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The Cincinnati Bengals finished one step short of the Super Bowl on Sunday afternoon, losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in a close AFC Championship Game. As they enter their offseason, they face a couple of key questions, and one of those questions could end up benefiting the Chicago Bears.

One of the biggest questions for Cincinnati is this: do they try and trade wide receiver Tee Higgins while his value is sky high?

If you’re wondering why they’d trade Higgins, it’s pretty simple. They cannot afford to pay both Higgins and Ja’Marr Chase maximum money, while also paying Joe Burrow on an extension as well. For that reason, the Bengals might end up having to part with Higgins and try to get a haul in return.

One team that’s Super Bowl bound, the Philadelphia Eagles, made a big trade to get their franchise quarterback a true alpha wide receiver in A.J. Brown. Look at how that worked out for Jalen Hurts this year.

If the Bears wanted to go out and make a splash, getting Justin Fields a legitimate WR1, then they should be all over an opportunity to get Higgins.

What would a Tee Higgins trade look like for the Chicago Bears?

Bears Get
WR Tee Higgins
Bengals Get
2023 2nd Round Pick
2023 4th Round Pick (No. 135)
2024 3rd Round Pick
2024 5th Round Pick

If you think back to the Stefon Diggs trade, where he left Minnesota for Buffalo, the Bears could try something similar where they package a bunch of picks together and avoid having to give up a first-round selection.

Obviously, the Bears hold the no. 1 overall pick this year, so they aren’t going to include that in a deal for Higgins. But, sending something like the above package could make it happen.

We saw on Sunday afternoon that Higgins is more than capable of being the number one guy on a team, with him making big plays just like he has all season. Higgins is a 6-foot-4 monster of a man who can make all of the catches and line up wherever needed.

In three seasons with the Bengals, Higgins has caught 215 passes for 3,028 yards and 19 touchdowns.

Remember, those numbers are including while being a number two to Chase in two of those three seasons.

Should the Bears want to go out and make a big move to get Fields his alpha wideout, there’s no better move this offseason than a trade for Higgins. This would change everything for Fields and the Bears offense, and who knows, we might see him take a similar leap to Hurts next season.

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Kenwood high-rise fire: Two workers for restoration company charged

Two workers for a restoration company have been charged with stealing cash and jewelry from an apartment of a Kenwood high-rise that was damaged in a deadly fire last week.

Jose Gamboa, 26, and Anger Uzcategui Pacheco, 20, were each charged with burglary after a resident turned over video showing them stealing from an apartment, according to Chicago police.

Gamboa and Pacheco were temporary workers for A-Emergency Services & Restoration, which was hired to work in the building after a 4-11 alarm fire climbed the outside walls of nine floors of the building in the 4800 block of South Lake Park Avenue last Wednesday. A woman was killed and eight other residents were injured.

The owner of the company told police that his workers were told not to enter any of the apartments. But video from an apartment on the fifth floor showed both inside, according to a police report.

The fire started in a 15th floor apartment of the complex and quickly spread up nine floors. The cause was “careless use of smoking materials” in a bedroom,” fire officials said. The apartment’s smoke alarm was not working at the time, the Chicago Fire Department said in a statement.

The building has failed seven inspections since Oct. 27, 2021, according to city records.

On Nov. 7 last year, it was cited for having cracked masonry on exterior walls, not having fire tags on certain doors and for failing to have a required examination report of the building, according to records from the city Department of Buildings.

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After the Chicago Cubs won the World Series, Chicago White Sox General Manager Rick Hahn had a clear message for owner Jerry Reinsdorf.

If the White Sox wanted to win a World Series, they needed to tear it all down. Trade away their superstars. Sign international prospects. Tank for draft picks. Save money now, then spend it when the youth was ready to contend.

Gone were the days of signing a core of free agents for $200 million (unless you’re the Los Angeles Dodgers, of course). It worked.

After years of trying to win with the 2005 World Series core and continually falling short of the playoffs, the Sox needed a change in philosophy and approach.

The seasons between the 2005 World Series and the 2016 World Series had been the same thing. Sign an All-Star bat past or late in their prime and convince the fans that an AL Central title or Wild Card spot was attainable. The truth is, it never was.

That all changed after the Cubs won it all. They shipped off the core for a plethora of young prospects and just like that, the Chicago White Sox were on a clear path to being a playoff contender.

Don’t let the rebuild fool you, the Chicago White Sox never actually tried to contend.

Fast forward to 2020 when the prospects had finally arrived on the South Side. It was time to start getting excited for October baseball at 35th and Shields. There was one thing that was missing though and that was a veteran core.

For the Cubs on the other side of town, everything truly came together in the 2015 offseason. The club signed postseason ace Jon Lester and poached former All-Star OF Jason Heyward from the hated St. Louis Cardinals. Finally, they were true World Series contenders.

It wasn’t just a young core that brought the title to the North Side in 2016. It was a mix of talented youth combined with postseason and veteran experience. That’s one thing that the Chicago White Sox are missing. And it seems as if they don’t care.

It’s become quite clear that the White Sox never actually wanted to take the steps to win a World Series. And yet here we are, the 2022 offseason in the rearview mirror and the Sox front office refuses to make any significant changes to the roster.

They’ve been open about not wanting to make a splash in free agency. Let’s call it how we see it here. This White Sox front office has not changed since 2006. They’re still stuck in the same mentality that they had coming off of the 2005 World Series championship.

This team will continue to rot in purgatory until there’s a true regime change. They’ve never changed from the Kenny Williams school of one more $20 million contract.

This is the same organization whose largest contract in TEAM HISTORY is a $75 million deal for an outfielder who had hit .274 in his career prior to a bounceback year in 2022.

Whether or not it was clear to Rick Hahn at the time, Reinsdorf and Kenny never actually planned on spending money. They saw an opportunity to tank, save money and continue to refuse to spend.

