Showing posts with label supporters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label supporters. Show all posts

Suzetta Whitaker Phantom Gallery Chicago - Newest Advisory Board members

"Art is Business"


Suzetta Whitaker join the Phantom Gallery Chicago Network in 2020, as a new member of the advisory board she brings her experience in public relations, and venture capitalism. She was a Supervisor with the United States Census Bureau, which is responsible for conducting the population count of everyone in the United States. Therefore, she can be a significant part of ensuring communities, organizations, and individuals understand the importance and impact of being counted.  

I first met Suzetta as an Airbnb Host Ambassador in the Chicago Bronzeville community. As Host Ambassador, she ensures guests have a positive experience through the hospitality of sharing her home, the cultural and rich heritage of her community and city. We organized meetups for hosts that live in Bronzeville and neighboring neighborhoods on the South Side of Chicago. Participating in merchant walks, and enjoying let us entertain you with local restaurants in the Bronzeville neighborhood. 

Both professions are passions for Suzetta because they are instrumental in making a difference in communities and people's lives. 

Suzetta believes that meeting someone for the first time always leaves them with a positive memory. She has supported events here at the Phantom Gallery Chicago. 

We welcome her to our board and look forward to programming with her and her social circle in 2022.





Californians for the Arts (CFTA)

"Art is Business"
Californians for the Arts (CFTA), the statewide arts advocacy organization, and California Arts Advocates (CAA), the statewide creative industries lobbying organization, are pleased to announce that Governor Newsom has signed the 2021-22 budget to include historic investments in the arts, culture and live events industries. In addition, on July 12, Governor Newsom signed SB 129 Budget Bill Jr, which amends SB 128 and SB 151 budget trailer bill, which contains more specificity for the grants programs for arts, culture, and live events.

The California State Budget represents a bold and momentous investment in the arts, culture, and creative economy. The pandemic’s impact has galvanized and united a broad coalition of arts advocates led by California Arts Advocates, California Association of Museums, and the California Chapter of the National Independent Venue Association and backed by more than 500 organizations, businesses, and local government leaders --aligning nonprofit cultural institutions, for-profit small businesses, and the creative workforce for the first time to lobby for a significant investment of $1 billion for arts recovery and stimulus from the State. The budget investments of over $600 million for this sector are a testament to the strength of this coalition that will survive well beyond this pandemic.

“We thank our Legislative and Newsom Administration champions, the thousands of arts advocates who showed up in support of our bold budget requests and the coalition that formed to lead the charge for transformational investments in arts, culture, creativity and live events, “ says Julie Baker, Executive Director of CFTA/CAA. “While the arts suffered more than most industries during the pandemic, it is heartening to know our sector has been seen and recognized for our valuable contributions both to California’s economic recovery and to our overall emotional health and wellness. California has an opportunity to be the leading creative state. With this level of investment, we are on a path to an equitable and just recovery for all creative workers and businesses to thrive.” 

The budget includes:

  • $50 million to Go Biz for grants to small nonprofit performing arts orgs to help with workforce development. Grants up to $75,000 based on budget size to help with:
  1. Employee expenses, including payroll costs, health care benefits, paid sick, medical, or family leave, and insurance premiums.
  2. Contributions or payments to a centralized payroll service.
  3. Recruitment, training, development, and other human resources-related expenses.
  4. Other operating expenses or equipment for employees. 

  • $150 million to GoBiz and CAL OSBA (Office of Small Business Advocate) for live events venues and businesses, including nonprofits and minor league sports.

  • $128 million to California Arts Council, of which $40 million is for Creative Youth Development, $60 million for CA Creative Corps Pilot program, and remaining for local assistance programs and staffing.

  • $50 million to Natural Resources Agency for museum grants programs.

