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Chicago police saying little about off-duty cop who said he fired at armed thief in Irving Park

Chicago police were releasing few details about an off-duty cop who said he fired at an armed thief who was trying to steal a catalytic converter from a parked car in Irving Park.

It was not known if the officer hit anyone early Tuesday in the 2800 block of West Grace Street, though a law enforcement source says investigators were checking hospitals for gunshot victims.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates use of force by officers, was called to the scene but the agency would not release any other information.

Police spokesman Tom Ahern would not confirm that an off-duty officer was involved, even though COPA had been notified. “We don’t confirm the occupation of victims,” he said, though the department does regularly disclose such information.

A media notification about the incident also makes no mention of an off-duty officer being involved. It said police responded to shots fired and made contact with a man who said he saw several people trying to steal a catalytic converter.

One of the thieves “pointed a firearm at the victim after becoming aware the victim was nearby,” the notification stated. “The victim drew his firearm and shot at the offender. The offenders entered multiple vehicles and fled the scene.”

It said the man was not injured but was taken to a hospital “for chest pain.”

No one was reported in custody.

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MLB Winter Meetings: White Sox’ Liam Hendriks discussed in trade talks

White Sox have discussed All-Star Closer, Liam Hendriks in Winter trade talks.

The White Sox have discussed star closer Liam Hendriks in talks with other teams this winter, reports Mark Feinsand of MLB.com.

There is no indication a deal is especially likely, although it stands to reason a number of clubs would have interest in installing the three-time All-Star into their late-inning mix provided Chicago is willing to make a trade.

While he may be available, not every team is in the running to acquire Hendriks as he has a limited no-trade clause; blocking a deal to five teams.

White Sox closer Liam Hendriks’ name has come up in trade talks with other clubs, per source. Hendriks has a limited no-trade clause that allows him to veto a deal to five clubs.

Over his 12-year career, Hendriks has appeared in 471 total games and has amassed a career ERA of 3.81 and a K/BB ratio of 724/158, making 115 career saves.

The 33-year old closer is coming off of another impressive season, recording 37 saves and a 2.81 ERA over 58 games. He also struck out 85 batters while only allowing 16 walks, culminating with a second straight All-Star nomination.

Chicago finished this past season with an overall record of 81-81, 11 games behind the NL Central Champion Cleveland Guardians. They already made a splash before the Winter Meeting by signing starting pitcher Mike Clevinger.

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NFL Overreaction Tuesday, week 13: Adding Watson saves the Browns season, Dallas is a real contender, 49ers Superbowl window is shut for this year, Chiefs are destined to be a first game exit in the postseason

Overreaction: Adding Deshaun Watson saves the Browns’ season.

After serving his 11-game suspension without pay and being fined five million dollars for his two dozen sexual misconduct claims Deshaun Watson played his first NFL game in exactly 700 days. There was clearly some rust for Watson as he tallied just 131 yards on 12 of 22 passing and threw one interception against his former team. This was nowhere near the standard of the ludicrous five-year 230 million dollar contract, he signed in the offseason.

The Browns won 27-14 but the story of the game was the Browns’ defense and special teams, not Watson. Donovan Peoples-Jones scored the first points for the Browns in the second quarter with a punt return for a touchdown. Corner Denzel Ward would score next for the Browns on a four-yard fumble return for a touchdown. Then linebacker Tony Fields II took an interception to the house for the final scoring play for the defense.

The Browns’ offense only mustered 6 points with Watson under center and had the defense not carried them in his Browns debut, the Browns would have lost 6-14. Having not played in 700 days and dealing with constant backlash from the NFL community, one could ask “Did the Browns make a mistake in signing Watson?” The Browns are 5-7 and would need to win out to make a push for the playoffs with no guarantee of getting in. The first year of Watson’s tenure in Cleveland may be a bust.

Not an Overreaction: The 49ers Superbowl window is closed for the time being.