At this point, the championship window is inching ever so closer to being shut. All-Star and franchise leader Jose Abreu is gone, the club continues to refuse to spend, and the prospects aren’t getting any younger.

If it’s not too late already, now is the time for Reinsdorf to open up the checkbook and make a splash in free agency. Build up a seasoned, veteran rotation to help out the young starters, add another bat or two, and run for October.

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The art of war

When he met Tereska Adwentowska in 1948, David “Chim” Seymour was photographing ghosts. 

Born Dawid Szymin in what would become Warsaw’s Jewish ghetto, the 36-year-old cofounder of the legendary Magnum Photos collective returned to find the streets of his youth reduced to rubble. His parents were gone, too, executed by the Nazis in a wooded suburb of Warsaw where they once spent blissful summers.

But closure, or something like it, wasn’t what brought Chim back to Warsaw. After his powerfully received postwar coverage for This Week magazine, UNESCO commissioned Chim for Children of Europe, a photojournalism series raising awareness about the continent’s estimated 13 million war orphans. 

That’s how Chim met Adwentowska, a student at a school for “backward and psychologically upset children,” per his caption. Her home had been flattened during a German air raid, her brain permanently damaged by shrapnel. In Chim’s photo, Adwentowska responds to an art class prompt: “This is home.” She scrawls a violent tangle of lines on the blackboard, her eyes wide and bewildered. 

Chim, on the other side of the lens, likely knew the feeling.

“Chim: Between Devastation and Resurrection”Through 2/4/24: Wed-Mon 10 AM-5 PM, Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, 9603 Woods Dr., Skokie, ilholocaustmuseum.org, general admission $6-$18

“Tereska,” as the 1948 photograph is often called, casts its thousand-yard stare over “Chim: Between Devastation and Resurrection,” a retrospective excerpted from an International Center of Photography exhibition and showing at the Illinois Holocaust Museum until February 4, 2024. But for the next several weeks, the pangs “Tereska” elicits from viewers will echo in galleries far beyond the Holocaust Museum’s. 

“Children of War”Through 2/12: Wed-Sun noon-4 PM, Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art, 2320 W. Chicago, uima-chicago.org, admission donation-based

Until February 12, the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art shows “Children of War,” a collection of 144 paintings spirited out of Lviv by mother–daughter art teachers Nataliia and Yustyna Pavliuk. Later this winter, the Chicago Cultural Center, Newberry Library, and Hyde Park Art Center host exhibitions affiliated with the second Veteran Art Triennial and Summit, entitled “Surviving the Long Wars.”

“Unlikely Entanglements”Through 7/9: Tue-Thu 10 AM-7 PM, Fri 10 AM-4:30 PM, Sat 10 AM-4 PM, Sun 10 AM-1:30 PM, Hyde Park Art Center, 5020 S. Cornell, hydeparkart.org, free

The three exhibitions are more or less dovetailing by chance. The first triennial happened in 2019, with this iteration delayed because of COVID, as was “Chim.” And, of course, few could have predicted the need for “Children of War.” But the resonance of that coincidence is hard to ignore. 

Boy in bombed building, Essen, Germany, 1947Courtesy Illinois Holocaust Museum

“Every time I see these images now, I see Ukraine,” Ben Shneiderman, Chim’s nephew and a pioneering computer scientist, told me as we passed a line of Chim’s Warsaw photos.

“Chim,” by design, privileges one perspective (Chim’s) andone medium (photography, here enlarged digital inkjet reproductions). On the other hand, “Surviving the Long Wars”will feature everything from textiles to performance works to 19th-century ledger art created during the American Indian Wars, which began the moment European settlers set foot in North America and never officially ended. (The U.S. government stopped recognizing Native tribes as sovereign nations in 1871, making it impossible to broker official treaties.) In an expansion of the first triennial, this year broadens the focus from veteran artists to all individuals affected by the U.S.’s longest wars: the American Indian Wars and the Global War on Terror. 

MQ-9/5 by Mahwish Chishty. Gouache and tea stain on paper, 2013Courtesy Newberry Library

“We’re coming at this as community members grappling with something that we all know is beyond our ability to fully grapple with,” says “Surviving the Long Wars”co-organizer Aaron Hughes. “Because of that, it’s really fraught; we’re bringing a lot of different communities together. And often, veterans overwhelmingly come from the same communities impacted by our foreign and domestic policies. What does it mean to unpack those contradictions?” 

Hughes and fellow co-organizer Joseph Lefthand have been doing just that—grappling, unpacking—for years now. Hughes, who cocurated last year’s “Remaking the Exceptional: Tea, Torture, & Reparations” at the DePaul Art Museum, foregrounds his dual identities as an Iraq war veteran and anti-war activist in his artistic practice; Lefthand delves into his experiences as both a subject and agent of state violence. (Lefthand is of Cheyenne-Arapaho, Taos, and Zuni descent; like Hughes, he participated in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.) 

“Residues and Rebellions”Through 5/27: Tue-Thu 10 AM-7 PM, Fri-Sat 10 AM-5 PM, Newberry Library, 60 W. Walton, newberry.org, free

When both spoke to me about “Surviving the Long Wars” over Zoom, words often gave way to pregnant pauses. “I would love to enrich the conversation around war and violence in a way that de-emphasizes the violence,” Lefthand says. “As a performance artist, what are the tools, methods, and relationships that I can use in order to create work around these experiences, so as not to center the violence and subject others to it?”

At the first triennial, Lefthand presented a performance piece entitled Things Are Certainly Beautiful to Behold, but to Be Them Is Something Quite Different. Donning a gas mask, he used symbolic objects which “repurposed, recontextualized, and questioned” the latent violence of everyday life: the emergence of the “nuclear family” and middle-class prosperity from World War II, for example. An audience member—a Marine vet—approached him afterward.

“He told me he was moved by my performance. It made him reflect on his children and how our youth are pulled into this machine of creating violence,” Lefthand recalls. 

