Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts

Community Conversation and Quilt Installation

"Art is Business"    https://www.chicagotextileweek.com/week-of-events/community-conversation-and-quilt-installation.


Blue Circles is a community art project developed by Amanda Christine Harth for her residency SAIC at Homan Square.


I visited this Community Conversation and Quilt Installation, and so glad I did. 

On Friday, September 30th, 2022, I joined an open-ended community conversation about Chicago's textile art and craft communities and their interrelating histories. 

What is Chicago's textile history, and what can we do to remember that history while creating its present and imagining its future?

This conversation occurred in Nichols Tower, part of Chicago's textile history. Once part of the original Sears, Roebuck & Company, the building now hosts the School of the Art Institute's Homan location. Several community quilts will be displayed during the conversation as a reminder of Chicago's rich quilting history and to link this gathering to the tradition of quilting circles as a community gathering, planning, and healing site. Featured quilts include A quilt from recent denim dying and quilting workshop participants at SAIC Homan, a "circle work" quilt made by Teen Creative Agency, and quilts from a local church.

Gatherings like quilting circles, sewing clubs, embroidery protests, and knitting collectives inspired this community conversation! So, in the spirit of those gatherings, bring your projects (knitting, crochet, embroidery, card weaving, quilt squares, fashion sketching, hand stitching, lace work--whatever!) to work on during the conversation. Some basic materials will be on hand if you don't have a project to bring. Then, CTW representatives and makers of the quilts on display will give brief opening remarks to set the stage for the remainder of the program.






RESOURCE: Sickler Welcome Blanket Kits, 2000 Miles of Warm

Sickler Welcome Blanket Kits, 2000 Miles of Warm Welcomeblanket.org, Making change with Art & Activism-Craftivism. Partnering with refugee resettlement agencies & immigrant aid groups to distribute blanks. 

Donating quilts to those in need of a warm welcome. What better way to welcome than a pretty, fun, and useful blanket? The need is great. 

Where are the blankets going?
Your blankets are helping three organizations:
THE IRC, our refugee resettlement partner, works with asylum seekers who have been released from detention.

Miry's List a movement dedicated to welcoming new arrival refugee families.
Catholic Charities USA, aiding in their Helping at the Boarder program.

Learn More:


Professional Development Opportunities, Listen in on EQUITICITY

"Art is Business"




Impact in Motion:
A Community Mobility Rituals Webinar Series

Fridays in April 2022, 10am PT / 12pm CT / 1pm ET

Zoom Registration Here

Equiticity is hosting A Community Mobility Rituals Webinar Series, made up of five webinars on consecutive Fridays in April 2022 at 10am PT / 12pm CT / 1pm ET.

The full webinar series will be focused on Community Mobility Rituals (CMRs) and each webinar will be focused on a particular topic related to CMRs.

The five webinars are as follows:
This Friday, April 1: A Founder’s Testimony: An Introduction to Community Mobility Rituals
Friday, April 8: The Ritual of Planning: A Curator’s Panel 
Friday, April 15: The Art of Storytelling: A Narrator’s Panel
Friday, April 22: The Art of Collaboration: Creating Quality Partnerships  
Friday, April 29: CMR Rx: The Future of Communal Impact
Community Mobility Rituals (CMRs) include our perennial mainstays of community bicycle rides and neighborhood walking tours. New this year, we will add to our rituals mix all of the following: public transit excursions, group scooter rolls, and Ciclovia-style open street festivals.

The intent of the webinar series is to share with the world what are Community Mobility Rituals; how they are planned and executed; the impact they are having on people, neighborhoods, cities, and community partners; and the research which supports the intended and achieved impacts.

The webinar series will include panelists from across the United States who are all practitioners actively organizing CMRs in their respective cities and communities.

We look forward to you joining our webinar series, and please feel free to invite your colleagues who may also be interested in learning more about Community Mobility Rituals.
 
RSVP Here



Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum Summer Tours

"Art is Business" Repost July 17th, 2021 Sacramento Magazine, by Dorsey G Griffith. 


Summer Fun: Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum

This museum displays artwork and historical documentation that illustrates Black struggle and achievement.
Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum

If you are lucky, you might find yourself in the capable hands of 17-year-old Saba Tesfay as your youth docent when you visit this hidden gem of a museum this summer.

The graduating senior and aspiring physician will lead you through the remarkable, 10,000-square-foot wall of African-American history murals, sharing her deep knowledge and sharp commentary. And she might begin the tour with this:

“I love history. We don’t get taught our part of history at school. We get acknowledgment during Black History Month, but we only learn about slavery and segregation.”

The Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum celebrates, through art and historical documentation, both Black struggle and achievement throughout history in Sacramento, the United States, and around the world.

shonna mcdaniels at Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum
Shonna McDaniels

Artist Shonna McDaniels, supported by a cadre of other creatives, developed the museum with grants and donations over many years. The busy, colorful place was designed to use art, much of it created locally, to educate the community, and to revel in the rich contributions of Black entrepreneurs, architects, educators, artists, entertainers, sports figures, racial justice fighters, and political leaders.

After struggling for years to land a larger location to house the museum’s growing collection, a tenant departure at Florin Square opened up another 2,500 square feet of space. The additional rooms are now full of engaging exhibits, many of which include explanatory audio recordings and artifacts to help tell their stories. One space, for example, teaches about Sacramento’s first Black-owned restaurant, Dunlap’s Dining Room, an Oak Park establishment that could serve only whites. Another celebrates Black people who escaped slavery and became millionaires.

“God has shown me that I need to stay put and stay focused,” McDaniels says. “We are able to serve the community in a way no other museum can.”

In addition to the murals and exhibits, the museum offers tours, workshops, and art experiences for student groups, as well as frequent events, including Second Sunday Family Days and Second Saturday with music, art tables, food, and films. Visitors to Florin Square also will find more than 75 minority-owned businesses from ethnic art shops to aestheticians and nonprofit social services organizations.

Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum

Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum

Location: Florin Square, 2251 Florin Road
Hours: Thursday–Sunday noon–5 p.m., Wednesday by appointment
Price: $4 for adults; $3 seniors; $2 ages 13–17; free for children 12 and younger
More information: sojoartsmuseum.org

More Museums!


From the Archives: Pianist and educator Ann E. Ward, Gone But Not Forgotten

"Art is Business" Reposted article by Brian Zimmerman   , Aug. 12, 2016



Pianist and educator Ann E. Ward, one of the most recognized female composers of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, July 18 at her home on the South Side of Chicago. She was 67.

A gifted improviser who was also an accomplished vocalist and African percussionist, Ward was born into a musical family in Chicago in 1949. Her career began as a concert pianist at the Chicago Musical College of Roosevelt University. After graduating from Kentucky State University with a degree in music composition, she performed with the Ken Chaney Experience.

A tireless supporter of the Chicago arts community, Ward frequently appeared in productions with the city’s more prominent theater companies, including Steppenwolf and North Light, serving as pianist and music director. Later, she became an integral part of the AACM, especially as a member of the Great Black Music Ensemble, in which she performed boldly and brilliantly alongside vocalist Dee Alexander, reedist Douglas Ewart, trombonist George Lewis, flutist Nicole Mitchell, reedist Mwata Bowden, and saxophonist Ed Wilkerson, among others.

Ward was a musician whose commitment to furthering the creative arts was matched only by her passion for educating and inspiring new artists. She was a teacher in the Arts and Humanities Programs for the Betty Shabazz International Charter Schools on Chicago’s South Side. She served as MIn addition, shester of Music at Chatham Bethlehem Presbyterian Church for more than 20 years. Ward also volunteered her time to serve as the director of the AACM School of Music on the campus of Chicago State University.

“I attribute my experiences in music and the arts to the wonderful people who have shared their knowledge, time, talent, and support with me over the years. With God and my special ‘musical family,’ I have been blessed to sustain myself as a viable performer, educator, and artist,” Ward wrote on the Great Black Music Ensemble’s website.

On Facebook, friends, colleagues, and family offered condolences and expressed gratitude for Ward's contributions to the Chicago creative music community.

“We lost one of the pillars of the AACM Chicago today: the gifted vocalist, pianist, teacher and administrator of the AACM, Mama Ann E. Ward,” wrote Art “Turk” Burton, a Chicago-based percussionist and AACM member. “She spent many years unselfishly giving of herself to the community and the AACM. I am honored to have performed with her on many occasions locally and internationally. I am sure she will be in the celestial orchestra doing what she does best.”



http://downbeat.com/news/detail/aacm-pianist-ann-e.-ward-dies-at-67

JUN 17 THUR “Preserving the House that Art Built.” - The South Side Community Art Center 80th Year Celebration

"Art is Business" Reposted: art.newcity.com/2021/05/26/a-living-institution-the-south-side-community-art-center-celebrates-eighty-years-as-a-force-in-african-american-art/

A Living Institution: The South Side Community Art Center Celebrates Eighty Years as a Force in African American Art