Another 49ers season is lost due to season-ending injuries once again. Starting quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo is out for the season with a broken foot. He is the second 49ers quarterback to go down with a season-ending injury this year. San Francisco lost, then starter, Trey Lance had a fibula fracture and a ligament disruption that has sidelined him since week 2. This has left Mr. Irrelevant Brock Purdy to lead the Super Bowl-hopeful 49ers squad that has sole possession of first place in their division.

Purdy had a rocky first outing in week 11 against the Cardinals in the 49ers blowout win 38-10. Purdy missed a handoff to his running back by a mile and became infamous for it on the internet. Since his mishap, Purdy filled in for Garoppolo against the surging Dolphins on Sunday and finished 25/37 for 210 yards with two touchdowns and one interception in the 49ers route of Miami 33-17.

San Francisco has a Super Bowl-caliber defense, but limitations on the other side of the ball may keep them from getting there. The 49er’s defense is number one in Opponent Yards and Points per game in the NFL. The offense is ranked in the top 15 for every major offensive category in the NFL, but with Purdy, under center, the future is not certain for San Fran.

Overreaction: The Cowboys are a real contender.

The legacy of the Dallas Cowboys is “this is our year” only that’s every year until the Cowboys crash and burn into mediocrity, again and again, time after time. The fan base has been meme’d to death and can never be taken seriously for an actual contender. This season “Dem Boys” are 9-3 and are coming off a monster 54-19 win over the Colts on Monday Night Football. Dallas scored 33 unanswered points in the 4th quarter to more than seal the win and it was the third time this year the Cowboys scored 40+ in a win. 

The Cowboys’ defense has been incredible this year. They are top 5 in every major defensive category and are allowing less than 2 touchdowns per game. Dallas has even found a one-two punch at running back with Tony Pollard and Ezekiel Elliot that has provided much-needed balance for the Cowboys’ offense this year. That being said the Cowboys are no stranger to amazing regular seasons, they just crumble in the playoffs and when the pressure is on.

Dallas has the 10th easiest schedule for 2022 and is poised to make the playoffs and possibly win the division if the Eagles have any more hiccups in the final stretch of the season. However, until they make that next step and make it past the divisional round of the playoffs for the first time since 1995 they cannot be taken seriously. Dallas has to prove they belong in the conversation of top teams to be taken seriously again.

Not an overreaction: The Chiefs could be a first-game exit in the playoffs.

Though it may seem unlikely, Kansas City has its Kryptonite in the form of an AFC North quarterback who cannot beat the Browns. Joe Burrow and the Bengals have beaten the Chiefs three straight times and barring a rematch in the playoffs it could be a 4th. If the playoff started today the Chiefs would host the 7th seat in the AFC. That spot is currently filled by the New York Jets.

That being said with five games left in the regular season the bottom half of the AFC can shift quite a bit. If the Bengals win only two of their next five they would end up 10-7 on the season and while several teams could finish 10-7 the likelihood is that only the Los Angeles Chargers would sneak into the playoff picture sitting at 6-6. The Bengals, Dolphins, and Ravens all sit at 8-4 and the Titans are 7-5  leaving the playoff seating wide open in the final weeks.

The Chiefs will lock up the division and secure home-field advantage, but any of the teams they would face would be a tough draw for the Chiefs. Kansas City has one of, if not the best offenses in the NFL, but when they struggle to get going things get ugly for KC fast. Patrick Mahomes is still the most hurried quarterback in the NFL, even after the team overhauled its offensive line. The Chiefs have the 3rd highest sack percentage in the NFL for quarterbacks and still cannot successfully protect Mahomes.

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High school basketball: No Shot Clock podcast, reviewing the Chicago Elite Classic

Joe Henricksen and Michael O’Brien talk about last weekend’s loaded Chicago Elite Classic in this episode.

We also discuss the new recruiting/transfer rule that has been proposed and debate whether or not the area’s top 10-15 teams are stronger overall this year than last season.

All that and a look ahead at the upcoming week of games.

The podcast is on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, so please subscribe.