Later, Lefthand looked the vet up. Years before, he’d been put on trial for war crimes, though he was ultimately found not guilty. “Someone who believed so deeply in the culture of the Marine Corps and that culture of violence was able to watch me perform, and it caused him to then question, even just a little bit, this system that he had been a part of,” Lefthand says.

“Reckon and Reimagine”Through 6/4: open daily 10 AM-5 PM, Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington, chicago.gov, free

What had done it? Was it the setting—a veteran art show in the Chicago Cultural Center’s Grand Army of the Republic Rotunda? Was it Lefthand himself, also a former Marine? Was the man haunted by what he had done? Lefthand doesn’t know. He’ll likely never know.

Bullet dress by Melissa DoudCourtesy Chicago Cultural Center

Where the works in “Surviving the Long Wars” are, by necessity, hyper-individualized, the works in “Children of War”—all paper-based, rendered in acrylic, pastel, or watercolor—make for more diffuse interpretations. UIMA exhibits the artworks sans placards, leaving artist names, titles, dates, and provenance a mystery.

In the disparate and often overwhelming display, some themes nonetheless coalesce. Many children lean into patriotic symbolism, squaring off the Ukrainian blue-and-yellow against the Russian white, blue, and red. (One work, in a bit of sophisticated geopolitical commentary, shows blue-and-yellow silhouettes shielding themselves from missile fire with an umbrella decorated with the Swedish, Polish, and American flags; whether the umbrella symbolizes solidarity or futility is left to the viewer.) In others, anthropomorphic animals stand in as surrogates for the conflict—a terrier in a police vest, a cat curled next to a rifle and a helmet.

A child takes a picture at the opening reception of “Children of War,” at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art.Courtesy UIMA

Step into the one-room gallery, and you’ll also be confronted by a sea of sunflowers, Ukraine’s national symbol, many Van Gogh-like in their staccato elegance. The most devastating shows a line of sunflowers standing charred and skeletal before an ashen landscape. Like most of the works, it only bears the first name of its painter: “Катерина,” Katerina.

Yustyna Pavliuk knows all these artworks and the young artists behind them by heart. Since the outbreak of the war, Pavliuk and her mother, a professor at Lviv Polytechnic National University, have taught art at hospitals, orphanages, and distribution centers to more than a thousand displaced children, most between the ages of four and 14. Nataliia Pavliuk started the classes just days after the Russian invasion; Yustyna, herself a student at the Polytechnic, joined her once or twice a week between her own studies. 

Likewise, when she and Nataliia return to Lviv at the end of the month, they will rest for just one day before resuming classes once again. 

“The first day, you are shocked. You don’t know what to do. The second day, you try to deal with your plans. And then, you say, ‘I can’t sit in one place. I need to do something,’” Yustyna says.

Yustyna called me from New York City, where she and Nataliia were sightseeing before returning to Chicago; Nataliia, who understands English better than she speaks it, listened and chimed in occasionally from out of frame. Yustyna said their students usually shared their backstories gradually. Sometimes, color palettes offered their own tell. 

“Kids who are the most affected by war, the most traumatized, they use the brightest colors. They don’t use black at all,” she says.

One such drawing depicts two children, one holding a balloon, standing in front of a house. The work is a self-portrait of the ten-year-old artist, Veronika, and one of her friends, Danylo. The colors seem to leap from the page; Veronika’s hair is long and flowing. 

In reality, at the time she created the work, Veronika’s hair was cropped short, the result of extensive surgeries after her house in Vuhledar, a coal mining city in Donetsk, was leveled by a Russian tank. Her entire family was killed. So was Danylo, in a separate attack, and many of her friends. 

Unlike Tereska, Veronika could imagine “home”: the building in the work’s background. Yustyna says Veronika told her it was a house “where all of her friends who died could be in one place.” But, like Tereska’s “home,” that place does not—cannot—exist.

“It’s a very, very deep work,” Yustyna says. “It’s the hope of meeting her friends again, and also knowing it will never be the same, like it was.”

The most powerful photographs in “Chim” come from his Children of Europe series. The precocity and pain Chim captured still staggers. Two pocket-sized buskers swaggering like troubadours on the streets of Naples. Young boys working in a printing press in Hungary, the composition and light evoking Vermeer. A boy without arms, probably no older than 12, reading a book in Braille with his lips. In one of my favorites, a half-dozen Polish kids ham it up for Chim on a rickety-looking wooden jungle gym. Behind them looms the blown-out skeleton of the Warsaw ghetto; the playground was built to deter kids from exploring the rubble. If not vying to impress him, clearly Chim’s young subjects at least trusted him. 

School children waiting for a bus in the ruins of the destroyed ghetto, Warsaw, Poland, 1948Courtesy Illinois Holocaust Museum

That doesn’t surprise Shneiderman. To him, Chim was the favorite uncle who always brought back books and tchotchkes from his travels. “In terms of why he focused on children, it always seemed obvious to me. He was a very empathic person,” Shneiderman said, during his January 19 talk at the Illinois Holocaust Museum. 

Unlike fellow Magnum Photos cofounder Robert Capa, Chim wasn’t drawn to combat images. Instead he favored psychological portraits which, like Lefthand’s work, never let you forget the violence looming just out of frame. The exhibition concludes with the last five years of Chim’s career, spent in the Middle East, much of it in the nascent state of Israel. In one, an Italian settler named Eliezer Trito holds his newborn daughter aloft, beaming. The placard describes her as the first child born in the Alma settlement in Northern Galilee. 

What it doesn’t mention is that three short years before, there had been another Alma—an Arab village razed by the Israeli Defense Force, despite being denoted by the Israeli Minority Affairs Committee as a peacefully “surrendered” village. The ruins of the old Alma rest just half a kilometer west of the Jewish settlement.

In another photo, taken in an unspecified region of Israel, a young couple marries under a chuppah held aloft by guns and pitchforks. The subject and composition were so stark that one contemporary accused Chim of staging it. Life, yet again, springs from bloodshed, and the living are left to reckon with the emotional rubble. 

