Concerts

The one that got away

Big Fish bombed on Broadway. Based on Tim Burton’s 2003 movie version of Daniel Wallace’s 1998 novel Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions, the show, with a score by Andrew Lippa and a book by John August, opened on Broadway on October 6, 2013, and only ran 98 regular performances and earned for its pains zero Tony nominations. Yet, in October 2019, I saw a revival of this show, produced by BoHo Theatre, that was so magical, it made me wonder why the show had bombed. Marriott Theatre’s sluggish and uninspired current revival, directed by Henry Godinez, gave me some insights. 

Big FishThrough 3/19: Wed 1 and 7:30 PM, Thu 7:30 PM, Fri 8 PM, Sat 4 and 8 PM, Sun 1 and 5 PM; also Thu 3/9 and 3/16 1 PM: Wed 3/8 and 3/15 and Sun 3/19 1 PM only; ASL interpretation Thu 3/16 7:30 PM; Marriott Theatre, 10 Marriott Dr., Lincolnshire, 847-634-0200, marriotttheatre.com, $59-$64

The story, about a father and son’s fraught relationship, is at heart an intimate one. Yes, the central character is larger than life; he loves telling tall tales about his life and exploits. He claims to have met and saved a giant, kissed a real mermaid, had his death foretold by a witch, etc. But the feelings smoldering underneath the tales are the kind more easily communicated in a storefront theater, not in Marriott’s banquet-hall-sized theater-in-the-round. This goes double for Lippa’s sweet and restrained but forgettable tunes.

It doesn’t help that the two most important actors in the show, Alexander Gemignani (Edward Bloom, the father) and Michael Kurowski (Will Bloom, the son)—don’t fully inhabit their parts. Gemignani never for a moment convinces as the fascinating, big-talking, dream chaser at the center of it all. Nor does Kurowski. Playing a son who has spent his life feeling neglected by his dad, Kurowski never seems more than mildly peeved at all of his father’s nonsense (which may even include having a long-term mistress). The lack of chemistry between these two takes all the fire out of the show. Heidi Kettenring, in contrast, turns in a stellar performance as Edward’s long-suffering wife. If only Gemignani and Kurowski had matched her energy and commitment, this show might have been magic.


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Speaking purpose into artists’ lives

Beleshia McCulley, aka Lyrical, founded and runs Lyrical Eyes Management and the 323 Music Group. Credit: ThoughtPoet

Behind a great artist, there’s often a great manager. The average fan likely never thinks about the people who manage their favorite musicians, but they’re the ones typically handling the behind-the-scenes work on the business side of the entertainment industry. Whether they’re booking performances, negotiating contracts, or just acting as voices of reason for the artists they represent, managers are unsung heroes. In Chicago, one of these unsung heroes is Beleshia McCulley, also known as Lyrical, founder of Lyrical Eyes Management and the 323 Music Group label.

Lyrical initially stepped into Chicago’s creative community as a singer, vocal coach, and poet before switching lanes. So while she’s only been taking on clients with Lyrical Eyes since 2012 and running her label since 2015, she’s been deeply rooted in the Chicago music scene for more than 16 years. Among the artists she’s helped bolster—whether by managing them, signing them to 323 Music Group, or simply advocating for them—are Lil Durk, Ravyn Lenae, and Chief Keef.

“I’ve always had a way with words, so that’s how I got into poetry and singing. When my daughter decided she wanted to be a music artist, I felt like I couldn’t allow somebody else to come in and manage her,” Lyrical says. “Knowing what I was good at, which was words, singing, and having been an artist myself, I wanted to protect her and surround her with the right people. So that’s how managing really started for me.”

Artist management is not a task for the weak. The entertainment industry is notoriously ruthless. Many people in the field will take advantage of colleagues who aren’t sufficiently careful, stealing credit from them or worse—and the situation is even tougher for a woman in a male-dominated industry. Lyrical says lots of people are just overall difficult to work with, and she’s been pushed out of projects she worked hard at building. It didn’t take her long to realize that the game can be dirty. She tried to make her start in the business while working for others, but the main thing she got out of that experience was a chip on her shoulder. Soon she decided to start her own management company and indie label.

“A lot of people come in with the purpose of getting to the bag, but I realized my purpose has nothing to do with getting the bag,” says Lyrical. “My purpose is to help people get closer to their goals.” Credit: ThoughtPoet

“You have to build your own team. A lot of people come in with the purpose of getting to the bag, but I realized my purpose has nothing to do with getting the bag. My purpose is to help people get closer to their goals,” she says. “That put me into a different perspective, to understanding that I was the bag, and [I] pushed myself. I feel like Briahna [Gatlin] of Swank Publishing and I are the women that’s really behind Chicago music, and we’ve done a lot of things [where] we still don’t get the recognition that we deserve.”

Lyrical has made a name for herself in the industry, but she’s never let her career define her. During our conversation, she emphasizes that she’s first and foremost a woman of God and a mother. She approaches life and relationships with an elegant grace, driven by the dedication to do right by people and help them reach their full potential. Whatever you might’ve been through, she’s probably experienced it herself and can help walk you through it.

“I believe in speaking purpose into people’s life. I believe in introducing them to God, who’s saved my life. I try to stop people from doing shit before they do it, because I know what it looks like,” Lyrical says. “I am just an advocate for preaching to people that what’s for you is for you, and if you choose to give up today, you don’t know what was coming next week. So I think when it comes to my community, I’m keeping myself up by just being able to give other people purpose.”

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Boozy tiki drinks, Cantonese cuisine, and Elvis Live!

The parking lot is full, illuminated by a fading yellow sign adorned with a tiki drink and a palm tree. Unassumingly tucked away in North Riverside, just west of Chicago, Chef Shangri-La is preparing for a lively night—not uncommon for the suburban mainstay. The entire restaurant is bustling, packed with families that fill the festively decorated, tiki-inspired dining room. Specialty cocktails and massive portions of Cantonese classics line the tables as customers fill the restaurant with astonishing energy. And to keep the place running smoothly, the owners, Dr. Lisa and Irv Abrams, are fixed to the host stand, inviting customers into their 47-year-old restaurant. 

Even though boozy tiki drinks like the Mai Tai or Dr. Fongs and the expansive Cantonese menu alone could justify the crowd, the main attraction begins shortly after 7 PM. Elvis has entered the building. The restaurant is suddenly quiet and the King himself serenades the tipsy dining room. The live entertainment occurs within the crowd, facilitating an intimate, far more engaging experience than an onstage performer. Suddenly, it’s clear why Chef Shangri-La upholds its distinctive, timeless legacy and why customers keep coming back. 

Chef Shangri-La opened in 1976 when Lisa’s parents, Paul and Susie Fong, decided to leave their original Chinatown eatery. The Fong family purchased this modest corner building in North Riverside, despite a significantly smaller kitchen and dining room. Still, Paul hoped the new building would give him the opportunity to create his perfect restaurant. Somehow in this limited kitchen, Lisa remembers her father cooking some of her favorite meals—occasionally a 14-course spread.