Black artist portrait outside SSCAC/Photo: Jonathan Romain

On the near South Side of Chicago, on the 3800 block of South Michigan Avenue in the historic Bronzeville neighborhood, is a beautiful Classical Revival building that has housed a community-based organization dedicated specifically to Black artists for just over eighty years: the South Side Community Art Center. The artist, curator, and former executive director Faheem Majeed describes the Center as a microcosm of the Black art world and Chicago’s South Side. For eight decades, this art center has championed the work of African American artists while serving as a gathering space for not only artists but the broader South Side community. It’s a legacy that continues, with recent exhibitions featuring emerging and mid-career artists such as David Leggett, Krista Thompson, and James T. Green, as well as Majeed.

Faheem Majeed with visitors/Photo: Abena Sharon

The organization came into being through the same dedicated belief in these artists that have kept it going all these years. In the late 1930s, a group of artists, gallerists, and art enthusiasts created an institution that would support Black artists on Chicago’s South Side. This founding group chose to collaborate with the Community Art Center initiative of the Federal Art Project (FAP), one of the many programs that grew out of the Works Project Administration—the federal New Deal agency established to help citizens and communities throughout the United States recover from the Great Depression. The FAP funded part of the renovations and the salaries of the Center’s first staff. Still, it was up to the organizers and the community to raise the money needed to purchase the building that would give the Center the stability that has enabled it to weather eighty years of change. The South Side Community Art Center is the only FAP-funded art center still operating in its original location.

Peter Pollack, Alain Locke, Eleanor Roosevelt, Patrick Prescott at the SSCAC official dedication

Fundraising began in 1938 and was supported by community leaders and local businesses and was bolstered by the philanthropic efforts of women’s organizations, especially middle-class Black women. The successful fundraising from major donors to people on the street proved the community’s support of the project. In 1940, the South Side Community Art Center was opened, and people were welcomed into the renovated building. In 1941, then-First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, a major supporter of the arts, would cut the ribbon for the official dedication of the building as the site of the Center. Though federal support would end two years later, the South Side Community Art Center resides in that same building, designated a historic landmark by the city and a National Treasure by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and placed on the National Register of Historic Places. It still actively provides space for emerging artists to experiment, collaborate and learn their history.

Artist and educator Dr. Margaret Burroughs during an arts conference at the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, 1971. Active in the Chicago arts community, Dr. Burroughs founded the South Side Community Arts Center in 1941 and later co-founded the DuSable Museum of African American History/Photo: Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

The most recognized founder was a visual artist and educator Dr. Margaret Taylor-Burroughs. She was in her early twenties when and the other founding members started the Center. So deep was her investment in the South Side Community Art Center that her contributions would extend to collecting funds on street corners, assisting with the physical labor of readying the space, as well as teaching and exhibiting her artwork. Also, the founder of the DuSable Museum, Taylor-Burroughs, set the stage for African American visual art education and an artist-driven scene that is active to this day.

Painting class with Charles White and Gordon Parks, 1942

The South Side Community Art Center has been a key force in African American art as an incubator for many artists who would go on to define African American visual arts production. When lists are made of the great African American artists of the twentieth century, several key figures always appear Elizabeth Catlett,  Gordon Parks, founding members Archibald Motley, and Charles White. These artists, along with locally renowned Chicago art luminaries and fellow founding members Eldzier Corter, William Carter, and Joseph Kersey, were part of the community that taught classes, learned from their peers, and exhibited at the Center formative years. White created many of the early works included in the “Charles White: A Retrospective,” a major traveling exhibition that opened at the Art Institute in 2018, during his time at the Center. Catlett developed and exhibited her linoleum prints alongside those of Taylor-Burroughs at the Center. It was work done through the South Side Community Art Center and his contacts there that would lead to Parks being awarded the Rosenwald Fellowship, which set the trajectory for the rest of his career.

South Side Community Art Center

The building is a unique space. Unlike the white box gallery that most art patrons are used to, the Center’s exhibition space has wide, wooden plank walls and dark, chocolate-colored floors. The walls cannot be repaired and made to look unused between exhibitions. Instead, the walls show the history of the art that has been hung there. When a young artist in the twenty-first century sees their work hanging in this space, they know that the nails holding it up might be in the same hole a nail was placed to show paintings by Motley or a drawing by White. This unique design is the serendipitous result of another piece of Chicago cultural history, the founding of The Institute of Design in 1937 by German immigrant and Bauhaus member LászlĂł Moholy-Nagy. Two of the New Bauhaus school members, Hin Bredendieck and Nathan Lerner, reportedly working through the Works Progress Administration, designed the Center’s gallery space in the school’s unconventional style.

