and sisterhood; and “Father I Stretch My Hands,” which depicts a poignant moment of a Black child in prayer.

“Wanting to have works that reflected the power and the beauty of the black community, I thought of these three pieces when InJung and I talked about reimagining black identity, strength and vulnerability, you kind of get a little bit of all in each work,” Beckham said.


Visitors looking at artwork at Zhou B Art Center. Credit: Provided/Facebook

Baker is not only curating will also present her work “Dark Symphony: Movement Three,” a large-scale graphic score designed for orchestra, painted in acrylic on canvas.

As the interim chair of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, Baker has partnered with Oh to bring six live performances to the opening day and on Feb. 21. These experimental soundscapes will complement the visual works, creating an immersive experience for attendees.

“I’m hoping that people come with little expectation,” Baker said. “Just come and take in the product of all these Black minds that took the time to create and put their expressions on paper or canvas.”

Oh acknowledges the financial challenges many artists face and emphasizes the importance of compensating all creative contributors despite the festival's modest budget.

“As an artist myself, being able to run this program and give back to artists, taking care of them and seeing this long-held vision finally manifesting, is incredibly exciting,” she said.


Poster of Black History Month Festival of Arts by the OH Art Foundation at Zhou B Art Center. Credit: Grace Xue/Block Club Chicago

The Black History Month Festival of the Arts runs from Friday through March 16 at OH Art Foundation on the second floor of Zhou B Art Center, 1029 W. 35th St.

Admission is free, inviting all to explore and celebrate the rich tapestry of African American culture and creativity. Visit the exhibition website for information and a complete list of featured artists.

“Reimagining Black Identity, Strength, and Vulnerability”

"Art is Business" https://ohartfoundation.org/.



Celebrating Black History Month, OH Art Foundation presents an opening reception on January 17h, 2025, and a Closing reception on February 21st, 2025, with OH Art Foundation at Zhou B Art Center in Chicago. The visual exhibition was curated by Renee Bakers and Wisdom Baty and promises to be a significant celebration of Black History Month, showcasing 27 selected visual artists 
6 Music performances selected by Jeff Chen, 

Selected Artists:  Takako Konishi, Alexy Irving, Margot McMahon, Le'Trice Buckingham, Alpha Bruton, Arlene Turner-Crawford, Grandeast Wright, Lavon Pettis, Alexandra Henderson, Wisdom Baty, Malika Jackson, Summer Coleman, Andrea Hill Fitzgerald, Jason Campbell, Lenin Delsol,
Nichole Masani Landfair, Isaiah Afrumu, Safiya Mirsberger Tolson, Dysen White, Scout Cartagena, Sebastian Sandu, Sharmarke Ahmed, Jeffery Beckham, Christopher Williams, Nolan W. McCants, Renee' Baker, Brandy Kent.

Music Performance Schedule January 17, 2025
Marvin Hathaway
The Ari Brown Quartet
Emoni Brown-Bey
February 21, 2025
Taalib-Din Ziyad
Coco Elysses and Draizig
Edward Wilkerson Jr. and Donovan Mixon

Thank you, Renee Baker of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, for matching donations to support musicians.

Oh Art Foundation
Zhou B. Art Center
1029 W. 35th St.
Chicago, IL 60609
773-569-8582 

Curators: Renee Baker and Wisdom Baty

This art exhibit explores the multifaceted healing nature of Black identity, shedding light on the complex intersections of strength, vulnerability, history, and future within the Black experience. The exhibit will showcase pieces that reframe traditional representations, inviting viewers to engage with themes of resilience, introspection, liberation, and the ever-shifting contours of identity.

Location: OH Art Foundation 2nd fl of Zhou B Art Center, 
1029 W. 35th St. Chicago, IL 60609
Exhibition Dates:  1/17/25- 3/16/25 



This art exhibit explores the multifaceted healing nature of Black identity, shedding light on the complex intersections of strength, vulnerability, history, and future within the Black experience. We invite artists of all mediums—visual art, sculpture, photography, performance, and beyond—to submit works that address the evolving narrative of Blackness in contemporary society.

The exhibit will showcase pieces that reframe traditional representations, inviting viewers to engage with themes of resilience, introspection, liberation, and the ever-shifting contours of identity. Artists are encouraged to challenge stereotypes and preconceived notions of Blackness, emphasizing the beauty and power of embracing vulnerability and quiet strength in moments of resistance, defiance, and healing.

We are looking for works that speak to the full range of Black-lived experiences, capturing both the triumphs and the struggles, the joy and the pain, the collective memory and individual expression. The exhibit aims to create space for reflection, dialogue, and healing while embracing the depth and complexity that define Blackness.

This exhibit will offer a new, unapologetically authentic, challenging, and transformative vision by reimagining Black identity healing, strength, and vulnerability. Artists are encouraged to draw upon personal narratives, cultural history, and current social movements to inspire their work, creating an environment where art becomes a tool for collective healing, liberation, and empowerment.

Passing of President Jimmy Carter Celebrating his Support for and Engagement with the Arts.

"Art is Business"


Following the recent passing of President Jimmy Carter, the news has been full of his impact on U.S. environmental policy and human rights. We were glad to see this article in ARTNews celebrating his support for and engagement with the arts, particularly during his presidency. Carter signed the bill that doubled the NEA’s budget and had a clear vision of the relationship between public and private funding to support the arts. Beyond his presidency, Carter was involved with the NEA’s Your Town program (now called the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design) and participated in two sessions hosted in Plains, Georgia, his hometown and life-long residence. 



Plains, GA
At 83 years old, President Carter rode his bicycle to the workshop, reinforcing everyone’s desire to create more walkable and livable communities. The workshop speakers and exercises focused on building civic capacity and leadership skills within the Latino community, as well as the inclusion of manufactured housing into existing community fabric.

The last time Your Town was in Plains, Georgia, was 2002, with a workshop focused on the issues faced by historically African American communities. At that workshop, President Jimmy Carter suggested that Future Your Town be focused on the Latino communities in Georgia. From December 13-16, 2007, Su Cuidad (Your Town) hosted 25 community leaders from throughout Georgia. Pratt Cassity, Public Service and Outreach Director from the University of Georgia School of Environmental Design, coordinated the workshop. Joining Pratt were groups of colleagues from UGA that specialized in the issues facing the Latino community.

The workshop speakers and exercises focused on building civic capacity and leadership skills within the Latino community. The design problem addressed the inclusion of manufactured housing into the existing community fabric.

Maurice Cox, the Endowment’s new Director of Design, attended the entire workshop. This was Mr. Cox’s first Your Town experience, and it was wonderful that he could see the workshop in its entirety.  The keynote speaker canceled at the last moment, and Maurice volunteered to speak. The participants all found his presentation inspirational and perfect for the needs of the workshop.

As we had hoped, President Jimmy Carter stopped by to say hello to the workshop participants. Pratt gave President Carter a symbolic key to Your Town. At 83 years old, President Carter rode his bicycle to the workshop, reinforcing everyone’s desire to create more walkable and livable communities.

-Excerpted from Your Town: Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design, Update, Fall, 2007

SOJO Museum Art in Placemaking AARP

Phantom Gallery CHI

William G. Hill presents Landscape Photography

"Art is Business"