“Prior to the opening, they set out to make this the ‘chef Shangri-la,’ interpreted by my father as the ‘chef’s utopia’ of what heaven was like for a chef, and designed it with Hawaiian decor, because who doesn’t like Hawaii?” says Lisa. “My mother really liked the idea because her grandmother was originally Hawaiian.”

Paul’s recipes continue to live on at Chef Shangri-La, filling a massive menu that features beloved items such as Shrimp La Fong and Tahitian Mango Passion Pork. The Fong family has also crafted an impressively creative boozy drink list with the specialty Dr. Fongs at the top, humorously named after Lisa when she had yet to complete her doctorate. When Paul passed away in 2012, Susie and her children ran the restaurant alone until she fell ill in 2019, leading her to approach Lisa’s husband Irv to take over the restaurant. 

“The absolute reason we came to take over the Chef is my mother,” says Lisa. “She had wanted to have the restaurant continue, and her wish, as it had been for many years, was she wanted to leave behind a whole extended family to be able to return to the Chef to have holidays and birthdays and anniversaries together and to keep the Fong family traditions alive and well.”

The Fongs carved out a family legacy in North Riverside, but Chef Shangri-La’s impact is embedded in the community due to its generational footprint. Guests are made to feel special. Simply by visiting, it’s apparent that you’ve entered a well-established, emotionally rich cornerstone. Beyond the drinks, the food, the retro atmosphere, and the performance, there is a real history that lives on—and that’s the true accomplishment for any restaurant that stays open for more than a decade, let alone nearly five.

“My favorite part of running the restaurant is hearing stories about how great a chef Paul Fong was and how families continue to dine with us over the last 46 years,” says Irv. “Lisa and I can carry out Mom’s wishes to deliver a great product and allow our customers to feel like they are on a tropical vacation.” 

Chef Shangri-La 7930 W. 26th St., North Riverside708-442-7080chefshangri-la.com

Chef Shangri-La’s live performances originated as fan dances, hula routines, and other Hawaiian-inspired shows, but in 2013, Elvis impersonators became a regular attraction. The longest-standing Elvis performer is Michael St. Angel, who performs on the fourth Friday of every month. St. Angel started performing when Chef Shangri-La first introduced Elvis to the lineup and feels a special and familiar connection to his performances there. He dances and sings between the tables, greeting newcomers, birthday celebrators, and die-hard regular customers—which ties the knot on a memorable experience. 

“I am proud to say that the first year they began offering live entertainment, I was one of the first, if not the first, solo performer who entertained there,” says St. Angel. “To date, the Fong family and I have been together since early 2013, so we’re celebrating our ten-year anniversary together.

“Overall,” he continues, “the crowd at Chef Shangri-La is energetic, and people are there to have a good time. It’s a great vibe there—Hawaiian/tiki themes, powerful tropical drinks, good food, etc. Toss in Elvis and you have the recipe for a memorable night, for sure. Since I’ve been performing there for so long, I have met many friends and fans from this one spot who not only have followed me elsewhere but also make a point of returning to Chef Shangri-La when I am there, which makes my performances all the more special and familiar.”

By 2019, Chef Shangri-La acquired a lineup of several other performers, including Billy Joel, Michael Jackson, and Tina Turner impersonators, among others. For several years before the pandemic, the family hosted Fong Fest—an annual music festival held in the restaurant’s parking lot. This year, Fong Fest will finally return in September, complete with more than 50 tropical drinks and Chinese appetizers. The Abrams family intends to carry on Paul and Susie Fong’s legacy, and so far, Chef Shangri-La remains the comforting “utopia” it set out to be. Maybe it’s the booze, but when you visit Chef Shangri-La, you want to stay a while. And you’ll likely return with friends, no matter how long the drive is out to the suburbs. 

“My mother is always with us in spirit and in the restaurant, and she wants us to continue to the next generation,” Lisa said. “Many others want to demolish this old building and turn it into condominiums or apartments, like the current community is also hoping, I think, but we’re hanging in there strong as ever.” 

During the pandemic, Irv and Lisa managed to keep Chef Shangri-La alive thanks to outdoor dining and entertainment. Plus, Irv and Lisa began bottling Dr. Fongs and the other signature drinks by quarts and gallons for customers to enjoy at home.

Lisa continued, “I want the customers to come with their families, young and old, friends, and colleagues to enjoy good Cantonese food like they are in Hawaii, get more happy with our fancy tropical drinks, and have a great time. I also want them to leave here and say, ‘When can we come back again?’”

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When a chair is a springboard

Appropriation, wordplay, riffs on news headlines, improv skits, and a grab bag of absurdist tropes get thrown in a hat to very uneven ends in Curious Theatre Branch’s set of four half-hour plays responding to Caryl Churchill’s This Is a Chair.

This Is Not a ChurchillThrough 2/25: Fri-Sat 8 PM, Facility Theatre, 1138 N. California, facilitytheatre.org, $15 or pay what you can

In Beau O’Reilly’s The Umbrella Disguise,several odd characters emerge from behind the titular object and recite inchoate monologues and dialogues. If there’s a larger point, it was lost on this viewer other than to note the gratitude as each exited the stage. In Jayita Bhattacharya and Ira S. Murfin’s (Not) What We Talk About When We Talk about Love,a different set of characters sketch out scenes riffing on titles of noted short stories by Raymond Carver, Flannery O’Connor, and others. It’s compelling and often reminded me of those writers, though not of Churchill in particular. Chris Bower’s How to Fix Your Fatigue (Do This Every Day) employs a more complex overlapping structure, with recurring characters returning to the stage multiple times. The most memorable are two androids who repeatedly quiz one another about what they see when they look up at the moon. Chris Zdenek’s This Is Not a Play by Caryl Churchill Titled, “This Is a Chair” is a succession of desperately unfunny improv-style skits that each fall well short of the laughs and/or resonance they’re reaching for.

Can’t say what any of these have to do with Churchill aside from using the title of her play as a springboard for whatever the writers would’ve written anyway.


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A heartbreaking Lady Day

Alexis J. Roston’s sixth go-round playing jazz legend Billie Holiday in the last year of her life is beautifully layered, heartbreaking, and still affirming of the great vocalist’s accomplishments, against a multitude of odds. After a decade on and off in the role, Roston is now a codirector in Mercury Theater’s production of the Lanie Robertson one-act Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill; she’s said her lived experience (having now lived longer than Holiday) informs her matured approach to the role. Set in the Mercury’s intimate Venus Cabaret Theater, the venue replicates a small club in Philadelphia, one of the only places left for Holiday to perform after her New York City cabaret card was revoked. After some waiting around, we’re told “Ms. Day is on her way, they wouldn’t let her through the front door,” and she eventually barges backstage, big coat and dog in tow.

Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill Through 3/12: Fri 8 PM, Sat 3 and 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Mercury Theater Venus Cabaret, 3745 N. Southport, 773-360-7365, mercurytheaterchicago.com, $60-$70 (premium tables for up to four people $259-$299, including a bottle of sparkling wine)

What follows is a magnetic greatest hits concert, where gorgeous vocal performances of songs like “When a Woman Loves a Man” and “God Bless the Child” are interspersed with the sad and rueful storytelling of a woman who faced unimaginable racism, sexism, and trauma throughout her short life. While an intentionally “off the rails” performance due to the performer’s addiction and mental health could lead to voyeuristic pity, Roston’s sparkle and vulnerability create room for empathy and admiration for Holiday, who is still standing and singing despite it all. You leave wishing Holiday knew her legacy and feeling deeply unsettled by how songs like “Strange Fruit” are still so topical.