Faheem Majeed at his exhibition, “From the Center,” 2021/Photo: Abena Sharon

Majeed, whose passion for the Center is contagious, speaks about the South Side Community Art Center's opportunities over his seventeen-year relationship with the organization. He speaks the most eloquently about the intergenerational knowledge that has been shared with him and other young artists when they spend time at the Center and join its decades-long legacy. He calls it “a living institution that connects the future to the past.” This is central to the ethos that has been a part of the institution since its inception. It is a community center based around art, not a museum. It is designed to allow learning through art and gathering and serve the needs of local artists and ensure that the community is served by art.

Zakkiyyah Najeebah Dumas-O’Neal is the organization’s public engagement manager, who, in the way of small institutions, also does public relations work and curation at the Center. She is excited about the breadth of exhibitions and planned programs, which she hopes will bring more artists and cultural workers into the facility and create more opportunities to collaborate with other Chicago arts organizations. This includes artist talks, classes, and three exhibitions: “Just Above My Wall,” curated by Ciera Mckissick, will run through the end of June; a Whitfield Lovell solo exhibition in the summer, in collaboration with Smart Museum and in conjunction with the fortieth anniversary of the MacArthur Fellows Program; and the year wraps up with a Black Women’s Art Collective curated by artist Kyrin Hobson. Her work will help a new generation of artists at the same age and stage in their careers as their now-famous forebears were when they were part of the South Side Community Art Center. The Center will also participate in the Terra Foundation’s Re-Envisioning Permanent Collections grant program, with the forthcoming exhibition “Love is Universal.” The exhibition will examine the intersections of Chicago’s LGBTQ and Black art histories, focusing “primarily on the Black gay male artists who were closely connected with the center between its founding in 1940 and into the 1980s,” according to the Terra Foundation.

A rising artist on the Chicago scene herself (she was a 2019 Newcity Breakout Artist), Zakkiyyah Najeebah Dumas-O’Neal spoke to me about what it has meant to her as a Black woman artist to be a part of an organization that has such a long- and well-established history of women in leadership roles and those who have found artistic success through the Center. “Space itself was spearheaded by a Black woman, Dr. Margaret T. Burroughs, which I believe instilled quite a legacy for other Black women to follow,” she says. She provides examples such as Elizabeth Catlett, Gwendolyn Brooks, Joyce Owens, YaoundĂ© Olu, and the Black women artist collective “Sapphire and Crystals.” The collective was conceived by Marva Pitchford Jolly (who was a supporter and volunteer of the Center) and Felicia Grant Preston and held their first exhibition at the South Side Community Art Center in 1987.

Eldzier Cortor visit to SSCAC

In the tradition of women’s leadership, in December of 2019, the board named Monique Brinkman-Hill as their latest executive director. Brinkman-Hill is a former member of the board and an avid art collector with a strong background in finance and leadership as a former senior vice president and managing director at Northern Trust and president and founder of MBH Coaching and Consulting LLC. This experience will be useful, as the Center was awarded a $2 million grant from the State of Illinois to renovate the organization and help ensure its continued success in serving the South Side as a community-based arts organization. An executive director with Brinkman-Hill’s level of business knowledge is well-positioned to use the gift for long-term strategic success. “A building that houses so much history must be preserved and maintained,” Brinkman-Hill says. This is exemplified by the theme that has been selected for the Center’s post-pandemic year, “Preserving the House that Art Built.” The kickoff is June 17, and the delayed eightieth-anniversary celebrations will culminate with their Annual Art Auction.

The South Side Community Art Center was founded not only to provide exhibition space for artists, but more essentially to provide darkroom and printmaking spaces, classes for community members, and a space for African Americans producing and interested in cultural production on the South Side of Chicago to gather in their own neighborhood. What is created there goes out into the world in new ways, taking the knowledge gained and the traces of those who came before. The Center has faced McCarthyism, economic fluctuations in the neighborhood where it is located, new organizations that offer competing programs for the community’s youth. Yet, it remains active and supported by the community in which it has thrived for over eighty years.

Phantom Gallery CHI

Village of Hazel Crest Open Lands "Arts in the Woods" Soundscape- Reggie Nicholson Concepts

On August 9, 2025, the Village of Hazel Crest will host a Moonlight Social at the Open Lands Arboretum, featuring a community listening sess...