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Sentrock takes flight

Before you even step inside the museum, you are greeted outside by a Bird City Saint vinyl—the artist’s signature character. Walking into the first gallery, I see a giant wooden sculpture filled with congratulations written in red and black ink from various folks from the opening. Although signing the wall or pieces during an opening is not unheard of, this feels different. Joseph Perez, otherwise known as Sentrock, is more than his art, and this exhibition and many of the pieces, including this one, are here to show it. Loved ones, students, and supporters are not only brought in to view the new works but become part of the exhibition themselves through these means.

Sentock’s first solo museum show, at the Elmhurst Art Museum.Courtesy Elmhurst Art Museum

In the next gallery, I come across a child pressing a button, making the room light up all the objects inside. Going forward, I come to the biggest part of the exhibition. A giant Bird City Saint statue lays in a pile of grass, with a low-rider bike on the left side and a paletero cart adorned in his style and flowers on the right. As I go around, I can’t help but remember all the summers I had growing up in Pilsen and Chicago’s south side in general. Sentrock, who started out writing graffiti, takes pride in his Mexican American culture and brings in cultural motifs in the new canvases created and sculptures. We are seeing Bird City Saint, just like his creator, take off.

Sobre todo, siguió volando

Aquí está, entre la cuidad

Entre las caras de los niños

Y los corazones de todos

¿Lo puedes ver? ¿Lo puedes encontrar?

“Sentrock: The Boy Who Wanted to Fly”Through 2/12: Wed-Thu noon-5 PM, Fri-Sun 11 AM-5 PM, Elmhurst Art Museum, 150 Cottage Hill, Elmhurst, elmhurstartmuseum.org, general admission $5-$18

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Crack in the wall

Who has the right to make art in a public space?


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Celtic conflicts

Ann Noble’s play about an Irish family decompensating after the mother’s death had its premiere in Chicago nearly 30 years ago, and it’s showing its age. There are plots and subplots and Irish-lit tropes like a storytelling session apropos of nothing, but none of these achieves warp, or even tarantella, speed. As the dutiful daughter Evie, self-martyred with an undercurrent of rage at her stay-at-home fate, Hayley Rice carries the show, and the moment when she tells her mother’s ghost (not a spoiler) that “What you could have done to make me happy is to die!” is absolutely scalding. Likewise, every entrance by Andrew Behling as Evie’s love interest is electric, not only from their chemistry but from his heartfelt portrait of a playboy belatedly trying to become a man.

And Neither Have I Wings to FlyThrough 2/26: Wed 8 PM, Thu 3 PM, Fri 8 PM, Sat 4 and 8 PM, Sun 3 PM; open captions Sat 2/11 4 PM and Fri 2/17 8 PM; First Folio Theatre, Mayslake Peabody Estate, 1717 31st St., Oak Brook, 630-986-8067, firstfolio.org, $49-$59 (seniors 65+ $44-$54, full-time students 22 and under $20)

But these actors have an unfair advantage, as their characters have the heft of real people. The rest of the cast struggles with the cardboard cut-outs they’ve been assigned: The Spoiled Daughter, The Boring Fiance, The Charming Rover, The Stern But Largely Absent Father. Nor has the device of the ghost worn well, or perhaps director Heather Chrisler wasn’t prepared to have Adrianne Cury play it for the comic effect that would have leavened the rest of the evening.  Angela Weber Miller’s set is a wonder of 1950s middle-class respectability and Lindsay Jones’s sound design evokes Ireland better than any number of stories. And, having now seen Michael Dias deliver Hamlet’s “rogue and peasant slave” speech, I look forward to his someday doing the whole thing. 


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Toxic claustrophobia

Jasmine Sharma’s Radial Gradient, directed in its world premiere at Shattered Globe Theatre by Grace Dolezal-Ng,is the story of two students and their bid to enter a sorority at their university. Anjani (Simran Deokule) is American-born, of Indian descent, and her family has lived in the United States for at least two generations. Her roommate Gigi (Isabelle Muthiah) considers herself a white-passing person of color, with a complexion she describes as “yogurty.” Their attempt to participate in Greek life becomes an allegory for a relationship with whiteness, white institutions, and white supremacy that includes themes of belonging, self-determination, and complicity with systems of power. 