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Chicago Cubs Rumors: Kodai Senga is still in play to signVincent Pariseon December 6, 2022 at 5:41 pm

The Chicago Cubs are clearly trying to spend some money right now. The Winter Meetings are underway and the rumors are swirling.

The Cubs were a bad baseball team in 2022 but they clearly think that there was enough good to be a winner a year later in 2023. That remains to be seen but spending some money is clearly something that needs to happen if they want to be a winner right now.

One player that they have been connected to for a while is Kodai Senga. He is a Japanese player that is looking to play Major League Baseball starting in 2023. He is a very good player that should be an impact guy right away.

A few weeks have gone by since the initial reports of the Cubs were last reported to be interested and some other teams have joined the mix. However, it seems like they are still in the running to sign Senga and be the team that brings him to Major League Baseball.

Kodai Senga would be a perfect fit for the Chicago Cubs in 2023.

Kodai Senga market includes: Mets, Giants, Red Sox, Cubs, Padres, Rangers

— Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) December 6, 2022

Jon Heyman of MLB Network and The New York Post reported on Twitter that the Cubs are still one of the suitors for Senga. Heyman named the Cubs also with the New York Mets, San Francisco Giants, Boston Red Sox, San Diego Padres, and Texas Rangers as teams going for him.

This doesn’t mean that a different team can’t come in and steal him off the market but this list does line up with the biggest spenders (or teams rumored to be spending) so far this year.

We have already seen Justin Verlander and Jacob deGrom kind of set the market by signing their new deals with their new teams.

In his late 30s, he won the Cy Young with the Houston Astros in 2022 so it will be interesting to see how pitchers go from there.

Carlos Rodon is probably the new best pitcher available on the market now that deGrom and Verlander are signed but Senga is still going to get lots of interest anyway.

He has a lot of potential but he does have to prove that he can pitch well at this level. The Cubs are hoping to be the team that gets to give him that chance.

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Chicago Cubs Rumors: Kodai Senga is still in play to signVincent Pariseon December 6, 2022 at 5:41 pm Read More »

Michelle Grabner does it againon December 1, 2022 at 3:46 pm

A compact solo exhibition at MICKEY presents the remarkable range of Michelle Grabner’s three-decade career. A celebrated figure in local and national art scenes, Grabner has done it all. Adjacent to her dedicated studio practice, Grabner’s pioneering curatorial platform The Suburban—an experimental gallery established in Oak Park in 1999 with her husband Brad Killam—has championed the ingenuity of artist-run spaces. Additionally, Grabner has taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago for over 25 years, leaving an indelible mark on the city’s artists and creative ecosystem. 

Entering the first gallery, one can appreciate the scope of Grabner’s trademark domestic vernacular applied across painting, sculpture, and photography. However, this survey is far from comprehensive. “A Minor Survey” hinges on a swiftly spoiled joke: all works on view were made in 2022. The motifs are largely recycled: two monumental, oil-on-burlap gingham paintings reprise Grabner’s signature checkered series, debuted in 2015; and three oil-on-canvas works, resembling bleached cloths, recall both textile paintings from the 90s and a recent series of pastel pictures adorned with white enamel globs. This may be Grabner’s first solo presentation in Chicago since 2013, but what differentiates her recent interventions from ideas honed over the past ten years? Look past the titular punchline, and the show could be brushed off as same old, same old.

But Grabner succeeds at iterating upon presumed old hat with novelty and aplomb. Some forms remain the same. For instance, a recent tondo painting—comprising a black, gesso-coated panel drawn over with graphite rays—replicates a form initiated over a decade ago. Nevertheless, the meditative icon, elegantly rendered with mechanical precision, emanates a timeless quality illustrative of Grabner’s enduring brand of abstraction. 

Other works test the limits of past ideas in new configurations. A particularly compelling patinated brass blanket breaks with Grabner’s previous textile sculpture idioms. Unlike earlier metal-cast cloth works, which appear vertically suspended from two points, this crocheted knit lays loosely folded on the floor. The uneven appearance of the blanket’s corners, not quite lined up, summons the labor required to fold linen uneasily handled by a single person. A simple chore can be a heavy order without the help of others. 