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Little bird, big dreams

In the musical stage adaptation of Mo Willems’s Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! (book by Willems and Mr. Warburton, music by Deborah Wicks La Puma, and lyrics by Willems), a down-on-his-luck pigeon (Brade Bradshaw) is fed up with never getting to do anything fun. He’s an underdog who wants nothing more than to feel heard. When he meets the passionate local Bus Driver (Karla Serrato), he decides that his purpose is to drive the bus.

From there, Pigeon’s neighbors try to convince him, primarily through song and dance, that there’s no way he can drive the bus. It’s a fun, simple story with a lot of heart and plenty of pertinent life lessons for young people.

Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! Through 2/26: Sat 10 AM, 1 PM, and 3 PM, Sun 1 PM; also Fri 2/20 7 PM; Sat 2/11 10 AM and 1 PM only; Greenhouse Theater Center, 2257 N. Lincoln, 773-404-7336, yptchi.org, $25 ($19 under 12). NOTE: all performances currently sold out. Contact box office for information on cancellations and wait lists.

Among the standout features in this Young People’s Theatre of Chicago production (directed by Randy White) is Jackie Penrod’s set design, which depicts a colorful abstraction of Chicago, allowing the audience to imagine Pigeon and his friends in their backyard. 

The young audience was enthralled with Pigeon’s journey at the show’s opening performance. They cheered him on, felt his pain, and swayed to the show’s bright songs (sung live to recorded music). While there is no question that the show is for younger children, adults can undoubtedly appreciate the pure joy of Pigeon’s world and the central message that there’s plenty of time to find your place and learn to fly.


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Classifieds

JOBS

Senior Market Research Analyst – Analyze companies’ rankings, IP transaction, marketing data globally & marketability of IP transactions. Design marketing IP strategies. Telecommuting permitted 90% of time & work from company HQ office – 200 W Madison St, Chicago IL 10% of time. Must reside within commuting distance from HQ. ** Travel internationally 1-2x/yr for 2-3 wks per trip. Reqs: Masters in Marketing, Business Admin, Mngmt, TV Mngmt, IP Mngmt, or a closely rltd field plus2 yrs exp in occupations rltd Market Research Analyst; & 2 yrs exp in each of the following: Designing methods to collect mktng data; Gathering & organizing mktng data including pricing, sales, & distribution methods through online dbs & surveys; Analyzing industry trends, customer behaviors & competitive intelligence using mktng analytics software such as Innography, PatSnap, Google Analytics, or Crunchbase; Design mktng strategies to position a product or service; Preparing forecasts for mktng campaigns; Preparing mkt research reports that track the results of mktng campaigns & competitor analysis; Working with followings: digital mkt research dbs such as Bloomberg, Edgar, or Capital IQ; mkt analytics software such as Google Analytics, Innography, or PatSnap; CRM software such as Salesforce, Monday.com, or Pipedrive; Spreadsheet software such as MS Excel or Google Sheets; & Presentation software such as MS PowerPoint or Google Slides. Send resume to J.S. Held LLC at [email protected].

Vice President, Private Equity Investments – Analyze corporate M&A & fundraising efforts. Engage in eval, pricing & structuring of investment securities. Compile statistical data & conduct analysis; Dvlp financial forecasts & models. Oversee completion of quality of earnings analysis & eval pro-forma tax consequences. Manage performance of 3rd party & due diligence providers. Work closely with attorneys for transaction documentation. Work is at Employer’s Office (676 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 3700, Chicago, IL 60611) with ten to twelve business trips a year throughout the U.S. that last 1 to 2 days per trip. Min reqs: Bachelor’s in Business Admin, Econ, Finance or closely rltd field + 5 yrs exp in occupations rltd to Financial Analysis (as equivalent, the employer will accept a Master’s Degree in Business Admin, Econ, Finance or closely rltd field + 2 yrs exp in occupations rltd to Financial Analysis). AND must possess: 2 yrs exp conducting due diligence in investment transactions; 2 yrs exp conducting customer & competitor research; 2 yrs exp developing financial models & forecasts; 2 yrs exp analyzing financial valuations using discounted cash flow analysis, accretion/dilution analysis, & comparable transactions analysis; 2 yrs exp working w/ credit terms & agreements; 2 yrs exp analyzing complex debt & equity securities structures; & 2 yrs exp in analyzing investment transaction terms. 2 yrs experience working w/ MS Excel & MS Power BI; 2 yrs exp working w/ financial DBs such as Bloomberg, CapIQ or LexisNexis; 2 yrs exp working w/ accounting software such as QuickBooks or Peachtree; & 2 yrs exp working w/ ERP software such as Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics GP, or SAP. Resume to Wind Point Advisors, LLC at [email protected].

PROFESSIONALS & SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES CHESTNUT ORGANIZING AND CLEANING SERVICES: especially for people who need an organizing service because of depression, elderly, physical or mental challenges or other causes for your home’s clutter, disorganization, dysfunction, etc. We can organize for the downsizing of your current possessions to more easily move into a smaller home. With your help, we can help to organize your move. We can organize and clean for the deceased in lieu of having the bereaved needing to do the preparation to sell or rent the deceased’s home. We are absolutely not judgmental; we’ve seen and done “worse” than your job assignment. With your help, can we please help you? Chestnut Cleaning Service: 312-332-5575. www.ChestnutCleaning.com

RESEARCH

Have you had an unwanted sexual experience since age 18?Did you tell someone in your life about it who is also willing to participate? Women ages 18+ who have someone else in their life they told about their experience also willing to participate will be paid to complete a confidential online research survey for the Women’s Dyadic Support Study. Contact Dr. Sarah Ullman of the University of Illinois at Chicago, Criminology, Law, & Justice Department at [email protected], 312-996-5508. Protocol #2021-0019.