Radial GradientThrough 3/11: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM; also Sat 3/11 3 PM; touch tour and audio description Sat 3/3 8 PM (touch tour 6:45 PM); Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont, 773-975-8150, sgtheatre.org, $45 general admission ($35 seniors, $25 under 30 years old, $15 students; also $15 industry tickets on Thu-Fri with code “INDUSTRY.”)

As Gigi and Anjani stand in line to be judged by their allegedly superior peers, they meet recruitment counselor Melanie (Kianna Rose), a Black member of the “top tier” Alpha sorority, who seems to be the exception to the laws of value in this realm. Anjani, forever Brown in the eyes of her peers, is inspired by Melanie’s ascendance and acceptance among the white elite. Gigi, disgusted by an Alpha sister’s refusal to acknowledge her (unnamed) heritage, declares the Alphas racist for presuming her white. As their friendship fractures, Anjani is disillusioned by sorority life and quits before joining, instead becoming a member of student government, whereas Gigi, protected by her white skin, joins the Gammas and eventually becomes president of the Panhellenic Association, with a private and generally ineffectual mission to improve the racial climate of Greek life. 

In the meantime, Melanie has been assaulted at a mixer with a fraternity, and her so-called sisters have refused to testify on her behalf in order to maintain relations with the fraternity. Instead of fighting back, Melanie perpetuates white power by pursuing a PhD in “multi-culti psychology” at the same university, where, in a desperate and preposterous attempt to conduct her thesis research at her dissertation defense, she subjects Gigi and Anjani to a faux-private survey under the surveillance (via two-way glass) of her thesis advisors. Radial Gradient illustrates the toxic claustrophobia of a petri dish where everyone speaks a vernacular of LOLs and TBHs, and no one can escape or progress. 


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Toxic claustrophobia Read More »

Celtic conflicts

Ann Noble’s play about an Irish family decompensating after the mother’s death had its premiere in Chicago nearly 30 years ago, and it’s showing its age. There are plots and subplots and Irish-lit tropes like a storytelling session apropos of nothing, but none of these achieves warp, or even tarantella, speed. As the dutiful daughter Evie, self-martyred with an undercurrent of rage at her stay-at-home fate, Hayley Rice carries the show, and the moment when she tells her mother’s ghost (not a spoiler) that “What you could have done to make me happy is to die!” is absolutely scalding. Likewise, every entrance by Andrew Behling as Evie’s love interest is electric, not only from their chemistry but from his heartfelt portrait of a playboy belatedly trying to become a man.

And Neither Have I Wings to FlyThrough 2/26: Wed 8 PM, Thu 3 PM, Fri 8 PM, Sat 4 and 8 PM, Sun 3 PM; open captions Sat 2/11 4 PM and Fri 2/17 8 PM; First Folio Theatre, Mayslake Peabody Estate, 1717 31st St., Oak Brook, 630-986-8067, firstfolio.org, $49-$59 (seniors 65+ $44-$54, full-time students 22 and under $20)

But these actors have an unfair advantage, as their characters have the heft of real people. The rest of the cast struggles with the cardboard cut-outs they’ve been assigned: The Spoiled Daughter, The Boring Fiance, The Charming Rover, The Stern But Largely Absent Father. Nor has the device of the ghost worn well, or perhaps director Heather Chrisler wasn’t prepared to have Adrianne Cury play it for the comic effect that would have leavened the rest of the evening.  Angela Weber Miller’s set is a wonder of 1950s middle-class respectability and Lindsay Jones’s sound design evokes Ireland better than any number of stories. And, having now seen Michael Dias deliver Hamlet’s “rogue and peasant slave” speech, I look forward to his someday doing the whole thing. 


Read More

Celtic conflicts Read More »

Toxic claustrophobia

Jasmine Sharma’s Radial Gradient, directed in its world premiere at Shattered Globe Theatre by Grace Dolezal-Ng,is the story of two students and their bid to enter a sorority at their university. Anjani (Simran Deokule) is American-born, of Indian descent, and her family has lived in the United States for at least two generations. Her roommate Gigi (Isabelle Muthiah) considers herself a white-passing person of color, with a complexion she describes as “yogurty.” Their attempt to participate in Greek life becomes an allegory for a relationship with whiteness, white institutions, and white supremacy that includes themes of belonging, self-determination, and complicity with systems of power. 