Despite her focused engagement with abstraction, Grabner’s appropriation of household accessories, from jam jars to dish towels, is perhaps too easily read as social critique—invoking second-wave feminist rhetoric espoused by the Wages for Housework movement and simultaneously vulnerable to casual sexism—as demonstrated in a 2014 New York Times review that conflated her artistic output with the efforts of a soccer mom. The tendency for viewers to extrapolate class and gender discourse follows not only from the artwork’s domestic content and the geographic context of the suburban midwest, but also from Grabner’s parallel success as a curator, critic, and educator. Unpacking the social terms of her interdisciplinary career in a 2012 interview with critic Barry Schwabsky, Grabner stated, “curating, writing, and teaching are super social endeavors, and they often evoke various critical positions. But yes, my studio is not social.” Unlike past institutional surveys that included bibliographic videos, collaborations, and work by other artists, MICKEY’s presentation conspicuously omits Grabner’s more social endeavors, focusing on the scope of her aesthetic strategies. 

While the artwork cannot entirely escape external associations, the present survey approximates the routines underpinning Grabner’s studio methodology. It’s a conceptual and self-referential practice where nothing goes to waste; ideas are repeatedly executed to the point that all possibilities are exhausted—or so you might think. Clarity and wit sprout from her sustained engagement with monotony. 

Look at a delicate wall-mounted sculpture, composed of bronze rods and flowering plants burgeoning at the joints. Resembling a canvas stretcher, the work is based on an arcane double entendre—“mullions” and “mulleins”—the former a term for a window frame divider and the latter a type of perennial plant. It’s a cheeky pun, perhaps originating from extended time spent mulling things over.  

Michelle Grabner, “Untitled”, 2022, silver on steel, dimensions variable. Credit: Courtesy of MICKEY and the artist

Nearby, an assortment of cans and tins coated in silver leaf lay atop a plinth. Their lids are peeled back but largely intact, as if the artist’s phantom hand was suspended in motion. The veneer—an ornamental redundancy, in which metal adorns metal—belabors a sense of being worked over. But these pieces also espouse a lightness. Rid of their utilitarianism, these containers are open-ended and permeable. They preserve nothing.

Two other sculptures appropriate the visual language of DIY crafting projects. Repurposing salvaged wood slabs, Grabner cuts out shallow circular beds to house assorted lid-like objects—some ready-made, others trompe l’oeil. The reliefs, evocative of her mobile sculptures, emulate salon-style hangs of Grabner’s various material strategies. Paintings, metal castings, and found objects lay side by side like spare parts of a whole practice. But for all their succinctness and poetry, these wood board assemblages could run the risk of falling flat. The quirky yet refined conceit exists precariously, calibrated just enough to avoid the pretense of triteness. 

Grabner has articulated boredom as a critical measure in her process and an unlikely defense against her work turning stale. To better understand the capricious conditions of her practice, one might look to artist Dick Higgins’s seminal 1968 essay, “Boredom and Danger,” published in the Something Else Newsletter. The text appraises a shift in art’s production and accompanying terms of engagement; describing danger as a crucial element in successful works, he remarked, “a sense of risk is indispensable, because any simple piece fails when it becomes facile. This makes for all the more challenge in risking facility, yet still remaining very simple, very concrete, very meaningful.” Embracing the possibility of failure, Grabner’s work exists at the edge of easy. An ode to looking hard and looking harder at the simplest of conceits, “A Minor Survey” revels in the stunning patience of Grabner’s gaze.