PERSONALS

Dominick Defanso rocks Guns N Roses, Aerosmith, Black Sabbath, Marilyn Monroe in Icons. Pop star / rock stars fun with Tracy Guns, ACDC, Lady G, T. Swift, Slash, J. Bieber, Gwen S. Watch on the Tube, Downloads, T-shirts, album coves – CDs. My favorite song – BARBIE GIRL. We love you – America.Thank you Hollywood RoseGuns N RoseTracy Rock RoseLia Lakely

ADULT SERVICES

Danielle’s Lip Service, Erotic Phone Chat. 24/7. Must be 21+. Credit/Debit Cards Accepted. All Fetishes and Fantasies Are Welcomed. Personal, Private and Discrete. 773-935-4995

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Classifieds

JOBS

Senior Market Research Analyst – Analyze companies’ rankings, IP transaction, marketing data globally & marketability of IP transactions. Design marketing IP strategies. Telecommuting permitted 90% of time & work from company HQ office – 200 W Madison St, Chicago IL 10% of time. Must reside within commuting distance from HQ. ** Travel internationally 1-2x/yr for 2-3 wks per trip. Reqs: Masters in Marketing, Business Admin, Mngmt, TV Mngmt, IP Mngmt, or a closely rltd field plus2 yrs exp in occupations rltd Market Research Analyst; & 2 yrs exp in each of the following: Designing methods to collect mktng data; Gathering & organizing mktng data including pricing, sales, & distribution methods through online dbs & surveys; Analyzing industry trends, customer behaviors & competitive intelligence using mktng analytics software such as Innography, PatSnap, Google Analytics, or Crunchbase; Design mktng strategies to position a product or service; Preparing forecasts for mktng campaigns; Preparing mkt research reports that track the results of mktng campaigns & competitor analysis; Working with followings: digital mkt research dbs such as Bloomberg, Edgar, or Capital IQ; mkt analytics software such as Google Analytics, Innography, or PatSnap; CRM software such as Salesforce, Monday.com, or Pipedrive; Spreadsheet software such as MS Excel or Google Sheets; & Presentation software such as MS PowerPoint or Google Slides. Send resume to J.S. Held LLC at [email protected].

Vice President, Private Equity Investments – Analyze corporate M&A & fundraising efforts. Engage in eval, pricing & structuring of investment securities. Compile statistical data & conduct analysis; Dvlp financial forecasts & models. Oversee completion of quality of earnings analysis & eval pro-forma tax consequences. Manage performance of 3rd party & due diligence providers. Work closely with attorneys for transaction documentation. Work is at Employer’s Office (676 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 3700, Chicago, IL 60611) with ten to twelve business trips a year throughout the U.S. that last 1 to 2 days per trip. Min reqs: Bachelor’s in Business Admin, Econ, Finance or closely rltd field + 5 yrs exp in occupations rltd to Financial Analysis (as equivalent, the employer will accept a Master’s Degree in Business Admin, Econ, Finance or closely rltd field + 2 yrs exp in occupations rltd to Financial Analysis). AND must possess: 2 yrs exp conducting due diligence in investment transactions; 2 yrs exp conducting customer & competitor research; 2 yrs exp developing financial models & forecasts; 2 yrs exp analyzing financial valuations using discounted cash flow analysis, accretion/dilution analysis, & comparable transactions analysis; 2 yrs exp working w/ credit terms & agreements; 2 yrs exp analyzing complex debt & equity securities structures; & 2 yrs exp in analyzing investment transaction terms. 2 yrs experience working w/ MS Excel & MS Power BI; 2 yrs exp working w/ financial DBs such as Bloomberg, CapIQ or LexisNexis; 2 yrs exp working w/ accounting software such as QuickBooks or Peachtree; & 2 yrs exp working w/ ERP software such as Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics GP, or SAP. Resume to Wind Point Advisors, LLC at [email protected].

PROFESSIONALS & SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES CHESTNUT ORGANIZING AND CLEANING SERVICES: especially for people who need an organizing service because of depression, elderly, physical or mental challenges or other causes for your home’s clutter, disorganization, dysfunction, etc. We can organize for the downsizing of your current possessions to more easily move into a smaller home. With your help, we can help to organize your move. We can organize and clean for the deceased in lieu of having the bereaved needing to do the preparation to sell or rent the deceased’s home. We are absolutely not judgmental; we’ve seen and done “worse” than your job assignment. With your help, can we please help you? Chestnut Cleaning Service: 312-332-5575. www.ChestnutCleaning.com

RESEARCH

Have you had an unwanted sexual experience since age 18?Did you tell someone in your life about it who is also willing to participate? Women ages 18+ who have someone else in their life they told about their experience also willing to participate will be paid to complete a confidential online research survey for the Women’s Dyadic Support Study. Contact Dr. Sarah Ullman of the University of Illinois at Chicago, Criminology, Law, & Justice Department at [email protected], 312-996-5508. Protocol #2021-0019.

PERSONALS

Dominick Defanso rocks Guns N Roses, Aerosmith, Black Sabbath, Marilyn Monroe in Icons. Pop star / rock stars fun with Tracy Guns, ACDC, Lady G, T. Swift, Slash, J. Bieber, Gwen S. Watch on the Tube, Downloads, T-shirts, album coves – CDs. My favorite song – BARBIE GIRL. We love you – America.Thank you Hollywood RoseGuns N RoseTracy Rock RoseLia Lakely

ADULT SERVICES

Danielle’s Lip Service, Erotic Phone Chat. 24/7. Must be 21+. Credit/Debit Cards Accepted. All Fetishes and Fantasies Are Welcomed. Personal, Private and Discrete. 773-935-4995

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Homecoming

Being in the spotlight isn’t something multidisciplinary artist Diana Solís ever sought, despite capturing influential socio-political movements through her camera for decades. But now, having just turned 67, and with the release of her new book of photography, Luz: Seeing the Space Between Us, the spotlight on her has never been brighter or so deserved. It’s a new kind of attention, unexpected and abundant, and Solís is grateful.

“I’m often quiet about what I do and lately, I’ve gotten a lot of attention,” Solís says about the overwhelming support she’s received after publishing Luz. “It’s been a little different, but normally I don’t talk a lot about the projects I’m working on.”

In Pilsen and beyond, Solís has been capturing the lifeblood of the community since the late 70s. Her visual artistry embodies Mexican, Chicano, and Latine cultures. Her work inspires rumination and curiosity. She is a visual storyteller who contemplates identity and inclusion through her portraits, murals, and photographs. As a multidisciplinary artist, she also explores painting, printmaking, comics, and photojournalism.

Solís took some time off from teaching last year so she could produce and work on Luz. The idea for the book began during the initial stages of the pandemic when Solís decided her early morning walks would include photos she’d take on her iPhone. “A month after we were on lockdown, I was walking the streets in Pilsen at six in the morning. I realized that even though there were people on the streets, what I was seeing was something I haven’t seen for a long time, which was the community in this very different light. The community is, like most of us, always on the go, and we don’t really slow down. So I felt this was amazing, this was great, I could photograph forever,” she says.

“I think the book is bigger than me in the sense that this latest project was about my return to photography, and about a love letter to my practice of photography and my community. I think the book holds not just the images, but the sense of COVID, the gentrification process, and the community. The changes that are portrayed in the book, it’s about the place and people. It’s more portraiture, not photojournalistic. It goes beyond my personal journey, you know, what got me started on this book,” she says. 

Luz: Seeing the Space Between Us by Diana SolísFlatlands Press, paperback, 120 pp., $45, flatlandspress.com

“What this has done for me is enabled me to go back to photography in a way that I didn’t even think about years ago. It’s always been there, I just wasn’t photographing for 20-plus years.”

Solís contemplated taking a break from photography after graduating from the University of Illinois, Chicago in 1997 because she wanted to dedicate herself to painting and drawing. After a brief trip to Europe, she returned to Chicago and focused on this new art form. 

“Little by little I sold my equipment. It didn’t happen overnight, but it was something I was thinking about when I went back to school,” she says. “I think I still took a couple of photos here and there up until 2000, but I went into the mode of how to be an illustrator.” 