Radial GradientThrough 3/11: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM; also Sat 3/11 3 PM; touch tour and audio description Sat 3/3 8 PM (touch tour 6:45 PM); Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont, 773-975-8150, sgtheatre.org, $45 general admission ($35 seniors, $25 under 30 years old, $15 students; also $15 industry tickets on Thu-Fri with code “INDUSTRY.”)

As Gigi and Anjani stand in line to be judged by their allegedly superior peers, they meet recruitment counselor Melanie (Kianna Rose), a Black member of the “top tier” Alpha sorority, who seems to be the exception to the laws of value in this realm. Anjani, forever Brown in the eyes of her peers, is inspired by Melanie’s ascendance and acceptance among the white elite. Gigi, disgusted by an Alpha sister’s refusal to acknowledge her (unnamed) heritage, declares the Alphas racist for presuming her white. As their friendship fractures, Anjani is disillusioned by sorority life and quits before joining, instead becoming a member of student government, whereas Gigi, protected by her white skin, joins the Gammas and eventually becomes president of the Panhellenic Association, with a private and generally ineffectual mission to improve the racial climate of Greek life. 

In the meantime, Melanie has been assaulted at a mixer with a fraternity, and her so-called sisters have refused to testify on her behalf in order to maintain relations with the fraternity. Instead of fighting back, Melanie perpetuates white power by pursuing a PhD in “multi-culti psychology” at the same university, where, in a desperate and preposterous attempt to conduct her thesis research at her dissertation defense, she subjects Gigi and Anjani to a faux-private survey under the surveillance (via two-way glass) of her thesis advisors. Radial Gradient illustrates the toxic claustrophobia of a petri dish where everyone speaks a vernacular of LOLs and TBHs, and no one can escape or progress. 


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Toxic claustrophobia Read More »

Fire damages historic mansion in Joliet used for weddings, banquets, other events

A historic mansion in Joliet used for weddings, banquets and other events was damaged by fire Wednesday afternoon.

Firefighters called to the Haley Mansion around 4 p.m. and found flames and heavy smoke coming from the attic and roof, according to fire officials.

No injuries were reported but the extent of the damage was not known.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

The castle-like mansion was built 130 years ago by Patrick Columbus Haley, a lawyer and mayor of Joliet.

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Sports cards, vintage coins among unclaimed property to be auctioned by treasurer’s office

Vintage coins, silver bars and sports trading cards of legends like Michael Jordan, Walter Payton and Shaquille O’Neal are among 400 pieces of unclaimed property that will be up for auction online next week.

The auction will take place from Feb. 6-10 and is being organized by the Illinois treasurer’s office. Other items for sale include Rolex watches, foreign currency and an 1833 Carson City Morgan silver dollar.

“The online auction provides a perfect opportunity for people to explore and acquire memorable items for themselves or for others who will appreciate them as gifts,” said Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs. “Because the auction is online, you can participate from your home or wherever you like.”

Several rings, necklaces, pieces of silver, gold and vintage postcards are also for sale.

The trove of 400 items comes from unclaimed safe deposit boxes, which are surrendered to the state after private entities have tried to contact the owners for several years. Items considered for auction typically have not been touched by their owners for 10 years.

Anyone interested in viewing the items or making a bid can visit ibid.illinois.gov. To be eligible for the auction, bidders must first register with iBid.

All auction proceeds will be held for the rightful owners, “no matter how long it takes,” the treasurer’s office said.

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things to do in chicago

North Coast Music Festival

North Coast Music Festival is a three-day event in Chicago that features live performances from bands, DJs and solo performers. Its stacked lineup, comfortable venue and friendly crowd make NCMF a must-see for anyone in the area looking to celebrate Labor Day weekend.

Previously held at Union Park and Huntington Bank Pavilion, North Coast Music Festival moved to SeatGeek Stadium in 2021. Now one of the best dance festivals in the city, North Coast is going to be on the upswing in the future thanks to its incredible lineup and a new home.