 “A Minor Survey”Through 12/18: Tue-Thur 12-6 PM, Fri-Sat 12-4 PM, MICKEY, 1635 W. Grand, mickey.online

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Art Chicago: To Dream, Design, and Acquire

The opening panel discussion at this year’s Art Chicago is titled “What If: To Dream, Desire and Acquire,” and that pretty much sums up the annual fair that brings together collectors, curators, artists, gallerists, scholars, and kibbitzers for four days of looking, talking, and dealing. Running Friday through Monday, Art Chicago concentrates on modern and…


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Michelle Grabner does it againon December 1, 2022 at 3:46 pm Read More »

World AIDS Day screenings, the Buttcracker, and moreKerry Reid, Micco Caporale and Salem Collo-Julinon December 2, 2022 at 7:16 pm

Last week, the annual winter flower shows opened at the city’s conservatories in Garfield Park and Lincoln Park. This year, the theme at Garfield Park Conservatory (300 N. Central Park) is “Snow Day,” which they’re channeling with a 12 feet tall “tree” created with white poinsettias, as well as oversized snowmen hidden throughout the conservatory’s show house. Seasonal plants on view include snows of Kilimanjaro shrubs, snow bush, snowball cabbage, and snow crystals (aka sweet alyssum). The Lincoln Park Conservatory’s (2391 N. Stockton) theme this year is “Sugar Plum,” which they embody with pink poinsettias and scenes and music from The Nutcracker. You can also expect to see purple heart, spiderwort, “Rosea Picta” snow bush, “Pure Violet Premium” pansies, and “Velvet Elvis” plectranthus. The winter flower shows are free and will be on view until January 8, but timed reservations are required within regular hours. Garfield Park Conservatory is open Wed 10 AM-8 PM (with last entry at 7 PM), Thu-Sun 10 AM-5 PM (last entry at 4 PM), and closed Mon-Tue. Lincoln Park Conservatory is open Wed-Sun 10 AM-3 PM; closed Mon-Tue. Check out the Garfield Park Conservatory and Lincoln Park Conservatory websites to plan your visit. (MC)

A portion of the show currently on display at Lincoln Park Conservatory.

There are some local events continuing today and this weekend in the spirit of World AIDS Day, which is observed on December 1 each year to commemorate those who have died from an AIDS-related illness, to show support for those living with HIV, to fight prejudice, and to educate. (In case you missed it, Reader editor in chief Enrique Limón wrote some reflections about growing up at the height of the AIDS era for his editor’s note in our latest issue.) The International Museum of Surgical Science (1524 N. Lake Shore Dr.) hosts Being And Belonging this weekend, a program of seven short films curated by the organization Visual AIDS highlighting underreported stories involving HIV and AIDS, from an international list of artists and filmmakers living with HIV. The program includes newly commissioned work by American artist Clifford Prince King, performance and video artist and Canadian queer community health activist Mikiki, and self-named “artivista” and Argentinian Camila Arce, who has been living with HIV since birth, and whose work is focused on the needs and realities of women living with HIV, those who were born with HIV, and those who seroconverted through breastfeeding. Being and Belonging screens in a continuous loop through Sunday; the museum is open today until 5 PM, and Sat-Sun 10 AM-5 PM. Admission for adults is $18, but check the museum’s website for a range of discounted rates for students, seniors, children, educators, and members of the military. The program also screens in its entirety on Sun 12/4 at 2 PM at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (220 E. Chicago); it’s free with museum admission ($15 for adults). (SCJ)

A trailer created for Being and Belonging by Visual AIDS

And tonight the nonprofit service organization CALOR (formed in 1990 by a group of HIV and Latinx activists as Comprensión y Apoyo a Latinos en Oposición at Retrovirus) hosts the World AIDS Day Variety Show, a night of community, tacos, beverages, and performances by performer and Selena illusionist Angelicia Diamond, rapper and actress Lila Star Escada, musician Rosalba Valdez, and performance artist Benji Hart. Drag performers Milani and Isa Diamond host, and DJ X-tasy will be on the decks. CALOR will offer free rapid HIV testing during the event. (8 PM, at Healthy Hood Chicago, 2242 S. Damen, free, all-ages, reservations requested at Eventbrite). (SCJ)