“It’s not like I had a traumatic experience with photography. I never let it go in the sense that I always kept up with photography shows, I bought photo books, supported photographer friends, and it was something I’ve always been interested in, something that’s been a part of my life for such a long time. But I was really happy pursuing drawing, painting, and illustration. I started doing abstract work, which I still do from time to time, but not too much because photography has kept me so busy. That’s the thing, it’s hard to balance two very demanding subjects, like photography and illustration/drawing. But the fact is if I want to do work, or gigs in illustration for freelance, it’s really hard.”

A shuttered panaderia in Pilsen, in 2022, from LuzCredit: Diana Solís

It takes a special kind of artist to pick right back up where they were decades ago as if time had stopped. It’s amazing to see Solís so effortlessly pick up the camera after so many years away from it. It says so much about her creative mind and passion.

“I’ve been working quietly for many, many years. In the sense that, sure I talk sometimes about what I do, I’m not afraid to talk or give a lecture. But I’m not one to put a lot of crema on my tacos,” she laughs. “Or constantly say ‘look what I’m doing’ or ‘look what I’ve done.’ I feel like I need to just do the work more than anything.”

Solís was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, in 1956 but grew up in Chicago where her family moved when she was a few months old. She grew up in Pilsen and Little Village, surrounded by family, books, music, and community. 

An early self-portrait, with the artists’ younger siblingsCredit: Diana Solís

By the early 80s, Solís was traveling—first to Peru, then eventually living in Mexico City where she attended Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 

“I was part of a summer session and it was very eye-opening. The school was very radicalized and politicized, and we were right in the thick of things.” She became involved with student movements, protests, and marches and documented all of it on her camera. She also got involved with queer community activism through groups like FHAR (The Homosexual Front of Revolutionary Action) and OIKABETH (Ollin Iskan Katuntat Bebeth Thot, which translated means “movement of women warriors paving the way and scattering flowers”).  

These were some of the first public queer organizations in Mexico, along with Ácratas and Lesbos, that formed just before the first national Lesbian & Gay Rights March in Washington, D.C., in 1979. Solís captured all of these historic movements through her lens. Her archives are massive, so she is working with Nicole Marroquín, a professor at the School of the Art Institute, to organize thousands of negatives of moments she’s captured along the way, including visits to Paris, Spain, Peru, and from across the U.S. 

While in Mexico City, Solís worked at Televisa, one of the country’s leading multimedia companies, doing what she calls paparazzo work. “Part of my job at Televisa as a staff photographer was working on telenovelas and the studio sets where they filmed. I always knew in the back of my mind that this was not what I wanted to do for the rest of my life,” she says. However, the opportunity felt like a way of legitimizing what she did, learning how to do that type of photography and how to deal with people. “It was very painfully clear to me that this was an industry that perpetuated entrenched racism, and I experienced it firsthand trying to get jobs. The color of my skin, and the way I look—I have a lot of Indigenous ancestries—so I just bristled all the time with all these things. It was horrible, and it continues to be the same thing today.”

In 1983, also during her time in Mexico, Solís cofounded and literally built Cuarto Creciente, a coffeehouse and feminist space where she became the cook, even though she didn’t know how to cook at the time. Because of the combined connections of the four founders, the cafe was an instant success. The space was able to feature legendary writers like Cherríe Moraga, Sandra Cisneros, and Norma Alarcón. 

“I have photographs of all of them performing at the Cuarto Creciente. It was a night of Chicano and Mexican writers together. Those are the kind of things I did at the coffeehouse, besides having to go once a week to the Central de Abastos to buy all the food and vegetables and learn how to cook.” The cafe was only around for two years because it was housed in a historic building, and it was eventually seized by the government in an act of gentrification. 

When she returned to Chicago, Solís again made her home in Pilsen, reactivating her involvement in the burgeoning art community and photographing artists and poets.  

Writer and poet Gregorio Gomez graces the cover of Luz.Credit: Diana Solís

Gregorio Gomez, the poet who graces the cover of Luz, met Solís through a mutual friend when he was the managing director of the Latino Chicago Theater Company in the 90s. Although Gomez knew very little about Solís when they first met, he noticed she was always carrying a camera around. “She was very personable and could hang with anybody and so she fit right in with the poets and she fit right in with the theater company, so she just became part of the family.”

Solís began attending the open-mike poetry nights Gomez led at Weeds, which was one of the longest-running poetry nights in Chicago, and captured the poets and spoken word artists sharing their work. Gomez says Solís was hardcore about taking photographs and wonders if at any point she knew that the people she captured on camera would become known in their respective art worlds. 

“I don’t know if she knew she was photographing leaders of our movement at the time,” he says. “She captured a movement and community, Latino and LGBTQ, and how each one of those worlds were swirling around each other and making an impact on the city of Chicago, even though sometimes we didn’t even know we were doing that.”

One of those leaders is fellow artist Marroquin, whom Gomez says encouraged Solís to do something with her collection of photos. Marroquin was astonished at everything Solís shot during that time, referring to its entirety as a treasure. It became an even bigger treasure when in 2022 it formed part of “Diana Solís: Encuentros, Photographs of Chicago Poetry Communities, 1978–1994” held at the Chicago Poetry Foundation, curated with the help of Oscar Arriola and Marroquín.

The inquisitive, bold, and almost rebellious nature in Solís’s work was present even while she attended UIC, from where she received a BFA in photography in 1997. She remembers her teachers didn’t appreciate that work, and instead, she says, “were more interested in me doing conceptual artwork, so I was getting somewhat berated by them in the critiques. I stuck to my guns. I stuck to what I wanted to do.”

A 1983 memorial march in honor of organizer Rudy Lozano, who was slain that year.Credit: Diana Solís

Growing up in Pilsen, Solís saw the rise of the local punk scene, including the creation of the Spanish-language hardcore punk band Los Crudos. She had met Martin Sorrondeguy, the band’s singer (also known as Martin Crudo), through his mom Patty, whom Solís worked with at Mujeres Latinas En Acción, a social services organization for women. Sorrondeguy was 11 when she first met him, before his music endeavors. 

“I used to go to punk events back in the day because my brother was a bouncer at one of the clubs,” she says. “He’s the one who told me about this new punk band Los Crudos, and when we arrived at the show I saw it was Martin. A bunch of us would go to the shows and support the group. We loved it.” They’ve been friends ever since. 

In 2016, when Los Crudos’s 25th anniversary came around, Sorrondeguy asked Solís to showcase some of her work at a celebratory exhibition titled “Desafinados.” She was surprised to be included because she wasn’t active in the punk scene, but Sorrondeguy said that didn’t matter.

“He went to my studio, saw some work he liked, and picked out some pieces,” Solís says. “The three pieces are basically about being an outsider, being in a different state of mind, and in a different world. They’re all characters and creatures, which is usually what I draw and paint. They’re heroes to me. They live in dream worlds, but they’re also worlds not unlike our own where they are cast aside by a society that wants to silence us. All these characters are part of that.”