What is North Coast?

North Coast Music Festival is a Chicago-based event focusing on electronic music. The festival aims to provide an immersive experience with live performances, dance music, and creative experiences.

The annual festival takes place on Labor Day weekend. The event has been held in several locations throughout the years, most recently at Huntington Bank Pavilion on Northerly Island and Union Park until 2021 when it moved to SeatGeek Stadium near Bridgeview.

After making a pivot into strictly dance music in 2019, the event has seen its audience grow from its original demographic of jam band and rock enthusiasts to fans of edm, hip-hop, and electronic music. Co-founders Michael Berg and Lucas King cited that particular segment of the audience as one that could benefit from their new direction.

This year, North Coast welcomed iconic electronic artists and a diverse range of immersive experiences. With plenty of vendor options, great vibes and positive energy, it looks to be a festival to watch for many years to come.

The Lineup

North Coast Music Festival is one of Chicago’s most popular and widely recognized music festivals. Each year, the Labor Day Weekend event brings together a lineup of electronic dance music acts.

This year, the festival is taking place September 2-4 at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, Illinois. The festival is set to bring back a stellar lineup that includes Armin van Buuren, ILLENIUM, Diplo, Fisher, Porter Robinson, Kaytranada, Seven Lions and heaps more.

The undercard is equally as strong with a roster featuring exciting niche artists, as well as a few legends of the house music scene. From Marshmello, Flume, Zeds Dead and Alison Wonderland, to DJ Snake, Duke Dumont, Gigantic NGHTMRE and Chris Lake, the lineup is filled with the best electronic dance music in the world.

This year, the festival will also feature a variety of art installations, costumed performers and a variety of other activities. In addition to the live music, attendees can enjoy food and beverages.

The Venue

If you’re looking for an exciting end-of-summer festival that will leave you wanting more, check out North Coast Music Festival. It’s a collaboration of independent promoters with 50 years of experience.

It takes over SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview for a three-day celebration of electronic music. The two-stage event features the biggest names in EDM, including Bassnectar and Major Lazer.

NCMF is a family-friendly event that welcomes kids of all ages and is surrounded by plenty of activities for everyone to enjoy. There are food trucks, craft vendors, and more.

Originally an all-genre festival, NCMF has shifted over the past decade to focus on dance music. This year, major artists include Armin van Buuren, Illenium, Diplo, Kaytranada, Gryffin, Jai Wolf, Madeon, Said the Sky, Seven Lions, and Slander.

Tickets

If you’re ready to get down with some of the best music in the world, North Coast is the place for you. A beloved festival that’s affectionately known as “Summer’s Last Stand,” NCMF returns to SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, Illinois for a third year this Labor Day weekend.

Tickets for North Coast are available at a variety of tiers, from one-day lawn tickets to VIP tickets for the whole weekend. In an effort to make the event more affordable, ticket tiers were purposefully reworked this year so concert goers can easily find the perfect match for their budget.

If you’re ready to attend this year’s North Coast, you’ll want to pick up your tickets before they’re gone! With a wide range of ticket options, including a deal score feature that ranks tickets by value and tells you if they’re a good deal or not, SeatGeek makes it easy to find the best North Coast Festival Tickets around.

North Coast Music Festival

things to do in chicago

Come out and enjoy the best Chicago Music Festivals now.

Event Meta
Name
SeatGeek Stadium
Event Status
Scheduled
Start Date
September 1, 2023 6:58 am
End Date
September 3, 2023 6:58 am
Event Location
Attendance Mode
Offline
Street
7000 South Harlem Avenue
Postal Code
60455
Locality
Bridgeview
Country ISO Code
Region ISO Code
IL

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things to do in chicago

Heatwave Music Festival Chicago

Summer is one of the busiest times of year in Chicago with a wide variety of music festivals going on every weekend.

This year saw the debut of a new festival, Heatwave Music Festival in Douglass Park. The festival strives to merge experiential art and dance music performances into a fully immersive pop-art inspired event.

Auris Presents

Auris Presents has established themselves as the dominant force in dance music events in Chicago. As the minds behind ARC Music Festival and exclusive promoters for RADIUS, Concord Music Hall and PRYSM Nightclub, they’ve built their reputation on bringing leading DJs to the city weekend after weekend.