There are approximately eleventybillion versions of The Nutcracker running around this time of year—but there’s only one Buttcracker. The brainchild of Jaq Seifert (who, as they told Reader contributor Matt Simonette earlier this week, originally came up with the title as a campfire joke) started out as a one-night burlesque and variety show back in 2016. It’s now getting a full run at the Greenhouse Theater Center (2257 N. Lincoln), with Miguel Long directing and choreography by Dylan Kerr. The story, based very loosely on the original, follows Clara from a stuffy holiday office party to the Land of Sweets, where celebrations of sex and body positivity unfold through burlesque, boylesque, circus arts, and more. The lineup changes almost nightly, and there are special preshow performances Fridays and Saturdays and brunch matinees on Sunday, along with specialty cocktails every show. It runs through 12/31, Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, with a special 9 PM performance for New Year’s Eve. Tickets range from $20 industry to $100 VIP seating during the regular run, $60-$200 on NYE, and are available at thebuttcrackerburlesque.com or greenhousetheater.org. 18+, 21+ for alcoholic beverages. (KR)

Another dance alternative to the holiday chestnut arrives 7 PM tonight at Links Hall (3111 N. Western) with two new pieces from REdance group. On the Edge of the Fault Line by RE

World AIDS Day screenings, the Buttcracker, and moreKerry Reid, Micco Caporale and Salem Collo-Julinon December 2, 2022 at 7:16 pm Read More »

Redtwist names new artistic directorKerry Reidon December 2, 2022 at 9:52 pm

This has been a year of tremendous changes at the top for Chicago theaters, with Susan V. Booth taking over at the Goodman after Bob Falls’s 35 years as artistic director and Braden Abraham, formerly the artistic director for Seattle Rep, poised to take over as AD at Glencoe’s Writers Theatre in February. Cody Estle, formerly the AD for Raven Theatre, just moved to Next Act Theatre in Milwaukee; a search for his successor will be underway shortly. And we’re awaiting news for who will be replacing Chicago Shakespeare founder and artistic director Barbara Gaines (who plans to depart mid-2023) and longtime executive director Criss Henderson, who leaves at the end of this year.

Redtwist Theatre is also making some staff changes. Founded in 1994 as Actors Workshop Theatre by the husband-and-wife team of Michael Colucci and Jan Ellen Graves, they changed their name to their current moniker in 2001 and moved to their storefront home at 1044 W. Bryn Mawr (smack-dab in the center of the Bryn Mawr Historic District and just down the street from City Lit Theater) a year later. The company has mostly focused on American classics (Arthur Miller and Edward Albee have been particular favorites) alongside contemporary writers like Lucas Hnath and Lauren Gunderson. 

Colucci and Graves stepped aside in 2019 and Charlie Marie McGrath took over as AD—just in time for the COVID-19 shutdown to put a screeching halt to live theater. McGrath steered the company into virtual productions and helped pave the way for reopening shows after COVID, but she too decided to step aside in May of 2022. 

Longtime ensemble member Brian Parry has served as interim artistic director for the past few months, but now the board has announced that Dusty Brown will be the new AD. Brown, a nonbinary director from Atlanta whose resume includes work with Georgia Shakespeare and Georgia Ensemble Theatre, has an MFA in directing from Ohio University and directed Macbeth for Three Crows Theatre at Redtwist earlier this fall. 

Brown will be joined by Eileen Dixon as community director and Michael Dias as development director. Dixon’s background includes acting and directing with a particular focus on new play development, and Dias is an actor and mime with deep experience in independent production. 

Redtwist will be announcing its next season shortly. 

Steep Theatre wins major city grant

Big news for another Edgewater theater company: Steep Theatre, which lost its longtime rental home on Berwyn Avenue in 2020, and then bought a former Christian Science reading room down the street, has been awarded the largest grant in the company’s 21-year history—a $2.988 million Community Development Grant from the City of Chicago.

The funds will help the company build out what is currently a pretty raw space in their new venue into a black-box theater and enhance public space for community engagement projects. (The company ran the Boxcar, a bar and performance space adjoining their former home, and frequently made that space available for other artists and neighborhood organizations for a couple of years before losing their lease.)