Solís herself is a hero for many. She embodies perseverance as she confronts and contends with ongoing extreme and life-threatening health issues, including several bouts of cancer. Her positive outlook, however, is unwavering. “I think, you know, in order for me to move forward every day in my life, I have a lot of gratitude—with myself, with my doctors, with my friends, with my community. And that, for me, allows me to do the things that I do, my work, which I love. I am doing the things that I love the most. These are the best times of my life.”

Solís explains the challenges of heading into the next bracket of adulthood, including the realization that not working is not necessarily included when declaring retirement. She’s been an educator for more than 40 years and continues in that profession, teaching courses at Benito Juarez Community Academy and Volta Elementary School and developing curricula related to social consciousness, social justice, critical thinking, and critical race theory. 

Luz represents the artist’s return to photography, after more than 20 years away.Credit: Carolina Sanchez

Solís worked with local artists to complete the project surrounding Luz, fundraising through the 3Arts crowdfunding platform and on her own. The first edition made its debut in Chicago at the National Museum of Mexican Art in November 2022; that edition has sold out. Together with her team, they are working on a second edition and are hopeful to have it published in the near future.

Luz captures the community and changes brought about by COVID and gentrification. There is also an intimate quality to the photographs which is communicated by the individual stance and eye contact expressed in every portrait. She has a way of connecting with her subjects through her lens. As Solís explains, the portraits within the book “became moments of emergence for those of us in Pilsen already vulnerable to predatory developers and racist housing policies, during a time when our nation’s inequitable response to COVID, with its variations, further silenced us.” A testament to the resilience of its community, Luz is an important and historical reflection of its people.

Mike, an employee at Angel’s Tire Shop, in 2020Credit: Diana Solís

“My photography is a mix of environmental portraits and reportage of sorts. The work in the book opened up a huge can of worms for me but in a good way. And it’s opened up a way for people to also look at the past work I’ve done and why this work is so important because it’s never been seen before. It’s taking parts of the history of Pilsen and other parts, like the 16 years of poetry communities that haven’t been seen before. And that’s not all, there’s more, but we just can’t include everything.” This led to conversations about putting together a catalog, or smaller book, to include the vast amount of photographs she hasn’t yet shared. Solís is excited about the possibilities. 

In some of her illustrations and paintings, you’ll find colorful, strange, and mythological figures. Their peculiar composition represents our connection to nature, a prominent idea in some of her works. “These characters and creatures began to develop back in the 90s when I started to do a lot more drawing and before I left photography.” Between visits to Europe and Oaxaca, the idea of converging cave art, textures, and layering began to form. “What I ended up doing was creating what I call a hybrid or anthropomorphic figure, which means a cross between human and animal. Without me realizing it at the time, I was beginning to develop this idea of how we relate to nature as human beings.

“A lot of my first drawings were of creatures that . . . had human features and the humans had animal features. And I stuck with that. I loved it and when I was in Oaxaca working, doing my printmaking and a residency, I met so many wonderful Oaxacan artists and their work was the same. Their work was based on mythology, coming from their Indigenous backgrounds and their relationship to earth and animals. I was so inspired by this, it kind of sealed a lot of ways I began to paint moving forward.” 

Gregorio Gomez was always struck by her painting. “She surpassed herself in regard to her photography,” he says. “I mean, a photograph is a photograph and you can Photoshop and do this and do that, but a painting has a different reality and a different visual look to it. And then, of course, have you seen some of her paintings? Where the heck did she get the mind to come up with those characters?! I found that to be genius. I found that to be not only artistic and creative but way, way out of left field. It just made me think how different she was, and is, in comparison to other painters of our generation.”

Much of Solís’s work is labor-intensive. “My paintings, drawings, doing it for many hours a day you can develop issues. I have major issues on my hands because of this.” This laborious process includes pieces where she incorporates collage and papel picado techniques, using Exacto blades, knives, and scissors. 

“I like the idea of merging craft with fine art. Craft is also art, actually,” she says. “A lot of the work I was doing was mixed-media work, which I’ve always done, and it’s where I’m at even today. As a teaching artist, I teach printmaking, drawing, and figure drawing. But in all of that, I have my specialties. I have specialties for creating certain types of artwork and I have a specialty for doing photography. Those are my strongest points, I believe. Photography is probably stronger than anything.”

Reading over some of the praise she’s received recently, it seems unusual that this new work is referred to as a rediscovering of her community. Solís agrees. “I don’t feel I rediscovered it. I think a lot of this wording, there’s a spin put on things. I guess you could say, in a way, I rediscovered certain things about myself through the pandemic. But did I rediscover it? I was always aware that Pilsen was in gentrification mode. It wasn’t like I just woke up one morning and I went, ‘Oh my god, I see all this change, I’m going to have to photograph it!’”

Luz captures the community and changes brought about by COVID and gentrification.Credit: Carolina Sanchez

The growing attention to her art can be overwhelming, she admits, but she’s thankful her work is being exposed to new people, especially the youth. “It makes me happy that Latinos are really, a lot of them, are really doing things that I would never do in my time because there were so few of us going to university. That they’re challenging the canons and the status quo of what other people have always thought we were about. 

“My work actually does the same thing. It challenges that. And I think that’s kind of people’s interest when they discover my work. . . . The other thing [that I’m happy about] is that I’m still alive . . . which is great,” she laughs. 

“I can navigate these waters as a living artist, not a dead one. It’s been exciting! It’s been great.” 

Join Diana Solís and Deanna Ledezma for a conversation about LuzTues 2/22, noon, UIC Rafael Cintron Ortiz Latino Cultural Center, Lecture Center B-2, 826 S. Halsted, RSVP here, free

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Homecoming

Being in the spotlight isn’t something multidisciplinary artist Diana Solís ever sought, despite capturing influential socio-political movements through her camera for decades. But now, having just turned 67, and with the release of her new book of photography, Luz: Seeing the Space Between Us, the spotlight on her has never been brighter or so deserved. It’s a new kind of attention, unexpected and abundant, and Solís is grateful.

“I’m often quiet about what I do and lately, I’ve gotten a lot of attention,” Solís says about the overwhelming support she’s received after publishing Luz. “It’s been a little different, but normally I don’t talk a lot about the projects I’m working on.”

In Pilsen and beyond, Solís has been capturing the lifeblood of the community since the late 70s. Her visual artistry embodies Mexican, Chicano, and Latine cultures. Her work inspires rumination and curiosity. She is a visual storyteller who contemplates identity and inclusion through her portraits, murals, and photographs. As a multidisciplinary artist, she also explores painting, printmaking, comics, and photojournalism.

Solís took some time off from teaching last year so she could produce and work on Luz. The idea for the book began during the initial stages of the pandemic when Solís decided her early morning walks would include photos she’d take on her iPhone. “A month after we were on lockdown, I was walking the streets in Pilsen at six in the morning. I realized that even though there were people on the streets, what I was seeing was something I haven’t seen for a long time, which was the community in this very different light. The community is, like most of us, always on the go, and we don’t really slow down. So I felt this was amazing, this was great, I could photograph forever,” she says.

