Posts

Community Gathering to Remember: Travon, Anthony, and Adam

Please join us to remember our neighbors and organize for justice. Únase a nosotros para recordar a nuestros vecinos y organizarse por la justicia.
3:30 pm Poster Making Class
3:30pm Clase de elaboración de carteles
6:30 pm Memorial
6:30pm Memorial

In Loving Memory of Travon, Anthony, & Adam.
En memoria cariñosa de Travon, Anthony & Adam

We miss you, Travon Chadwell,
Te extrañamos, Travon Chadwell.
Killed by CPD March 25th, 2021.
Asesinado por la policía de Chicago, 25 de Marzo, 2021
Travon was 18 years old.
Travon tenia 18 años.
We miss you, Adam Toledo.
Te extrañamos, Adam Toledo.
Killed by CPD, March 29th, 2021.
Asesinado por la policía de Chicago, 29 de Marzo, 2021
Adam was 13 years old.
Adam tenia 13 años.
We miss you, Anthony Alvarez.
Te extrañamos, Anthony Alvarez.
Killed by CPD, March 31st, 2021.
Asesinado por la policía de Chicago, 31 de Marzo, 2021
Anthony was 22 years old.
Anthony tenia 22 años.

Timothy David Rey – Premieres The Monologue Play

Writer/ Performer Timothy David Rey premiers three new filmed short monologues from his ongoing work, The Monologue Play. The Monologue Play uses found language and creative non-fiction to produce performance pieces that are both real and imagined to examine how race, class, sex, gender, and religion are embraced, contested, and eventually performed.

The project was made possible by generous funding from Changing Worlds NPO ‘Survive and Thrive’ Grant &the Arts Work Fund Chicago.

Masks and proof of vaccination are required to attend the event.
RSVP through the FB Event Page

OPEN CALL RE-WIRED

This is an OPEN CALL for individuals and groups who feel unheard, misunderstood, marginalized and in-visible. It is an invitation to GATHER and COLLABORATE on art installations that amplify your voices and real-life experiences. Whether queer, indigenous, immigrant, refugee, senior citizen or a person with a disability, all of us are connected by our shared humanity. This truth is too often mired by conflict, inequality, greed, misunderstanding and a lack of empathy. The role of CRAFT & MAKING—to facilitate communication and HUMANIZE THE OTHER—is at the heart of THE RE-WIRED PROJECT, an ART INSTALLATION that will be displayed in a gallery exhibition at FACILITY, http://facilitychicago.org, from September–November 2022.

THE RE-WIRED PROJECT is inspired in part by the moving and powerful expressions of solidarity that emerged as chalky sidewalk slogans and impassioned murals throughout the City in the wake of George Floyd’s mur-der. The walls, sidewalks, front yards and windows of Chicago’s diverse neighborhoods have long served as a canvas, reflecting individual and community values. These very public yet personal affirmations, including sentiments like ‘I am beautiful,’ ‘Black Lives Matter’ and ‘Hate Has No Home Here,’ bring awareness to social justice issues that have long impacted our city’s (and nation’s) complicated relationship with its history. It is also an expression of hopes and dreams. From The Great Migration of African Americans from the south, to refugees fleeing conflict in Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere, Chicago continues to serve as a city of hope and refuge; a reality filled with contradictions and opportunities for self-reflection.

Liberty
United
Blessings
Justice
Prosperity
Privilege
Preference
Regulation
Consequence
Migration
|mportation
We
People

TO PARTICIPATE This is an OPEN CALL to PARTNER WITH ORGANIZATIONS AND INDIVIDUALS in making an art installa-tion using thread, yarns and wire to re-create (and create) ideas and aspirations with the words that have emerged on the streetscapes of our communities. WHY WIRE? Because it has long served as a conductive antenna, broadcasting messages beyond barriers and borders. The notion of RE-WIRING also suggests over-hauling an antiquated system. In addition to creating words with wire, volunteer participants are invited to collaborate on tree-like compositions that reflect the deep roots and networks we create through community.