In a press release, Steep’s artistic director Peter Moore said, “We recognize that this is an investment not only in our company, but in our Edgewater community and our theatre community, which has been hit so hard these last two years by the pandemic. We take those responsibilities very much to heart. Chicago isn’t Chicago without its theatre, and we’re proud that our city recognizes theatre as both an indispensable cultural asset and an undeniable economic catalyst.”

Steep is also searching for a new executive director; Kate Piatt-Eckert, who held that role for nine years, left the company last month.

Jenn Freeman (Po’Chop) in Litany. Freeman is one of five Chicago artists receiving a fellowship from Dance/USA this year. Credit: Jordan Phelps

Chicago artists recognized by Dance/USA

Each year, Dance/USA, the national service organization for professional dance, awards fellowships to artists. This year’s cohort recognizes 30 artists “representing an array of modalities rooted at the intersection of social and embodied practices. These include community-building and culture-bearing practices, healing and storytelling practices, activism and representational justice practices, and more.”

Of those 30, five are based in Chicago: footwork artist Jemal “P-Top” Delacruz; Jenn Freeman, also known as Po’Chop; cat mahari; Vershawn Sanders-Ward; and Anna Martine Whitehead.

Delacruz cofounded The Era footwork crew in 2014, and (among many other accolades) he received a National Dance Project Award from the New England Foundation for the Arts in 2019. 

Freeman’s work has focused on elements of storytelling, striptease, and dance, and she’s also the creator of the digital zine The Brown Pages. She’s collaborated on video projects with Jamila Woods and Mykele Deville and also created the dance-film series Litany in association with Rebuild Foundation.

Afrofuturism, body history, and exploring the “informal legacy of Blk liberation through documentation” are intertwined parts of mahari’s practice. A past recipient of the 3Arts Award in dance, along with other awards, one of mahari’s current projects, Blk Ark: the impossible manifestation, is “a multimodal reflective of marronage, anarchism, Hip Hop, and play to be completed [in] 2025.” 

Sanders-Ward, the founding artistic director of Red Clay Dance Company, has also received numerous plaudits for her company’s work. In 2019, Red Clay opened its own community studio space in Woodlawn. Her upcoming site-specific choreographic project set to premiere in June 2023, Rest.Rise.Move.Nourish.Heal, was also selected for a 2021 National Dance Project Award from New England Foundation.

Martine Whitehead’s work, both collaborative and solo, has “‘embodied epistemologies of Black in FORCE! an opera in three acts, created with Ayanna Woods, Angel Bat Dawid, and Phillip Armstrong, the waiting room of a prison provides the setting for a piece that, as Martine Whitehead says, is “a structure for resourcing ourselves to dream of a world beyond the prison-industrial complex and all its impoverished tentacles that reach into our lives and make it almost or actually impossible to live.” 

Each artist receives a $30,167 grant from Dance/USA (provided in partnership with the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation) to be used at their discretion.

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Redtwist names new artistic directorKerry Reidon December 2, 2022 at 9:52 pm Read More »

Roman Villarreal shapes the neighborhoodon December 5, 2022 at 1:00 pm

There’s conflict, grief, helplessness, loss, and also joy, camaraderie, and loyalty that inhabit artist Roman Villarreal’s south-side neighborhood and, consequently, the work he’s made there. All of this is on display in his first retrospective, “South Chicago Legacies,” at Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art.  

Villarreal grew up in the Bush neighborhood on the southeast side, among steelworkers, of which he was one, and gang members, of which he was also one. He started his art practice in the army during the Vietnam War by making drawings and selling them to fellow soldiers. Villarreal served his term without getting deployed to Vietnam, a fate that few men in his community shared. In fact, his parish, Our Lady of Guadalupe, is believed to have suffered the highest per capita death rate of men sent to war during that era. This was the first of two devastations that would mark his community worse off; the second was the closure of the steel mills.

In the years following the war, Villarreal started sculpting what he saw on the streets out of material he salvaged. In the late 1970s, he constructed The Rainbow Lounge, the oldest piece on display at Intuit. It’s a three-dimensional wooden panel painted in bright acrylics that depicts a band performing at the eponymous hangout. The women’s lips flash bright red lipstick, the men’s carry heavy handlebar mustaches. It’s warm and jovial. As Villarreal told me, “You have to show the good and the bad.”