This summer, they’re bringing a brand-new pop art-inspired event to Douglass Park. The debut edition of Heatwave will feature a full lineup of artists and creatives set to immerse attendees into an experience that bridges the gap between experiential art and globally leading dance music performances.

Above & Beyond

Above & Beyond brought their full arsenal to Douglass Park this summer for the debut Heatwave Music Festival Chicago. This pop-art inspired event bridges the gap between experiential art and globally leading dance music performance.

This two-day music and arts fest is a perfect midsummer addition to the Chicago festival scene. Its smaller size and close-together stages made for easy access to all of the action.

This festival was a great success in its first year and will no doubt return next year. It also has some great talent on the lineup, including Above & Beyond, Galantis, RL Grime, Tiesto and Zeds Dead.

Galantis

This summer, Chicago’s premier live event production company Auris Presents will debut a new pop-art inspired immersive dance music festival. This 2-day event will take over Douglass Park on July 16-17, bringing global tastemakers to the city’s West Side.

Featuring some of dance music’s biggest names, the inaugural Heatwave will be a fully immersive, pop-art inspired experience that bridges the gap between experiential art and globally leading dance music performances.

Larger than life house-inspired sounds will be on full display from illustrious Oliver Heldens, Grammy-nominated Audien, South African livetronica duo Goldfish, hitmaker Frank Walker, rising star MADDS, and sultry Counter Records signee Kasbo playing a DJ set. Billing continues with Endless Summer: Sam Feldt B2B Jonas Blue, Matoma, Borgeous and more.

RL Grime

The debut of Heatwave Music Festival Chicago delivered on expectations with headliners like RL Grime, Above & Beyond, and Zeds Dead. The pop-art inspired event bridges the gap between experiential art and globally leading dance music performances.

The lineup consists of three visual arts environments that are all inspired by pop culture, including Andy Warhol and comic books. Attendees will be able to dance the day away while soaking up the atmosphere.

RL Grime is an artist that excels in huge drops and ignorant trap music. He played a powerful 90-minute set that was a highlight of the weekend.

Tiesto

Tiesto brought his signature blend of EDM from the past and present to Heatwave Music Festival Chicago. Trippy visuals and a mix of popular songs like M83’s “Midnight City” pulled attendees to the stage.

Heatwave Music Festival will debut this summer at Douglass Park in Chicago with a fully immersive pop-art experience bridging experiential art and globally leading dance music performances. The event will feature artists like Above & Beyond, Galantis, RL Grime, Tiesto and Zeds Dead topping the bill.

Zeds Dead

On July 16-17, Douglass Park will play host to Chicago’s newest dance music festival. The fully immersive, pop-art-inspired event will bridge the gap between experiential art and globally leading dance music performances.

The festival’s electronic core will feature a stacked lineup featuring Group Therapy and Anjuna powerhouse Above & Beyond, Swedish hitmakers Galantis, hip-hop influenced producer RL Grime, global superstar TIESTO, and Canadian bass music kings Zeds Dead.

Larger than life house inspired sounds will be on full display with Dutch DJ and producer Oliver Heldens, Grammy-nominated Audien, South African live duo Goldfish, hitmaker Frank Walker, rising star MADDS, and sultry Counter Records signee Kasbo doing a DJ set. Billing continues with Endless Summer: Sam Feldt B2B Jonas Blue, Matoma, Borgeous and more to keep the party going late!

Heatwave Music Festival

things to do in chicago

Come on out and enjoy the fun and amazing music and culture.

Event Meta
Name
Union Park Chicago
Event Status
Scheduled
Start Date
June 10, 2023 6:39 am
End Date
June 12, 2023 6:39 am
Event Location
Attendance Mode
Offline
Street
1501 W Randolph St
Postal Code
60606
Locality
Chicago
Country ISO Code
Region ISO Code
IL

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things to do in chicago

Arc Music Festival Chicago

Chicago’s arc music festival pays homage to house music’s birthplace and culture with a world-class lineup. Taking place this Labor Day Weekend (September 2-4) at Union Park, ARC is bridging the global electronic music scene.