All participating artists, individual volunteers and organizations will be CREDITED as part of this collective effort. From September–November 2022, when this project is installed, the exhibit will be visible from the street, and open to the public on select dates. There will be workshops, performances, publications, social media and artist talks to engage visitors during the project’s development and/or when it’s completed. If you or your organization are interested in participating in any of these opportunities (or in a different way) I would be eager to discuss your ideas.

I LOOK FORWARD TO COLLABORATING WITH YOU. Please CONTACT me at: [email protected]

Anke Loh
www.ankeloh.net

ANKE LOH | BIO Anke Loh has been a full-time professor in the Department of Fashion at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago since 2005, and served as its chair for seven years. With a background in fashion design, her artistic practice focuses on textile development and wearable technology. Compelled by the social impact of craft and technology on communities, her work explores the relationship between the body and its environment. Anke’s designs and installations have been featured at international runway shows and exhibitions includ-ing New York Fashion Week, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, Japan’s Osaka Collection Show and Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry. Her most recent work focuses on the development of touch- and motion-sensitive textiles that serve as alternative modes of communication. In an evolving and fragmented world, she uses wearable technology to address feelings of isolation brought on by long-simmering social and economic inequities that surfaced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

OPEN CALL RE-WIRED

This is an OPEN CALL for individuals and groups who feel unheard, misunderstood, marginalized and in-visible. It is an invitation to GATHER and COLLABORATE on art installations that amplify your voices and real-life experiences. Whether queer, indigenous, immigrant, refugee, senior citizen or a person with a disability, all of us are connected by our shared humanity. This truth is too often mired by conflict, inequality, greed, misunderstanding and a lack of empathy. The role of CRAFT & MAKING—to facilitate communication and HUMANIZE THE OTHER—is at the heart of THE RE-WIRED PROJECT, an ART INSTALLATION that will be displayed in a gallery exhibition at FACILITY, http://facilitychicago.org, from September–November 2022.

THE RE-WIRED PROJECT is inspired in part by the moving and powerful expressions of solidarity that emerged as chalky sidewalk slogans and impassioned murals throughout the City in the wake of George Floyd’s mur-der. The walls, sidewalks, front yards and windows of Chicago’s diverse neighborhoods have long served as a canvas, reflecting individual and community values. These very public yet personal affirmations, including sentiments like ‘I am beautiful,’ ‘Black Lives Matter’ and ‘Hate Has No Home Here,’ bring awareness to social justice issues that have long impacted our city’s (and nation’s) complicated relationship with its history. It is also an expression of hopes and dreams. From The Great Migration of African Americans from the south, to refugees fleeing conflict in Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere, Chicago continues to serve as a city of hope and refuge; a reality filled with contradictions and opportunities for self-reflection.

Liberty
United
Blessings
Justice
Prosperity
Privilege
Preference
Regulation
Consequence
Migration
|mportation
We
People

TO PARTICIPATE This is an OPEN CALL to PARTNER WITH ORGANIZATIONS AND INDIVIDUALS in making an art installa-tion using thread, yarns and wire to re-create (and create) ideas and aspirations with the words that have emerged on the streetscapes of our communities. WHY WIRE? Because it has long served as a conductive antenna, broadcasting messages beyond barriers and borders. The notion of RE-WIRING also suggests over-hauling an antiquated system. In addition to creating words with wire, volunteer participants are invited to collaborate on tree-like compositions that reflect the deep roots and networks we create through community.

All participating artists, individual volunteers and organizations will be CREDITED as part of this collective effort. From September–November 2022, when this project is installed, the exhibit will be visible from the street, and open to the public on select dates. There will be workshops, performances, publications, social media and artist talks to engage visitors during the project’s development and/or when it’s completed. If you or your organization are interested in participating in any of these opportunities (or in a different way) I would be eager to discuss your ideas.