  • Eighty-one arts and culture earmark investments in local communities such as $4 million to Self Help Graphics and Art, $6.5 million to Destination Crenshaw, $8 million to Debbie Allen Dance Academy, $13,500,000 to the City of Sacramento for community reinvestment, and $3 million to San Diego Symphony totaling close to $238 million.

2021 BIG DAY OF GIVING Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum








"Art is Business"

Sojourner Truth: The Forgotten History of the Slave Who Fought For Women's Rights

"Art is Business"  https://www.sojoartsmuseum.org/about

The Phantom Gallery Chicago Network has sustained during the COVID-19 Pandemic, due to the support of the SOJO Art Museum, one of the Phantom's network partners. Shonna McDaniel's has worked with me over the years, from 1990 founding member of Celebration Arts Visual Arts, 1995 to one of the co-founders of Visual Arts Development Project. She started her museum project in 1999.

Shonna McDaniels, a visual artist, and community activist, envisioned an institution to preserve Black history and celebrate the accomplishments of African American people and their legacy. As a result, the previous name of Sojourner Truth Multicultural Art Museum changed to Sojourner Truth African American Museum. We offer resources to document, preserve, and educate the public on the history, life, and culture of African Americans.


                            Parent and Founding Board Director Ollie McDaniel's and Shonna McDaniels  

From the archives of the Resistance Library: Unsung Heroes The Forgotten History of the Slave Who Fought For Women's Rights 

 Sojourner Truth: The Forgotten History of the Slave Who Fought For Women's Rights Sojourner Truth was a lot of things. She was a slave. A mother. A wife. An activist. A preacher. A woman who wasn’t afraid to stand up for what she believed in, regardless of the consequence. A woman who spoke her mind, even when everyone around her disagreed. Filled with such courage and bravery, she could see the potential of liberty for all, even when faced with adversities far worse than people see today. 

Sojourner Truth was never a victim of circumstances, even though they were bleak for much of her life. When life knocked her down, she’d get back up, ready to fight again. She lived by her own standard, even though it was considered radical. She didn’t care. She was here to speak her truth, which she never failed to do. Even her self-given name says as much. 

“Sojourner” means “to stay awhile,” combined with Truth. To stay awhile in truth. To stand in truth. Many would say that’s exactly how she spent her life. 

  Sojourner Truth: From Slavery to Freedom Sojourner Truth was brought into this world a slave named Isabella Baumfree around 1797. Born on a plantation about 95 miles north of New York City, Belle only spoke Dutch until she was nine years old when she was sold, along with a herd of sheep, for $100. She would be sold two more times by the age of 13, when she found herself owned by John Dumont and his second wife, Elizabeth. The truth was not treated well as a slave and would recall her owners as cruel and punitive. At 18, she fell in love with a slave boy named Robert, who was owned by a neighbor. When his owner found out the boy was in a relationship with a slave from a different master, he was severely beaten, and Truth never saw him again. It’s believed that her first child, James, may have been Robert’s. Her second child, Diana, is most likely the result of rape by Dumont. Truth birthed three other children to Thomas, a slave she eventually married, who was also owned by Dumont. 

 In 1826, the year Dumont told her he’d grant her freedom, then refused, Truth took her youngest child who was still an infant and left the Dumont estate, escaping from slavery. Years later, when talking of the event, Truth said, “I did not run off, for I thought that wicked, but I walked off, believing that to be alright.” Two years later, when Dumont unlawfully sold Truth’s son, Peter, she took him to court. Truth became the first black woman to win a case against a white man and gained custody of her son. 

 She spent the next decade working as a housekeeper and servant, and in 1843, Isabella Baumfree had a religious experience. She converted to Methodism and changed her name to Sojourner Truth. She moved from the city and devoted her life to serving God through preaching about the abolition of slavery and equal rights for women. In 1844, she joined the Northampton Association of Education and Industry, a self-sufficient religious and abolition group that lived on over 470 acres, raising livestock and running a sawmill, gristmill, and silk factory. 