“There’s nothing more Zionist than that,” Holocaust Museum curator Arielle Weininger mused, staring at the wedding tableau.

In 1956, Chim was shot by Egyptian troops while covering the Suez Crisis. His family found out on the morning news when Shneiderman was nine. 

Today, Shneiderman oversees Chim’s estate, mostly handling licensing and research queries. As he settles into retirement from the University of Maryland, he devotes increasingly more time to managing his uncle’s legacy.

“Robert Capa is known for the phrase, ‘If your photos aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough,’” Shneiderman says. “A couple of the exhibits about Chim are called ‘Close Enough,’ because Chim got close enough emotionally. That’s just the spirit of who he was.” 

It’s all any of these exhibitions can be, grasping at terrors we all cower beneath yet never get an iota nearer to understanding: close enough.

Lisa Tashkevych contributed translation assistance for this article.

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An invitation to listen to survivors

“It’s an invitation,” says Aaron Hughes, cocurator of “Remaking the Exceptional: Tea, Torture, and Reparations,” an exhibition currently on display at the DePaul Art Museum. Marking the 20th anniversary of the opening of the Guantánamo Bay detention camp, the exhibit examines the similarities between survivors of torture at the U.S. military prison with survivors of…


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The art of war Read More »

The art of war

When he met Tereska Adwentowska in 1948, David “Chim” Seymour was photographing ghosts. 

Born Dawid Szymin in what would become Warsaw’s Jewish ghetto, the 36-year-old cofounder of the legendary Magnum Photos collective returned to find the streets of his youth reduced to rubble. His parents were gone, too, executed by the Nazis in a wooded suburb of Warsaw where they once spent blissful summers.

But closure, or something like it, wasn’t what brought Chim back to Warsaw. After his powerfully received postwar coverage for This Week magazine, UNESCO commissioned Chim for Children of Europe, a photojournalism series raising awareness about the continent’s estimated 13 million war orphans. 

That’s how Chim met Adwentowska, a student at a school for “backward and psychologically upset children,” per his caption. Her home had been flattened during a German air raid, her brain permanently damaged by shrapnel. In Chim’s photo, Adwentowska responds to an art class prompt: “This is home.” She scrawls a violent tangle of lines on the blackboard, her eyes wide and bewildered. 

Chim, on the other side of the lens, likely knew the feeling.

“Chim: Between Devastation and Resurrection”Through 2/4/24: Wed-Mon 10 AM-5 PM, Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, 9603 Woods Dr., Skokie, ilholocaustmuseum.org, general admission $6-$18

“Tereska,” as the 1948 photograph is often called, casts its thousand-yard stare over “Chim: Between Devastation and Resurrection,” a retrospective excerpted from an International Center of Photography exhibition and showing at the Illinois Holocaust Museum until February 4, 2024. But for the next several weeks, the pangs “Tereska” elicits from viewers will echo in galleries far beyond the Holocaust Museum’s. 

“Children of War”Through 2/12: Wed-Sun noon-4 PM, Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art, 2320 W. Chicago, uima-chicago.org, admission donation-based

Until February 12, the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art shows “Children of War,” a collection of 144 paintings spirited out of Lviv by mother–daughter art teachers Nataliia and Yustyna Pavliuk. Later this winter, the Chicago Cultural Center, Newberry Library, and Hyde Park Art Center host exhibitions affiliated with the second Veteran Art Triennial and Summit, entitled “Surviving the Long Wars.”

“Unlikely Entanglements”Through 7/9: Tue-Thu 10 AM-7 PM, Fri 10 AM-4:30 PM, Sat 10 AM-4 PM, Sun 10 AM-1:30 PM, Hyde Park Art Center, 5020 S. Cornell, hydeparkart.org, free

The three exhibitions are more or less dovetailing by chance. The first triennial happened in 2019, with this iteration delayed because of COVID, as was “Chim.” And, of course, few could have predicted the need for “Children of War.” But the resonance of that coincidence is hard to ignore. 

Boy in bombed building, Essen, Germany, 1947Courtesy Illinois Holocaust Museum

“Every time I see these images now, I see Ukraine,” Ben Shneiderman, Chim’s nephew and a pioneering computer scientist, told me as we passed a line of Chim’s Warsaw photos.

“Chim,” by design, privileges one perspective (Chim’s) andone medium (photography, here enlarged digital inkjet reproductions). On the other hand, “Surviving the Long Wars”will feature everything from textiles to performance works to 19th-century ledger art created during the American Indian Wars, which began the moment European settlers set foot in North America and never officially ended. (The U.S. government stopped recognizing Native tribes as sovereign nations in 1871, making it impossible to broker official treaties.) In an expansion of the first triennial, this year broadens the focus from veteran artists to all individuals affected by the U.S.’s longest wars: the American Indian Wars and the Global War on Terror. 

MQ-9/5 by Mahwish Chishty. Gouache and tea stain on paper, 2013Courtesy Newberry Library

“We’re coming at this as community members grappling with something that we all know is beyond our ability to fully grapple with,” says “Surviving the Long Wars”co-organizer Aaron Hughes. “Because of that, it’s really fraught; we’re bringing a lot of different communities together. And often, veterans overwhelmingly come from the same communities impacted by our foreign and domestic policies. What does it mean to unpack those contradictions?” 

Hughes and fellow co-organizer Joseph Lefthand have been doing just that—grappling, unpacking—for years now. Hughes, who cocurated last year’s “Remaking the Exceptional: Tea, Torture, & Reparations” at the DePaul Art Museum, foregrounds his dual identities as an Iraq war veteran and anti-war activist in his artistic practice; Lefthand delves into his experiences as both a subject and agent of state violence. (Lefthand is of Cheyenne-Arapaho, Taos, and Zuni descent; like Hughes, he participated in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.) 