I LOOK FORWARD TO COLLABORATING WITH YOU. Please CONTACT me at: [email protected]

Anke Loh
www.ankeloh.net

ANKE LOH | BIO Anke Loh has been a full-time professor in the Department of Fashion at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago since 2005, and served as its chair for seven years. With a background in fashion design, her artistic practice focuses on textile development and wearable technology. Compelled by the social impact of craft and technology on communities, her work explores the relationship between the body and its environment. Anke’s designs and installations have been featured at international runway shows and exhibitions includ-ing New York Fashion Week, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, Japan’s Osaka Collection Show and Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry. Her most recent work focuses on the development of touch- and motion-sensitive textiles that serve as alternative modes of communication. In an evolving and fragmented world, she uses wearable technology to address feelings of isolation brought on by long-simmering social and economic inequities that surfaced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

OPEN CALL RE-WIRED

This is an OPEN CALL for individuals and groups who feel unheard, misunderstood, marginalized and in-visible. It is an invitation to GATHER and COLLABORATE on art installations that amplify your voices and real-life experiences. Whether queer, indigenous, immigrant, refugee, senior citizen or a person with a disability, all of us are connected by our shared humanity. This truth is too often mired by conflict, inequality, greed, misunderstanding and a lack of empathy. The role of CRAFT & MAKING—to facilitate communication and HUMANIZE THE OTHER—is at the heart of THE RE-WIRED PROJECT, an ART INSTALLATION that will be displayed in a gallery exhibition at FACILITY, http://facilitychicago.org, from September–November 2022.

THE RE-WIRED PROJECT is inspired in part by the moving and powerful expressions of solidarity that emerged as chalky sidewalk slogans and impassioned murals throughout the City in the wake of George Floyd’s mur-der. The walls, sidewalks, front yards and windows of Chicago’s diverse neighborhoods have long served as a canvas, reflecting individual and community values. These very public yet personal affirmations, including sentiments like ‘I am beautiful,’ ‘Black Lives Matter’ and ‘Hate Has No Home Here,’ bring awareness to social justice issues that have long impacted our city’s (and nation’s) complicated relationship with its history. It is also an expression of hopes and dreams. From The Great Migration of African Americans from the south, to refugees fleeing conflict in Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere, Chicago continues to serve as a city of hope and refuge; a reality filled with contradictions and opportunities for self-reflection.

Liberty
United
Blessings
Justice
Prosperity
Privilege
Preference
Regulation
Consequence
Migration
|mportation
We
People

TO PARTICIPATE This is an OPEN CALL to PARTNER WITH ORGANIZATIONS AND INDIVIDUALS in making an art installa-tion using thread, yarns and wire to re-create (and create) ideas and aspirations with the words that have emerged on the streetscapes of our communities. WHY WIRE? Because it has long served as a conductive antenna, broadcasting messages beyond barriers and borders. The notion of RE-WIRING also suggests over-hauling an antiquated system. In addition to creating words with wire, volunteer participants are invited to collaborate on tree-like compositions that reflect the deep roots and networks we create through community.

All participating artists, individual volunteers and organizations will be CREDITED as part of this collective effort. From September–November 2022, when this project is installed, the exhibit will be visible from the street, and open to the public on select dates. There will be workshops, performances, publications, social media and artist talks to engage visitors during the project’s development and/or when it’s completed. If you or your organization are interested in participating in any of these opportunities (or in a different way) I would be eager to discuss your ideas.