While there, she met many heroes within the abolition movement, including William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, and David Ruggles. Sojourner Truth: A Radical Among Radicals At six feet tall, Truth stood out in a crowd, but it wasn’t just for her height. She was a woman who said what she thought and what she believed in without reserve. 

She gave her first anti-slavery speech in 1845 in New York City and was soon considered one of the most inspiring speakers of the era. In 1851, Truth gave her most famous speech, entitled “Ain’t I a Woman?” at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio. Although it’s held in esteem today, the speech is surrounded by controversy. Given extemporaneously, the speech focused on not just being black, but on being a woman, something that was unusual even amongst abolitionists, who only focused on the rights of black men, not black women. The original speech was reprinted in two different local newspapers, and the phrase “Ain’t I a Woman?” wasn’t recounted in either one. But 12 years later, in a transcription published by Frances Dana Barker Gage, the speech had changed. “Ain’t I a woman?” appeared four times and the whole speech had a southern feel. This was odd, given that Truth was from New York and Dutch was her first language. 

But a southern dialect fit the narrative that was being created at the time, and after multiple publications of the speech by Gage, the modified version has stood the test of time. Truth’s advocation of rights for not just blacks, but women – and even black women – was considered radical, even in her circle. She was ostracized among the abolitionists, although she did remain friends with others within the equal rights movements, including Susan B. Anthony. 

 Perhaps it was also her unorthodox and no-BS attitude that made her unliked. At one speech in 1858, after being ridiculed and called a man, Truth revealed her breasts to the crowd to prove her womanhood. Sojourner Truth: Fighting Through the War and Beyond When the Civil War broke out, Truth did what she could to help the cause. She recruited black men to fight for the Union, and her grandson even enlisted and served in the 54th Massachusetts regiment. Truth started working for the National Freedman’s Relief Association in 1864, which led her to meet with President Abraham Lincoln regarding the needs of black people in America. 

 After the war, Truth fought to secure the promised land grants (40 acres and a mule) for t was unsuccessful in her attempts. She continued to fight for equal rights for both blacks the black men who fought in the war. She even met with President Ulysses Grant in 1870 brand women until she died of infected leg ulcers on November 26, 1883. Nearly blind and almost deaf, Truth spent her life fighting for what she believed in, regardless of the cost. 

Sojourner Truth: A Legacy Although Truth saw the 13th Amendment passed, she did not live to see women granted equal rights. Even so, Sojourner Truth has been recognized as having a huge influence on the women’s equality movement and that her influence helped pave the way for the 19th Amendment, which wasn’t ratified until 1920

 In recognition of her efforts, Truth, along with four other women and the 1913 Women’s Suffrage Procession, will be featured on the $10 bill in 2020, as part of the 100-year celebration of women winning the right to vote. Sojourner Truth was also memorialized in 2018, with the U.S. Navy naming a ship the USNS Sojourner Truth. She was the inspiration for the NASA Mars Pathfinder Robotic Rover, “Sojourner.” Smithsonian Magazine listed her in the “100 Most Significant Americans of All Time.” She has been inducted into the Women’s Hall of Fame and her face has graced a USPS stamp. Although recognized as a hero today, Sojourner Truth’s life was not an easy one. Yet even when, literally, stoned and beaten, Truth continued to fight with words and with dignity. She stayed with her truth and worked to change the world. 

This tribute was written by Molly Carter Ammo.com's Resistance Library: Unsung Heroes The Forgotten History of the Slave Who Fought For Women's Rights You're free to republish or share any of our articles (either in part or in full), which are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Our only requirement is that you give Ammo.com appropriate credit by linking to the original article. Spread the word; knowledge is power! 