“Residues and Rebellions”Through 5/27: Tue-Thu 10 AM-7 PM, Fri-Sat 10 AM-5 PM, Newberry Library, 60 W. Walton, newberry.org, free

When both spoke to me about “Surviving the Long Wars” over Zoom, words often gave way to pregnant pauses. “I would love to enrich the conversation around war and violence in a way that de-emphasizes the violence,” Lefthand says. “As a performance artist, what are the tools, methods, and relationships that I can use in order to create work around these experiences, so as not to center the violence and subject others to it?”

At the first triennial, Lefthand presented a performance piece entitled Things Are Certainly Beautiful to Behold, but to Be Them Is Something Quite Different. Donning a gas mask, he used symbolic objects which “repurposed, recontextualized, and questioned” the latent violence of everyday life: the emergence of the “nuclear family” and middle-class prosperity from World War II, for example. An audience member—a Marine vet—approached him afterward.

“He told me he was moved by my performance. It made him reflect on his children and how our youth are pulled into this machine of creating violence,” Lefthand recalls. 

Later, Lefthand looked the vet up. Years before, he’d been put on trial for war crimes, though he was ultimately found not guilty. “Someone who believed so deeply in the culture of the Marine Corps and that culture of violence was able to watch me perform, and it caused him to then question, even just a little bit, this system that he had been a part of,” Lefthand says.

“Reckon and Reimagine”Through 6/4: open daily 10 AM-5 PM, Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington, chicago.gov, free

What had done it? Was it the setting—a veteran art show in the Chicago Cultural Center’s Grand Army of the Republic Rotunda? Was it Lefthand himself, also a former Marine? Was the man haunted by what he had done? Lefthand doesn’t know. He’ll likely never know.

Bullet dress by Melissa DoudCourtesy Chicago Cultural Center

Where the works in “Surviving the Long Wars” are, by necessity, hyper-individualized, the works in “Children of War”—all paper-based, rendered in acrylic, pastel, or watercolor—make for more diffuse interpretations. UIMA exhibits the artworks sans placards, leaving artist names, titles, dates, and provenance a mystery.

In the disparate and often overwhelming display, some themes nonetheless coalesce. Many children lean into patriotic symbolism, squaring off the Ukrainian blue-and-yellow against the Russian white, blue, and red. (One work, in a bit of sophisticated geopolitical commentary, shows blue-and-yellow silhouettes shielding themselves from missile fire with an umbrella decorated with the Swedish, Polish, and American flags; whether the umbrella symbolizes solidarity or futility is left to the viewer.) In others, anthropomorphic animals stand in as surrogates for the conflict—a terrier in a police vest, a cat curled next to a rifle and a helmet.

A child takes a picture at the opening reception of “Children of War,” at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art.Courtesy UIMA

Step into the one-room gallery, and you’ll also be confronted by a sea of sunflowers, Ukraine’s national symbol, many Van Gogh-like in their staccato elegance. The most devastating shows a line of sunflowers standing charred and skeletal before an ashen landscape. Like most of the works, it only bears the first name of its painter: “Катерина,” Katerina.

Yustyna Pavliuk knows all these artworks and the young artists behind them by heart. Since the outbreak of the war, Pavliuk and her mother, a professor at Lviv Polytechnic National University, have taught art at hospitals, orphanages, and distribution centers to more than a thousand displaced children, most between the ages of four and 14. Nataliia Pavliuk started the classes just days after the Russian invasion; Yustyna, herself a student at the Polytechnic, joined her once or twice a week between her own studies. 

Likewise, when she and Nataliia return to Lviv at the end of the month, they will rest for just one day before resuming classes once again. 

“The first day, you are shocked. You don’t know what to do. The second day, you try to deal with your plans. And then, you say, ‘I can’t sit in one place. I need to do something,’” Yustyna says.

Yustyna called me from New York City, where she and Nataliia were sightseeing before returning to Chicago; Nataliia, who understands English better than she speaks it, listened and chimed in occasionally from out of frame. Yustyna said their students usually shared their backstories gradually. Sometimes, color palettes offered their own tell. 

“Kids who are the most affected by war, the most traumatized, they use the brightest colors. They don’t use black at all,” she says.

One such drawing depicts two children, one holding a balloon, standing in front of a house. The work is a self-portrait of the ten-year-old artist, Veronika, and one of her friends, Danylo. The colors seem to leap from the page; Veronika’s hair is long and flowing. 

In reality, at the time she created the work, Veronika’s hair was cropped short, the result of extensive surgeries after her house in Vuhledar, a coal mining city in Donetsk, was leveled by a Russian tank. Her entire family was killed. So was Danylo, in a separate attack, and many of her friends. 

Unlike Tereska, Veronika could imagine “home”: the building in the work’s background. Yustyna says Veronika told her it was a house “where all of her friends who died could be in one place.” But, like Tereska’s “home,” that place does not—cannot—exist.

“It’s a very, very deep work,” Yustyna says. “It’s the hope of meeting her friends again, and also knowing it will never be the same, like it was.”

The most powerful photographs in “Chim” come from his Children of Europe series. The precocity and pain Chim captured still staggers. Two pocket-sized buskers swaggering like troubadours on the streets of Naples. Young boys working in a printing press in Hungary, the composition and light evoking Vermeer. A boy without arms, probably no older than 12, reading a book in Braille with his lips. In one of my favorites, a half-dozen Polish kids ham it up for Chim on a rickety-looking wooden jungle gym. Behind them looms the blown-out skeleton of the Warsaw ghetto; the playground was built to deter kids from exploring the rubble. If not vying to impress him, clearly Chim’s young subjects at least trusted him. 

School children waiting for a bus in the ruins of the destroyed ghetto, Warsaw, Poland, 1948Courtesy Illinois Holocaust Museum

That doesn’t surprise Shneiderman. To him, Chim was the favorite uncle who always brought back books and tchotchkes from his travels. “In terms of why he focused on children, it always seemed obvious to me. He was a very empathic person,” Shneiderman said, during his January 19 talk at the Illinois Holocaust Museum. 