I LOOK FORWARD TO COLLABORATING WITH YOU. Please CONTACT me at: [email protected]

Anke Loh
www.ankeloh.net

ANKE LOH | BIO Anke Loh has been a full-time professor in the Department of Fashion at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago since 2005, and served as its chair for seven years. With a background in fashion design, her artistic practice focuses on textile development and wearable technology. Compelled by the social impact of craft and technology on communities, her work explores the relationship between the body and its environment. Anke’s designs and installations have been featured at international runway shows and exhibitions includ-ing New York Fashion Week, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, Japan’s Osaka Collection Show and Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry. Her most recent work focuses on the development of touch- and motion-sensitive textiles that serve as alternative modes of communication. In an evolving and fragmented world, she uses wearable technology to address feelings of isolation brought on by long-simmering social and economic inequities that surfaced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Movie Night! ~ The Maribor Uprisings: A Live Participatory Film

The Maribor Uprisings: A Live Participatory Film (2017) is a documentary that subverts the viewing experience. Pulling from footage of the 2012 demonstrations in Maribor, Slovenia against corruption in the government, the film places you in the streets with a first-person look at the action. Filmmakers Milton Guillén and Maple John Razsa have compiled and structured a plethora of activist-shot footage at several demonstrations that vary in intensity, and you as a viewer are meant to decide along with the people around you where to go and what to do. You can stay in the streets and mill around interviewing some peaceful protestors about their concerns and their goals, or maybe follow a more rowdy group toward City Hall and light some things ablaze. It all depends on the decisions and mentality of the audience as a whole. Using organizational tactics such as the ones implemented during the Occupy Wall Street protests—the human microphone, call and response, etc—the audience works together to form a unit of politically and ideologically motivated action.

The film remains a compelling piece of documentary storytelling even without the added experience of participation. The footage is an electric display of risk-taking—the cameras get up close to their subjects—protestors and riot police alike—to stunning effect. In an age where protest footage is livestreamed and instant on social media, the filmmakers have managed to take footage of demonstrations from 2012 and make it feel as if you are experiencing it in the actuality of the current moment. You march with Maribor. You run from the riot police. You practically feel the blows of their batons. The stories of protestors present themselves to you throughout the film—you are transported to a more peaceful, quiet Maribor of the daytime, getting snippets of intimate and powerful interviews with several people.

Rogers Park Is Sharing Some Love!

The PO Box has been collecting valentines from our neighbors for the migrant children and young folks who are still incarcerated at Heartland Alliance’s detention centers in Rogers Park.

We are hand delivering them on Valentine’s Day.

Free Them All!!!!!

 

Jornada en memoria de defensores contra megaproyectos de muerte/Working Day in memory of defenders of water/forest

February! ProtestArte Proyecto Chi is exhibiting in our space and hosting a special two-day workshop in Spanish.

In memory and solidarity naming of defenders of water/forest. At 4 years without Guadalupe Campanur, from the Cheran community in Michoacan and at 3 years without Samir Flores, defender of water and land, popular communicator, we would like to invite you to remember them and create art in their memory and in community.

En memoria y solidaridad nombrando a defensores del agua/bosques. A 4 años sin Guadalupe Campanur – comunera en Cheran, Michoacan- a 3 años sin Samir Flores – defensor del agua y tierra, comunicador popular-queremos invitar a recordarles y crear arte en su memoria en convivencia.

Day 1: February 19th
View and discuss short movie and exhibition
Make linoprint art
Day 2: February 26th
Finish art projects- prints/posters
Participate in a vigil honoring Irene Chavez and Melissa Ortega, at the memorial under the tracks across from the PO Box.
1er dia: 19 de Febrero
Proyección de videos-exhibicion
– charla
– creación de arte
2do dia: 26 febrero
terminar impresiones-prints, posters
al finalizar se tendrá una vigilia en memoria de Irene Chavez , Melissa Ortega en el memorial ‘del puente’

Rogers Park Seed Library Open Hours

Rogers Park Seed Library Open Hours are every second Sunday 2-3pm and every third Tuesdays from 6-7:30pm.
This is the time to pick up new seeds (free!), gift your surplus, or just hang out and talk seeds!

Rogers Park Seed Library Open Hours

Rogers Park Seed Library Open Hours are every second Sunday 2-3pm and every third Tuesdays from 6-7:30pm.
This is the time to pick up new seeds (free!), gift your surplus, or just hang out and talk seeds!