The three-day fest brings together house and techno legends, local originators, international movement leaders, and multi-genre live performances across four immersive stages: The Grid, elrow, Expansions, and the ARC Car powered by The GoodBus.

Stages

ARC brings a global dance music experience to Chicago, bringing the ethos, culture and artistry that makes this city special to attendees. The immersive stage environments guide attendees from the technicolor containers of The Grid to the outrageousness of Elrow, through to the deeper shades of Expansions.

The ARC lineup is a who’s who of the electronic music world. Carl Cox, Richie Hawtin, DJ Tennis, Charlotte De Witte, Lane 8, Chris Lake, Anna, Adam Beyer playing b2b with Eric Prydz’s alter-ego Cirez D and much more will headline the three-day party.

ARC was also proud to showcase the best of the local scene with a number of rising talents. Honey Dijon, a fashion icon and midwest musical genius, made her festival debut on the main stage with Derrick Carter and Lady D.

Lineup

After a successful debut last year, the house and techno festival is back with an expanded three-day event that will be held Labor Day Weekend. This year’s lineup will feature some of the best dance music innovators in the world including Carl Cox, DJ Tennis, Charlotte de Witte, Lane 8, Chris Lake, Adam Beyer playing b2b with Eric Prydz’s alter-ego Cirez D, Nora En Pure and more.

While the festival is a must-see for fans of house and techno, it’s also a great time to get your fill of local acts as well. Chicago-born artists like Derrick Carter, Honey Dijon, Mike Dunn and Farriswheel’s Gene Farris will be making appearances on one of the festival’s stages.

With a plethora of afterparties, attendees will be able to continue the fun at venues all over Chicago after the festival closes on Saturday night. The ARC After Dark series features some of the most iconic names in dance music including Boris Brejcha, Eric Prydz, Adam Beyer and Ricardo Villalobos.

Experience

Aiming to connect the global electronic music scene with house music’s birthplace of Chicago, ARC returns this Labor Day Weekend September 2nd-4th for an expanded three-day experience featuring a world-class lineup. Headliners include modern house music icons, Chicago’s own originators, international techno artists and multi-genre live performances.

A curated selection of the world’s most sought after artists will perform on a series of stages throughout Union Park including the main stage, The Grid. In addition, ELROW will host a tented stage for the first time at ARC showcasing some of the city’s most influential DJs under vines and leaves.

ARC will also feature several upcoming stars in the house music community. Charlotte De Witte, who is known for her darker, more cerebral electronic music, will bring her unique sounds to the stage for the first time at ARC.

The lineup also features a mix of longtime veterans in the genre, showcasing how house music has evolved into an unmistakable spiritual gift to the world. Fashion icon Honey Dijon, Derrick Carter and the Queen of Chicago house DJ Lady D will all take to the stage as well as Farriswheel’s Gene Farris and next generation riser Kryptogram.

Overall

ARC was created to honor the birth of house music in Chicago and its debut on Labor Day weekend captivated locals and travelers alike. The event harnessed the city’s vitalic energy, deep-seated history and charming appeal to put on display for all to experience.

This year’s lineup includes movement leaders from around the globe who are changing the way electronic music is played. For instance, Brazilian rising star ANNA is a DJ who has broken through the music scene with her incredible originals and has become one of the most respected names in dance music.

Arc Music Festival

things to do in chicago

Passes are available. Buy now and enjoy this incredible Chicago Music Festival.

Event Meta
Name
Union Park Chicago
Event Status
Scheduled
Start Date
September 1, 2023 6:26 am
End Date
September 3, 2023 6:26 am
Event Location
Attendance Mode
Offline
Street
1501 W Randolph St
Postal Code
60606
Locality
Chicago
Country ISO Code
Region ISO Code
IL

ARC also brings together artists who have helped define and shape house music in Chicago over decades, allowing the community to unite. Detroit legends Carl Craig and Seth Troxler, married couple Oona Dahl and DJ Three, UK favorites Skream and Eats Everything, and Chicago house artists Derrick Carter b2b Mark Farina, Gene Farris b2b Mike Dunn and Hiroko Yamamura b2b DJ Hyperactive will all play at the festival.

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Arc Music Festival Chicago Read More »