Unlike fellow Magnum Photos cofounder Robert Capa, Chim wasn’t drawn to combat images. Instead he favored psychological portraits which, like Lefthand’s work, never let you forget the violence looming just out of frame. The exhibition concludes with the last five years of Chim’s career, spent in the Middle East, much of it in the nascent state of Israel. In one, an Italian settler named Eliezer Trito holds his newborn daughter aloft, beaming. The placard describes her as the first child born in the Alma settlement in Northern Galilee. 

What it doesn’t mention is that three short years before, there had been another Alma—an Arab village razed by the Israeli Defense Force, despite being denoted by the Israeli Minority Affairs Committee as a peacefully “surrendered” village. The ruins of the old Alma rest just half a kilometer west of the Jewish settlement.

In another photo, taken in an unspecified region of Israel, a young couple marries under a chuppah held aloft by guns and pitchforks. The subject and composition were so stark that one contemporary accused Chim of staging it. Life, yet again, springs from bloodshed, and the living are left to reckon with the emotional rubble. 

“There’s nothing more Zionist than that,” Holocaust Museum curator Arielle Weininger mused, staring at the wedding tableau.

In 1956, Chim was shot by Egyptian troops while covering the Suez Crisis. His family found out on the morning news when Shneiderman was nine. 

Today, Shneiderman oversees Chim’s estate, mostly handling licensing and research queries. As he settles into retirement from the University of Maryland, he devotes increasingly more time to managing his uncle’s legacy.

“Robert Capa is known for the phrase, ‘If your photos aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough,’” Shneiderman says. “A couple of the exhibits about Chim are called ‘Close Enough,’ because Chim got close enough emotionally. That’s just the spirit of who he was.” 

It’s all any of these exhibitions can be, grasping at terrors we all cower beneath yet never get an iota nearer to understanding: close enough.

Lisa Tashkevych contributed translation assistance for this article.

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The Chicago Bulls are a shell of what they were a year ago, but somehow have mostly the same roster make-up.

Obviously, the missing piece right now is Lonzo Ball, who very well could be shut down for the year pretty soon. But other than Ball, this team still features the main guys who led the Bulls to a once-time seat in first place last season.

Playing as inconsistently as they have all season, the Bulls still maintain the belief that they have more than enough to win with, at least according to head coach Billy Donovan.

The Bulls’ coach seems intent on keeping this roster where it’s at and riding it out, stating that the team just “isn’t desperate enough,” despite having what he thinks is the talent to make a playoff run.

Whether or not Donovan believes this roster is good enough, though, is irrelevant. If the front office wants to make a move, they’ll do so, and one rumored move as of late includes swing man Alex Caruso.

Marc Stein and Jake Fischer believe the Chicago Bulls would ask for two first-round picks for Alex Caruso

It sounds absolutely crazy because it is. The Bulls getting a pair of first-round picks for Caruso would be a dream.

Sure, he’s one of the best perimeter defenders in the league, if not one of the best overall, on-ball defenders. His tenacity and effort changes the course of games at times. But, the fact is, Caruso isn’t even a starter.

The Bulls might have a hard time getting a pair of first-round picks for a couple of their key starters at this point, let alone for a sixth man.

If Chicago’s brass thinks they’ll get a return like that for Caruso, they might as well hand in their resignations now. Arturas Karnisovas and Marc Eversley are bright basketball minds, but an ask like this would be hilarious and downright off-base.

Who are we kidding, though. The Bulls will likely stand pat at the deadline, not make any moves and ride this roster right into the play-in tournament, with a first round exit.

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Jason Dickinson’s versatility displayed on Blackhawks’ first line — and in carpentry hobby

EDMONTON, Alberta — Blackhawks center Jason Dickinson follows an admirable, if clich?, maxim.

“You have to try things and fail before you learn you’re actually good at something,” he said.

That mindset motivated him six years ago to try renovating his bathroom at his home in Georgetown, Ontario, with the help of one plumber friend. That project inspired him to take up carpentry as a permanent hobby.

That attitude also gave him confidence when a last-minute shakeup in the Hawks’ lines Thursday moved him up to first-line center, a role he’d never occupied. He produced two of his best performances in that role against the Flames and Oilers.

First, though, came the bathroom renovations and woodworking.

“I said, ‘I want to try this,’ ” Dickinson said. “That’s really where it all started. I needed tools to try it, and I enjoyed it, so I stuck with it. After I helped with the bathroom, I was able to get the nod from my wife to build a coffee table that she wanted, so she must’ve thought I was at least half-decent.”

After the coffee table and a few “other random things,” he turned his attention outside and constructed a ground-level deck behind his house. Then last year, he began building some chairs, but supply-chain shortages for the types of screws he needed forced him to postpone that project.

The time demands of the hockey season — and the logistical impracticality of transporting his tools to Chicago — limit his carpentry to summertime, and he downplayed his ability as “very minimal.” But if he was a less humble man, he could certainly claim to possess one of the most unique skills of anyone in the Hawks’ locker room.

Occupying a first-line center role is obviously less groundbreaking by comparison. It does represent, however, a high-water mark for Dickinson in his solid first season with the Hawks.

The idea first entered coach Luke Richardson’s mind when Max Domi — who has typically held that role — was tagged with 17 penalty minutes Tuesday against the Canucks.

Dickinson held his own as Domi’s temporary fill-in alongside Patrick Kane, so when Jonathan Toews came down sick in Calgary, Richardson moved Domi into Toews’ second-line spot and put Dickinson next to Kane again.

“It looked like there were a couple of plays [in Vancouver] where there was a bit of life there,” Richardson said Thursday. “I thought, ‘Let’s start with that. We could always maybe flip [Sam] Lafferty in there for some speed.’

”But Dickinson was skating well and making plays. It went well, so I didn’t need to change it.”