FP Commercial, Davis Group Sponsor Phantom Art And Social Justice Installation

"Art is Business"  https://www.laurenlowery.com/lauren-lowery
This Phantom Gallery Chicago space is sponsored by Lauren G. Lowery who is both a Principal and Managing Broker at Finders Plus Real Estate and FP Commercial Advisors based in Chicago, Illinois.
Lauren Lowery,

Hi Alpha, I'm representing an historic and beautiful space at 36th and State Street in Bronzeville. The Overton 3619 South State Street 
https://animoto.com/play/Kw0MKiZQ9JyXbJ29Q8L2IA

For the past decade, the Phantom Gallery Chicago Network has been supported by Lauren G. Lowery who is both a Principal and Managing Broker at Finders Plus Real Estate and FP Commercial Advisors based in Chicago, Illinois. Ms. Lowery is responsible for business strategy, new business development, retailer relationships, and retail advisory services for FP Commercial. Her extensive real estate knowledge provides proper guidance for the company's growth and stability.



Lauren G Lowery is Co-Founder and Chief Archivist at The Modern Dance Music Research and Archiving Foundation based in Chicago, Illinois. The Dance Music Foundation documents and preserves house and dance music artifacts, scholarship and memories to reveal the genre’s significance and impact. Collection Archive duties include curating exhibitions and symposiums at Northwestern University, The Old Town School of Folk Music and Columbia College Chicago, digital restoration and storage collection. Ms. Lowery is primarily responsible for accession and organizing of memorabilia and media using a hybrid of archival technologies. Her extensive knowledge of Chicago History combined with African and African American history provides proper guidance for the foundation's growth.



ABOUT US
The Bronzeville Retail Initiative, Edgewater Development Corporation, Neighborhood Housing Services of Illinois and West Humboldt Park Development Corporation. Ms. Lowery previously managed a portfolio of more than 1.5 million square feet of retail space, has facilitated successful negotiations in over 500 sales and lease transactions and named Top Producer by the Chicago Association of Realtors. 

Ms. Lowery received her Bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University in Evanston, IL and a Master of Arts in Inner City Studies at Northeastern Illinois University, Carruthers School.


Ms. Lowery is a member of the International Council of Shopping Centers, an Illinois State Licensed Managing Real Estate Broker and is a Professional Certificate candidate at NeighborWorks America in Community Revitalization. Ms. Lowery is a former member and award winner of the Chicago Urban League, Metro board, a Silver Star Member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated and a member of the Society of American Archivists. Ms. Lowery holds a Professional Certificate from the Modern Archives Institute at the National Archives and Record Administration in Washington DC and the immediate past Vice President of the Northwestern University Black Alumni Association.

William Hill on Cottage @ POAH

"Art is Business"


W.IN.E TV Interview Ms. Alpha Bruton & Ms. Marianna Buchwald



"Art is Business"
ALPHA BRUTON

Alpha Bruton is an artist, art consultant, and chief curator for the Phantom Gallery Chicago. She creates environmental art installations where objects and images are selected to “serve as cultural mirrors" and the sites in which they are situated serve as part of a broader cultural commentary. 

She is a muralist and paints on large canvas, wood panels, and other found objects. 
Current work on display at the Phantom Gallery Chicago, Bronzeville Artist Lofts alternative  exhibition space, is a retrospective 1993 - 2017

Mrs Bertha Copeland, Fabric Collage on Wood, 2017

Lady in Blue, collaboration Elaine Crossley,  1999, 2014

Alanthius, and the Despised Self Image, Acrylic on Wood

Mardi Gras NOLA, 1999, Acrylic on Burlap Pegboard Masonite

Mary Jay in Cat Walk City, Acrylic on Burlap Pegboard Masonite, 1997

Detroit 1967- Acrylic on Canvas, 1993

Leroy Jones, Yourba Movement, Acrylic on Canvas, 1993

Collective Memories, 2016, Found Objects on Canvas



happenstance

"Art is Business" posted for Alan Emerson Hicks Exhibit Curator


happenstance
an art presentation from michelle stone and peter n gray

happenstance has a most positive-enlightening - or even magical impact when
                         our mind, body, spirit, imagination  are wide open to intuition,
                         questions, people, nature, situations, places, ideas,
                         tension, argument, interpretation, sorrow, elation, taste, smell,
                         visions, sounds, simplicity, complexity, short & long silence, mystery
these feed the creative work practice of an artist 