“I think the book is bigger than me in the sense that this latest project was about my return to photography, and about a love letter to my practice of photography and my community. I think the book holds not just the images, but the sense of COVID, the gentrification process, and the community. The changes that are portrayed in the book, it’s about the place and people. It’s more portraiture, not photojournalistic. It goes beyond my personal journey, you know, what got me started on this book,” she says. 

Luz: Seeing the Space Between Us by Diana SolísFlatlands Press, paperback, 120 pp., $45, flatlandspress.com

“What this has done for me is enabled me to go back to photography in a way that I didn’t even think about years ago. It’s always been there, I just wasn’t photographing for 20-plus years.”

Solís contemplated taking a break from photography after graduating from the University of Illinois, Chicago in 1997 because she wanted to dedicate herself to painting and drawing. After a brief trip to Europe, she returned to Chicago and focused on this new art form. 

“Little by little I sold my equipment. It didn’t happen overnight, but it was something I was thinking about when I went back to school,” she says. “I think I still took a couple of photos here and there up until 2000, but I went into the mode of how to be an illustrator.” 

“It’s not like I had a traumatic experience with photography. I never let it go in the sense that I always kept up with photography shows, I bought photo books, supported photographer friends, and it was something I’ve always been interested in, something that’s been a part of my life for such a long time. But I was really happy pursuing drawing, painting, and illustration. I started doing abstract work, which I still do from time to time, but not too much because photography has kept me so busy. That’s the thing, it’s hard to balance two very demanding subjects, like photography and illustration/drawing. But the fact is if I want to do work, or gigs in illustration for freelance, it’s really hard.”

A shuttered panaderia in Pilsen, in 2022, from LuzCredit: Diana Solís

It takes a special kind of artist to pick right back up where they were decades ago as if time had stopped. It’s amazing to see Solís so effortlessly pick up the camera after so many years away from it. It says so much about her creative mind and passion.

“I’ve been working quietly for many, many years. In the sense that, sure I talk sometimes about what I do, I’m not afraid to talk or give a lecture. But I’m not one to put a lot of crema on my tacos,” she laughs. “Or constantly say ‘look what I’m doing’ or ‘look what I’ve done.’ I feel like I need to just do the work more than anything.”

Solís was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, in 1956 but grew up in Chicago where her family moved when she was a few months old. She grew up in Pilsen and Little Village, surrounded by family, books, music, and community. 

An early self-portrait, with the artists’ younger siblingsCredit: Diana Solís

By the early 80s, Solís was traveling—first to Peru, then eventually living in Mexico City where she attended Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 

“I was part of a summer session and it was very eye-opening. The school was very radicalized and politicized, and we were right in the thick of things.” She became involved with student movements, protests, and marches and documented all of it on her camera. She also got involved with queer community activism through groups like FHAR (The Homosexual Front of Revolutionary Action) and OIKABETH (Ollin Iskan Katuntat Bebeth Thot, which translated means “movement of women warriors paving the way and scattering flowers”).  

These were some of the first public queer organizations in Mexico, along with Ácratas and Lesbos, that formed just before the first national Lesbian & Gay Rights March in Washington, D.C., in 1979. Solís captured all of these historic movements through her lens. Her archives are massive, so she is working with Nicole Marroquín, a professor at the School of the Art Institute, to organize thousands of negatives of moments she’s captured along the way, including visits to Paris, Spain, Peru, and from across the U.S. 

While in Mexico City, Solís worked at Televisa, one of the country’s leading multimedia companies, doing what she calls paparazzo work. “Part of my job at Televisa as a staff photographer was working on telenovelas and the studio sets where they filmed. I always knew in the back of my mind that this was not what I wanted to do for the rest of my life,” she says. However, the opportunity felt like a way of legitimizing what she did, learning how to do that type of photography and how to deal with people. “It was very painfully clear to me that this was an industry that perpetuated entrenched racism, and I experienced it firsthand trying to get jobs. The color of my skin, and the way I look—I have a lot of Indigenous ancestries—so I just bristled all the time with all these things. It was horrible, and it continues to be the same thing today.”

In 1983, also during her time in Mexico, Solís cofounded and literally built Cuarto Creciente, a coffeehouse and feminist space where she became the cook, even though she didn’t know how to cook at the time. Because of the combined connections of the four founders, the cafe was an instant success. The space was able to feature legendary writers like Cherríe Moraga, Sandra Cisneros, and Norma Alarcón. 

“I have photographs of all of them performing at the Cuarto Creciente. It was a night of Chicano and Mexican writers together. Those are the kind of things I did at the coffeehouse, besides having to go once a week to the Central de Abastos to buy all the food and vegetables and learn how to cook.” The cafe was only around for two years because it was housed in a historic building, and it was eventually seized by the government in an act of gentrification. 

When she returned to Chicago, Solís again made her home in Pilsen, reactivating her involvement in the burgeoning art community and photographing artists and poets.  

Writer and poet Gregorio Gomez graces the cover of Luz.Credit: Diana Solís

Gregorio Gomez, the poet who graces the cover of Luz, met Solís through a mutual friend when he was the managing director of the Latino Chicago Theater Company in the 90s. Although Gomez knew very little about Solís when they first met, he noticed she was always carrying a camera around. “She was very personable and could hang with anybody and so she fit right in with the poets and she fit right in with the theater company, so she just became part of the family.”

Solís began attending the open-mike poetry nights Gomez led at Weeds, which was one of the longest-running poetry nights in Chicago, and captured the poets and spoken word artists sharing their work. Gomez says Solís was hardcore about taking photographs and wonders if at any point she knew that the people she captured on camera would become known in their respective art worlds. 

“I don’t know if she knew she was photographing leaders of our movement at the time,” he says. “She captured a movement and community, Latino and LGBTQ, and how each one of those worlds were swirling around each other and making an impact on the city of Chicago, even though sometimes we didn’t even know we were doing that.”

One of those leaders is fellow artist Marroquin, whom Gomez says encouraged Solís to do something with her collection of photos. Marroquin was astonished at everything Solís shot during that time, referring to its entirety as a treasure. It became an even bigger treasure when in 2022 it formed part of “Diana Solís: Encuentros, Photographs of Chicago Poetry Communities, 1978–1994” held at the Chicago Poetry Foundation, curated with the help of Oscar Arriola and Marroquín.

The inquisitive, bold, and almost rebellious nature in Solís’s work was present even while she attended UIC, from where she received a BFA in photography in 1997. She remembers her teachers didn’t appreciate that work, and instead, she says, “were more interested in me doing conceptual artwork, so I was getting somewhat berated by them in the critiques. I stuck to my guns. I stuck to what I wanted to do.”

A 1983 memorial march in honor of organizer Rudy Lozano, who was slain that year.Credit: Diana Solís

Growing up in Pilsen, Solís saw the rise of the local punk scene, including the creation of the Spanish-language hardcore punk band Los Crudos. She had met Martin Sorrondeguy, the band’s singer (also known as Martin Crudo), through his mom Patty, whom Solís worked with at Mujeres Latinas En Acción, a social services organization for women. Sorrondeguy was 11 when she first met him, before his music endeavors. 