The decade that followed The Rainbow Lounge brought national tragedy, and many of Villareal’s 1980s works chosen for display deal straight-forwardly with drug abuse, addiction, and a community in mourning. Side-by-side paintings They Die On The Throne and Habits show a man with a needle in his hand and a woman with a bottle to her lips, respectively. Though to reduce these paintings to drug awareness PSAs would be a huge disservice. They imbue the space with its most glaring displays of color—colors were associated with gangs and were very important to the community, Villarreal told me—and showcase his skill with acrylics.

“The way I see it, we were this middle-class neighborhood while the steel mills were open,” he says. “Then came the closures and the downfall. So now we have this whole generation that grew up during a time when all they saw was a middle-class neighborhood falling through the cracks—it hasn’t been the same since.” Villarreal bore witness to it all: “Vietnam, death, fatherhood, closures, and the street art movement…” he says, skimming through a half-century’s worth of history in a few seconds. He consolidates it all as naturally as he might give his address. He knows the stories well because he’s spent his life telling them. 

Roman Villarreal (American, b. 1950). The Parade, early 2000s. Acrylic on foam, 12 x 6 x 35 in. Courtesy of the Villarreal Family. Credit: Joseph “Fugie” Almanza

“I tell people I’m an urban anthropologist,” he says. “All I’m doing, really, is showing you my experiences from the 80s, 90s, [and so on]. I have to make sure there’s an even balance. I don’t only want to show bad, because it’s not only bad.” A painting from the 1990s, Porch, shows his signature blocky figures—friends, kids, pets—gathered on the front steps of a house, drinking beer, listening to music, and enjoying the weather. He adds: “They’re all wearing gang sweaters.” Villarreal lived on a block called “the beehive” where a lot of Latin Kings, the gang he belonged to, also lived. All summer they got together on porches before “the bloody 90s,” as he puts it. “Then we all moved to the backyards.” The painting itself holds all of these aspects: the love, the warmth, the moment, as well as the loss, the violence, the change. 

Porch wasn’t, in fact, meant to be viewed. It was a sketch for a clay piece. Of course, things don’t always work out as planned. An alabaster sculpture called Dogs (2019) started out as a lion and her cubs. He hadn’t even finished it when Intuit’s exhibition curator Alison Amick decided they wanted it in the show. “You never know what people are going to see in your work,” he says and seems genuinely interested in the various ways that the show could have played out. 

Intuit is dedicated to outsider art, but the museum has the hardwood floors and white walls of any West Town gallery. When the exhibition opened in June of this year, Villarreal says he was “really, really surprised to see it all together in that space.” Villarreal was used to seeing his work in group shows or outdoors (his two most well-known sculptures, a mysterious mermaid at 41st street beach and a steelworker and his family at Steelworkers Park, live in public spaces). 

Villarreal left the steel mills in the late 1980s and has been making art full-time ever since. He proudly identifies as an outsider artist; his auto-didacticism granted him a freedom that he doubts he’d have found by studying art in an institution. He attempts to describe the freedom that he feels when he’s working, fumbling around with the words before settling on: “There’s nothing as beautiful as a blank canvas.” He works almost every day, sketching and painting when it’s cold, sculpting when it’s warm. Between his three studios, he has 900 works. 

There are drawbacks to his outsider position, though. Namely, what happens to the art after the show closes or, ultimately, once the artist dies. There aren’t established places for preservation in the outsider art world, let alone continued sales. “We don’t have a traditional outlet, there’s a lot to learn from trial and error. Technique, how to promote work, how to network. But we’ll learn to survive,” he says. And isn’t that the truth. 

“Roman Villarreal: South Chicago Legacies” Through 1/8/23: Thu-Sun 11 AM-6 PM, Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art, 756 N. Milwaukee, (312) 624-9487, art.org

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