Opening July 21, 2017  at the Phantom Gallery Chicago Network, 436 E. 47th Street, Room 205, Chicago IL  60653phantomgallerychicago@gmail.com

The Exhibit runs from July 21st - August 12, 2017Opening: VIP  5pm - 6pm pre-boarding  Bronzeville Art District Trolley Tour 2017, this event is free and open to the public.

Alan Emerson Hicks, 773-501-7730

ART IS BUSINESS- SSA#56

"Art is Business"- J0IN US TONIGHT RAIN OR SHINE, WE WILL BE OPEN
Special Service Area 56 is one of the sponsors of today’s event.  Special Service Area 56, also known as SSA 56, services the business corridor on 47th Street from State Street to Vincennes Ave and is managed by Quad Communities Development Corp (QCDC).


SSA’s are economic development tools designed to support and promote local business growth in neighborhoods.  SSAs provide services and programs beyond what may be available from the City of Chicago.

There are over 50 active SSAs currently operating in Chicago.  SSA’s provide services such as sponsoring special events, managing area wide marketing campaigns, public way maintenance and decorations as well as rebate programs for local businesses.

For more information regarding SSA56, please visit the www.QCDC.org. 


CULTURE BRIDGE/KULTURBRUECKE 2017


DANK Haus, Scharpenberg Art Gallery, 4th floor
4740 N. Western, Chicago, IL.

"Culture Bridge is an annual exhibition and International Festival open to the interpretation and views of artists, who enjoy the variety of expression in the form of paintings, music, photography, sculpture, jewelry, graphic design, fashion design, outsider art, performance art, film, storytelling and theater. 

Photo Credit Warren Perlstein

Cultures approach each other by way of travel and communication. I use to call it accultulation.  What is meant by acculturation? Cultural modification of an individual, group, or people by adapting to or borrowing traits from another culture; also : a merging of cultures as a result of prolonged contact. The process by which a human being acquires the culture of a particular society from infancy.

Photo Credit Warren Perlstein
It can also refer to "the process by which Western culture is being exported and diffused into other nations.

The International Art Group and artists invited to participate in 2017 Culture Bridge exhibition aim to create a dialog between cultures, using our many different art forms. Mariana Buchwald Founder of Iinternational Art Group.

Piotr Wolodkowciz, Keo Ra Zen, Past Curators of Culture Bridge/Kulturbruecke joined me in the installation of 2017 artworks, an amazing collections of art from artists who have traveled all over the world, now living and creating art in Chicago.

Featured artists Martha Juarez Photo Credit Warren Perlstein  

 Opening reception was documented by artist Warren Perlstein, visit him on Flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/warrenp/sets/72157680473493096/,to see the amazing photographs of the opening event.


Featured Artist Judith Roth- Photo Credit Warren Perlstein

Photo Credit Warren Perlstein

Artist Renee Baker- Film Series  maker and Composer

  
 Experimental Film and Sound
Tuesday, February, 28 and Wednesday March 1, 6pm - 9pm
 RENEE BAKER
Filmmaker/Composer
“SONIC CONSCIOUSNESS”
 Film 1 OUTEREXTREMIA 13
 Film 2: THE BLUE BIRD

Art Activities, Painting of Portraits
Saturday, March 4. 12:30pm - 3pm
Bookmaking with Linda M. Platt for families and artists
 
Linda M. Platt will be conducting a workshop for family and friends, photographed here with her daugher and son in law .
                          Portrait Painting:4pm  - 9pm:The Artist as Subject and Object:
 Michael Abcede, Martha Juarez, Elizabeth Parker, Piotr Wolodkowciz
Art talks with Laura Engel, The Native American Drum: Warren Perlstein