It went so well that even when Toews returned to the lineup Saturday against the Oilers, he was merely inserted as the third-line center to keep Dickinson and Domi in the same spots.

Dickinson scored in both games in Alberta, upping his season goal total from five to seven, and both goals were similar. He skated down a middle-lane highway, smoothly gathered well-placed passes from Kane and beat goaltenders one-on-one with good shots.

He also finished with a 50.2% expected-goals ratio at five-on-five in the two games combined. When he wasn’t on the ice, the Hawks’ ratio was 37.2%.

Kane, who has been longing for a net-driving linemate ever since Dylan Strome left last summer, loved it.

“I like playing with him,” Kane said. “He drives the middle of the ice really hard. If he keeps doing that, defenses are going to have to honor that, and it’s just going to give me more space on the outside to make plays. . . . Hopefully we can build on that chemistry we’ve had and be even better when we come back [from the All-Star break].”

It seems the Hawks have found a substantive combination with Kane and Dickinson, who might be learning he’s actually good at being a “1C.”

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The Chicago Bears have big fish to fry this off-season. They are the team with the most money to spend against the cap, the team with the number one pick in the draft, and the team that has a fanbase the most starving for a winner.

Over the weekend, we saw Championship Sunday take place and it was a wild ride. Each matchup was incredibly hard to pick before the games began for a variety of reasons but the outcomes aren’t very surprising in the end.

For the NFC, the Philadelphia Phillies took down the San Francisco 49ers in blowout fashion. 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy became famous this season as he was Mr. Irrelevant in the 2022 NFL Draft but he won seven straight NFL games coming into this match on Sunday.

Unfortunately, he got hurt on a play rather early in the game. He was replaced by Josh Johnson who is the fourth quarterback used by San Francisco this season but he got hurt as well. Purdy eventually came back into the game but he was unable to throw the ball.

We should find out for sure what the actual injury to Purdy is soon but it was obviously something that hindered the 49ers and their chance to win.

The Chicago Bears should be watching and learning from these amazing teams.

Over in the AFC, the Cincinnati Bengals paid the Kansas City Chiefs a visit with a chance to advance to the Super Bowl on the line for the second straight year. With Joe Burrow and Patrick Mahomes going up against one another, you knew it would be amazing.

Of course, it was. It was tied 20-20 in the final minutes of the game and both teams had a chance to win it. The Chiefs, however, found a way to get it done by kicking a game-winning field goal to advance to the Super Bowl. It will be the Chiefs vs the Eagles.

This is going to be a truly sensational game to end what was a very fun season. As Bears fans, we can’t help but wonder what it would take for our team to reach this point sometime soon.

If they could mimic one of the teams that will be playing in two weeks, it is the Philadelphia Eagles. They have a mobile quarterback in Jalen Hurts that can make plays with his feet. He has been developing his throwing abilities but everyone knows how he wins so well in this league.

Justin Fields can absolutely become what Hurts is but he is a better runner and you never know what his arm develops into. The Bears should try and build around him and his style of play the same way Philly did with Hurts.

Having an outstanding offensive line and a great defense has really helped him as well but that would help any quarterback. Adding a superstar wide receiver like AJ Brown to the mix also gives him significantly better weaponry as everyone slots down a spot.

If the Bears can realize this sometime soon and build it in a similar fashion, they could become the kings of the NFC North which will give them a chance in the postseason.

Something to think about is the fact that all four remaining teams over the weekend, including the Eagles, had offensive head coaches. The Bears have a defensive head coach. That is something that may need to be thought about when it comes to developing Justin Fields.

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Jalen Hurts is going to the Super Bowl? Bears’ Justin Fields should feel free to follow him

After the Eagles drafted Jalen Hurts in the second round in 2020 — a move that “left mouths agape across the country,” NFL.com reported at the time — even then-coach Doug Pederson seemed to endorse the notion that Hurts might not be an NFL-caliber passer.

“Taysom Hill on steroids,” Pederson called Hurts, referring to the manner in which the Saints had used the run-first Hill as a complement to Drew Brees.

So what has Hurts done since then? Taken over for a clearly less-talented Carson Wentz. Taken his own lumps — in the form of continued criticism of his passing ability — while growing into the job. And now, of course, as one of the leading MVP candidates in the NFL, taken the Eagles to the Super Bowl.

Was Justin Fields watching? One hopes.

Can Justin Fields follow in Hurts’ footsteps? One prays.

Hurts will be overshadowed in Glendale, Ariz., by Chiefs superstar quarterback Patrick Mahomes, the best player on the planet, but to doubt he can hold his own on the Super Bowl 57 stage would be to ignore his path. He is the same guy who went to Alabama and, as a freshman, beat out a second-year QB who’d been Nick Saban’s top recruit ever at the position. The same guy who went 25-2 as a starter before being lifted — stunningly — for Tua Tagovailoa in a national-title game, then spent the next season as a backup so he could graduate from Alabama and finally transferred to Oklahoma and had one of the greatest statistical seasons of all time.

Fields was beaten out at Georgia before he transferred to Ohio State and became a Hurts-level college star. Like Hurts, Fields knows what it’s like to be dismissed as an NFL thrower despite having an embarrassment of physical tools. But Hurts is 16-1 as a starter this season, and if that seems a few million miles from where Fields is with the Bears, well, it is.

For now.

That doesn’t mean forever.

THREE-DOT DASH

The 49ers falling short means no shot to tie the Patriots and Steelers with a sixth Super Bowl title, the most ever. Who gets to seven first? It could take a while. …

Ayo Dosunmu’s name keeps popping up in trade rumors. It would be kind of sad to see the Bulls guard and native South Sider have to leave his hometown behind, wouldn’t it? But Dosunmu is all business, as he famously was in college at Illinois. Wherever he is, he’ll be living at the gym. …

Illinois has owned Wisconsin since Dosunmu hit all those big shots down the stretch in 2020 to snap a 15-game losing streak against the Badgers. A 61-51 win Saturday in Madison was the Illini’s sixth straight in the series. Is it fair to say Brad Underwood’s program has surpassed Greg Gard’s? By all means, go right ahead. …

What a huge win Oklahoma got for coach Porter Moser over the weekend, blowing out No. 2 Alabama 93-69. The Sooners had lost to Texas by one point, to Iowa State by three, to Kansas by four, to Baylor by two — mercy. A breakthrough like that was coming.