“I used to go to punk events back in the day because my brother was a bouncer at one of the clubs,” she says. “He’s the one who told me about this new punk band Los Crudos, and when we arrived at the show I saw it was Martin. A bunch of us would go to the shows and support the group. We loved it.” They’ve been friends ever since. 

In 2016, when Los Crudos’s 25th anniversary came around, Sorrondeguy asked Solís to showcase some of her work at a celebratory exhibition titled “Desafinados.” She was surprised to be included because she wasn’t active in the punk scene, but Sorrondeguy said that didn’t matter.

“He went to my studio, saw some work he liked, and picked out some pieces,” Solís says. “The three pieces are basically about being an outsider, being in a different state of mind, and in a different world. They’re all characters and creatures, which is usually what I draw and paint. They’re heroes to me. They live in dream worlds, but they’re also worlds not unlike our own where they are cast aside by a society that wants to silence us. All these characters are part of that.”

Solís herself is a hero for many. She embodies perseverance as she confronts and contends with ongoing extreme and life-threatening health issues, including several bouts of cancer. Her positive outlook, however, is unwavering. “I think, you know, in order for me to move forward every day in my life, I have a lot of gratitude—with myself, with my doctors, with my friends, with my community. And that, for me, allows me to do the things that I do, my work, which I love. I am doing the things that I love the most. These are the best times of my life.”

Solís explains the challenges of heading into the next bracket of adulthood, including the realization that not working is not necessarily included when declaring retirement. She’s been an educator for more than 40 years and continues in that profession, teaching courses at Benito Juarez Community Academy and Volta Elementary School and developing curricula related to social consciousness, social justice, critical thinking, and critical race theory. 

Luz represents the artist’s return to photography, after more than 20 years away.Credit: Carolina Sanchez

Solís worked with local artists to complete the project surrounding Luz, fundraising through the 3Arts crowdfunding platform and on her own. The first edition made its debut in Chicago at the National Museum of Mexican Art in November 2022; that edition has sold out. Together with her team, they are working on a second edition and are hopeful to have it published in the near future.

Luz captures the community and changes brought about by COVID and gentrification. There is also an intimate quality to the photographs which is communicated by the individual stance and eye contact expressed in every portrait. She has a way of connecting with her subjects through her lens. As Solís explains, the portraits within the book “became moments of emergence for those of us in Pilsen already vulnerable to predatory developers and racist housing policies, during a time when our nation’s inequitable response to COVID, with its variations, further silenced us.” A testament to the resilience of its community, Luz is an important and historical reflection of its people.

Mike, an employee at Angel’s Tire Shop, in 2020Credit: Diana Solís

“My photography is a mix of environmental portraits and reportage of sorts. The work in the book opened up a huge can of worms for me but in a good way. And it’s opened up a way for people to also look at the past work I’ve done and why this work is so important because it’s never been seen before. It’s taking parts of the history of Pilsen and other parts, like the 16 years of poetry communities that haven’t been seen before. And that’s not all, there’s more, but we just can’t include everything.” This led to conversations about putting together a catalog, or smaller book, to include the vast amount of photographs she hasn’t yet shared. Solís is excited about the possibilities. 

In some of her illustrations and paintings, you’ll find colorful, strange, and mythological figures. Their peculiar composition represents our connection to nature, a prominent idea in some of her works. “These characters and creatures began to develop back in the 90s when I started to do a lot more drawing and before I left photography.” Between visits to Europe and Oaxaca, the idea of converging cave art, textures, and layering began to form. “What I ended up doing was creating what I call a hybrid or anthropomorphic figure, which means a cross between human and animal. Without me realizing it at the time, I was beginning to develop this idea of how we relate to nature as human beings.

“A lot of my first drawings were of creatures that . . . had human features and the humans had animal features. And I stuck with that. I loved it and when I was in Oaxaca working, doing my printmaking and a residency, I met so many wonderful Oaxacan artists and their work was the same. Their work was based on mythology, coming from their Indigenous backgrounds and their relationship to earth and animals. I was so inspired by this, it kind of sealed a lot of ways I began to paint moving forward.” 

Gregorio Gomez was always struck by her painting. “She surpassed herself in regard to her photography,” he says. “I mean, a photograph is a photograph and you can Photoshop and do this and do that, but a painting has a different reality and a different visual look to it. And then, of course, have you seen some of her paintings? Where the heck did she get the mind to come up with those characters?! I found that to be genius. I found that to be not only artistic and creative but way, way out of left field. It just made me think how different she was, and is, in comparison to other painters of our generation.”

Much of Solís’s work is labor-intensive. “My paintings, drawings, doing it for many hours a day you can develop issues. I have major issues on my hands because of this.” This laborious process includes pieces where she incorporates collage and papel picado techniques, using Exacto blades, knives, and scissors. 

“I like the idea of merging craft with fine art. Craft is also art, actually,” she says. “A lot of the work I was doing was mixed-media work, which I’ve always done, and it’s where I’m at even today. As a teaching artist, I teach printmaking, drawing, and figure drawing. But in all of that, I have my specialties. I have specialties for creating certain types of artwork and I have a specialty for doing photography. Those are my strongest points, I believe. Photography is probably stronger than anything.”

Reading over some of the praise she’s received recently, it seems unusual that this new work is referred to as a rediscovering of her community. Solís agrees. “I don’t feel I rediscovered it. I think a lot of this wording, there’s a spin put on things. I guess you could say, in a way, I rediscovered certain things about myself through the pandemic. But did I rediscover it? I was always aware that Pilsen was in gentrification mode. It wasn’t like I just woke up one morning and I went, ‘Oh my god, I see all this change, I’m going to have to photograph it!’”

Luz captures the community and changes brought about by COVID and gentrification.Credit: Carolina Sanchez

The growing attention to her art can be overwhelming, she admits, but she’s thankful her work is being exposed to new people, especially the youth. “It makes me happy that Latinos are really, a lot of them, are really doing things that I would never do in my time because there were so few of us going to university. That they’re challenging the canons and the status quo of what other people have always thought we were about. 

“My work actually does the same thing. It challenges that. And I think that’s kind of people’s interest when they discover my work. . . . The other thing [that I’m happy about] is that I’m still alive . . . which is great,” she laughs. 

“I can navigate these waters as a living artist, not a dead one. It’s been exciting! It’s been great.” 

Join Diana Solís and Deanna Ledezma for a conversation about LuzTues 2/22, noon, UIC Rafael Cintron Ortiz Latino Cultural Center, Lecture Center B-2, 826 S. Halsted, RSVP here, free

related stories

“It’s an Open Mike, Who Cares?”

Hanging With the Poets on a Monday Night at Weeds


Ghosts of gentrification

As fall settles into Chicago, a ghostly chill raises the hackles of those attuned to a different kind of presence in the city’s streets. We live in a city of disappearances: from the original loss of home of Chicago’s many Native tribes, to the thousands of people disappeared by the Chicago Police Department into the…


Pilsen’s Ailing Arts District

As 4Art Inc prepares to leave its Pilsen location, John Podmajersky III’s Chicago Arts District looks more and more like a ghost town. Also: the Chicago Artists Coalition loses its recently appointed executive director in the wake of a Web site crisis.


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