          
           Art Talk, Play, Film Festival 
Saturday March 11.Art Activities and Play,12:30 - 3pm with Penelope Thrashe        
Film Festival, 6 - 9pm: 
KULTURE KLASH featuring Kao Ra Zen,                                           
Tom Palazzolo, Daniel Brehm, Ron Richardson, Spencer Hutchinson     

Kao Ra Zen Curator of Film Festival KULTURE KLASH featuring Kao Ra Zen
     
 Live Music and Movement
SONIC NEWNESS: 
Renee Baker & Althea Teamer
Tues March 14. 6pm - 9pm
 Wed March 15. 6pm - 9pm
 Renee Baker & Chicago Mask Ensemble: Marianna Buchwald, Althea Teamer, Gina Carpenter, Daniel Weinberg, Kathryn Gauthier

Closing Reception
Saturday. March 18. 6pm - 9pm
Music: Ancestral Resurrections, George Larson,
Fashion show with Elizabeth Parker, 
Art bazaar: Daniel Weinberg

 EXHIBITING ARTISTS 

images can be seen on ArtSlant-
 

Michael Abcede 
Rah Marie Anderson
Renee Baker
Alpha Bruton 
Hans-Ulrich Buchwald
Marianna Buchwald 
Gina Carpenter
Paulo Carvalho
 Janina Ciezadlo
Kambua Chema   
Sara Peak Convery
Tomasz Fudala    
Henning Greve  
Kathryn Gauthier
Teresa Gierwielaniec – Rozanacki
Ladan Ghajar
Judith Heinemann
William Hill    
Spencer Hutchinson 
Martha Juarez      
Delia Jean
Stanislaw Kielar
Wes Lee K (Wesley Kochan)
Agnieszka Kulon
Renata Kowalczyk        
George Larson
Boruch Lev
Ginny Ching Yin Lo
Bishal Manandhar
Aimee Michel
Brittany Nacole  
Didier Nolet   
Elaine O’Sullivan
Tom Palazzolo 
Elizabeth Parker 
Warren Perlstein
Lauren Pilot
Linda M. Platt
Robert Pockmire
Judith C. Riemer
Erin Rossi
Judith Roth
Daniel Shumis
Paola Cofresi Silverstien    
Joanna Szymanska    
Joyan Tang
Althea Teamer
Bala Thiagarajan
Penelope Thrasher 
Elsa Toebelmann
Eileen Tull
Kim Denise Uhe
Daniel Weinberg
Zackary Williams
Piotr Wołodkowicz
Teresa Zawitkowska
Fotios Zemenides
Kao Ra Zen
  
        

CURATOR’S NOTES:
TIME ARTS - Marianna Buchwald             




















"Culture Bridge is an annual exhibition and International Festival open to the interpretation and views of artists, who enjoy the variety of expression in the form of paintings, music, photography, sculpture, jewelry, graphic design, fashion design, outsider art, performance art, film, storytelling and theater. The objective of this exhibition is to build the cultural exchange and dialog between artists from the United States, South America, Africa, Europe and Asia. 


Guest Curator - Alpha Bruton     



 Cultures approach each other by way of travel and communication. It can also refer to "the process by which Western culture is being exported and diffused into other nations. The International Art Group and artists invited to participate in 2017 Culture Bridge exhibition aim to create a dialog between cultures, using our many different art forms.

   SPECIAL THANK YOU TO OUR COMMITTEE MEMBERS 2017 
    
Culture Bridge Committee: Martha Juarez, Joanna Szymanska, Sara Peak Convery, Sarah Marie Anderson, Linda M. Platt, Penelope Thrasher, Daniel Weinberg, Kambua Chema, Warren Perlstein, Piort Wolodkowicz, and Bishal Manandhar.

Photo Credit Warren Perlstein






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...