“I just sat there when the crowd rushed the floor,” the ex-Loyola coach said. “My younger self might have run out in the middle of it. I just sat there and said, ‘This is the vision.’ ” …

After the Big 12 smoked the SEC in a 10-game weekend challenge between the best two conferences in the land, we can put away the debate about which is No. 1. It’s the league that won the last two national titles (Baylor, Kansas). …

My latest college basketball AP Top 25 ballot: 1. Purdue, 2. Houston, 3. Tennessee, 4. Virginia, 5. Arizona, 6. Alabama, 7. Texas, 8. Kansas State, 9. Kansas, 10. UCLA, 11. TCU, 12. Gonzaga, 13. Clemson, 14. Baylor, 15. Xavier, 16. Iowa State, 17. Marquette, 18. North Carolina, 19. San Diego State, 20. Providence, 21. Florida Atlantic, 22. Saint Mary’s, 23. NC State, 24. New Mexico, 25. Indiana.

THIS YOU GOTTA SEE

Clippers at Bulls (7 p.m. Tuesday, NBCSCH): Patrick Williams’ play has been trending up, but is “the Paw” ready to deal with “the Claw”? Because that Kawhi Leonard cat is still kind of good.

Northwestern at Iowa (8 p.m. Tuesday, BTN): Are the Wildcats an NCAA Tournament team? They’re on the bubble for now, but ending an eight-game losing streak to the Hawkeyes would get all the bracketologists stirring in their moms’ basements.

“30 for 30: Bullies of Baltimore” (7:30 p.m. Sunday, ESPN): This documentary recalls the glory of the team with the single greatest defense in NFL history, none other than your 1985 Chicago Bea … oops, sorry, make that the 2000 Ravens.

ONLY BECAUSE YOU ASKED

From Tony, via Facebook: “Why is Big Ten basketball so down this year?”

Last season’s all-Big Ten squad — Johnny Davis, Keegan Murray, Jaden Ivey, Kofi Cockburn and E.J. Liddell — was a great one, and all those guys have moved on. The new batch of all-leaguers, even with the national player of the year in Purdue’s Zach Edey, doesn’t quite stack up. Let’s call that Part One.

Part Two: The best players around the league — Edey, Indiana’s Trayce Jackson-Davis, Michigan’s Hunter Dickinson — are big men, not a bad thing in itself. But the relative absence of star guards stands out, particularly in the playmaking department and especially so at some of the league’s traditionally powerful programs. Illinois doesn’t have a point guard. Indiana and Michigan lost their point guards to injuries. Most of the best facilitators in the Big Ten aren’t surrounded by Top 25 talent.

THE BOTTOM FIVE

Brock Purdy: It’s a great nickname and all, but the NFC Championship Game is high on the list of the worst possible times to be “Mr. Irrelevant.”

Josh Johnson: Pretty amazing that the 36-year-old quarterback has played for a record 14 NFL teams. If only the 49ers were one of them.

Schadenfreude: You know who’s only 35? Colin Kaepernick. I’d crack wise about that, but it wouldn’t be nice.

Matt Painter: Purdue’s Edey was a bucket short of 40 points Sunday when his coach subbed him back in with a huge lead on Michigan State and a couple of minutes left to play. We’re sure Tom Izzo appreciated the heck out of that maneuver.

Joel Embiid: You’ve got to feel for the 76ers big man. After being snubbed when All-Star Game starters were announced, all the poor son of a gun has left is a supermax contract, the NBA scoring lead and a still-perfect career record against the Bulls.

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The Chicago Blackhawks were in Alberta to end the pre-All-Star portion of their 2022-23 schedule. They started 1-1 on their trip through western Canada as they were defeated by the Vancouver Canucks but managed to beat the Calgary Flames.

Things wrapped up against the best team in the western part of Canada as the Edmonton Oilers hosted Chicago. It is always difficult to play them because of the fact that you have to try and contain the two National Hockey League leading scorers.

Connor McDavid is the best player on Earth and it is by a sizable margin. Leon Draisaitl, however, is in the mix for the second-best player. Together, they form the best 1-2 punch in the entire league. Playing against them is never easy.

The Hawks found it to be especially difficult as they lost to Edmonton by a final score of 7-3. Connor McDavid scored one goal and had two assists for his typical three-point game. Likewise, Draisaitl also had one goal and two assists.

The Chicago Blackhawks were not successful against the Edmonton Oilers.

You can’t stop them completely but the Hawks did a terrible job of even slightly containing them. It was just one of those games in which they looked like the worst team in the league (they are certainly one of them).

The good news for the Hawks is that Patrick Kane had two assists. There is going to be a lot of trade buzz surrounding him so seeing him play well is really important.

He hasn’t had the best year of his career and needs to get on the scoresheet as often as he can in order for the Hawks to get the most out of him before the deadline.

A cool part about the game is that the Edmonton Oilers gave an opportunity to an emergency backup goalie (EBUG). Matt Berlin of the University of Alberta got a chance to dress because of the status of Stuart Skinner. Jack Campbell made the start but allowed Berlin to finish once it was obvious that they were going to win.

Now, the Hawks are done until after the All-Star break. They will send Seth Jones to the event in Florida to compete for the Central Division and the rest of the team will get a break. Although losing has been by design, it has to be tough on the players so they deserve this break.

They will return to the ice on Tuesday night when they host the Anaheim Ducks. This will be a very interesting game between two teams that want to be in the Connor Bedard sweepstakes this upcoming spring. That should be a lot of fun to watch as each team begins the stretch run of their season.

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