Friday, December 2, 2011

Art & Architecture

Our assignment was to write a short critique of Frank Gehry’s  Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park.   As we approach the Pritzker Pavillion, we are instructed to take in the city skyline, and how the pavilion relates to the other buildings.  Behind the Pavillion, we can see the Aqua building (second building from the right), designed by Jeanne Gang, who was awarded a MacArthur Foundation grant this fall.  



Modern Wing of the Art Institute
Directly facing Millennium Park and the Pritzker Pavilion is Renzo Piano’s Modern Wing of the Art Institute.  
‘When Frank Gehry completed the Jay Pritzker Pavilion - a baroque swirl of steel plates enclosing a concert shell - he issued a friendly challenge [regarding the location of the Modern Wing].   ‘Come and get me,’ he told Piano, who was finalizing his design. The Italian did just that, exploiting the rigorous street grid to align his concourse on the pavilion, counterpointing Gehry’s exuberance with his cool rationality. ‘He works in his language, I with mine, but the two projects do a similar job,’ says Piano. ‘He created an acoustical space and we created a visual space protected from the sun.’ “ http://www.architectural-review.com/buildings/art-institute-of-chicago-by-renzo-piano-building-workshop-chicago-usa/8601035.article
We cross the Nichols Bridgeway, also designed by Piano, which joins Millennium Park to the Art Institute's Modern Wing.   We stop to take photos at Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate, aka “The Bean,” also in Millennium Park.  The Bean is one of the most popular (and most often photographed) sculptures in Chicago.



Friday, October 14, 2011

The Show That the Art Students Neglected to Name Because They Were so Busy Rehearsing

Inspired by a recent visit to a Neo-Futurist Performance of  “Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind,” Chicago Program students created their own 2 minute plays in the Neo-Futurist style.    “The single unifying element of these plays is that they are performed from a perspective of absolute honesty.”   http://www.neofuturists.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=20&Itemid=45

Our wonderful colleagues created true stories about Chicago, growing up, love, sororities, critics, friends and no friends, orange juice, sock puppets, pigeons and fish.  We laughed, we cried, we gagged, we laughed some more.  Our colleagues entertained us with comedy, tragedy, the morbid, and the gross.  Truly inspiring!  Awesome job, Arts students!





The economy is driving people who are not homeless to our door

“The economy is driving people who are not homeless to our door,” said Jim LoBianco, director of Chicago StreetWise Magazine.  Chicago Program students met with LoBianco at the new StreetWise location in Uptown.  StreetWise ,  the oldest street newspaper in North America, started 20 years ago.  It’s mission is to help people help themselves to self-sufficiency through gainful employment.   Vendors purchase the magazine for $.90 and sell it for $2 -- the profit of $1.10 goes directly to the vendor.   Content of the magazine focuses on social justice issues, poverty and homelessness. 

The newspaper started as an enterprise for the homeless only.    However, more and more the program is helping those facing homelessness due to loss of employment, or loss of income.   
Streetwise has 200 vendors, and actively recruits panhandlers to join the program.  Each vendor abides by a code of conduct.  He/she establishes two or three personal goals, and goals are tracked.  Most vendors can afford to pay for a room within a couple of weeks.  Sixty percent of the vendors are in the program short term, from nine months to three years, as they move on to other employment opportunities.  
The program provides direct support  to social service programs that help clients overcome barriers that contribute to unemployment and homelessness, such as workforce development, housing/shelter and medical care http://streetwise.org/2011/10/social-service-support/ .
Of the 40 percent that remain n the program long term, 10 percent are physically challenged and 30 percent sell StreetWise as a means of extra income.  These vendors are all in stable housing; StreetWise will not enable homeless living.

Louder than a Bomb


Every year, more than 600 teenagers from over 60 Chicago area schools gather for the world’s largest youth poetry slam, a competition known as "Louder Than a Bomb".   Founded in 2001, Louder Than a Bomb is the only event of its kind in the country—a youth poetry slam, http://youngchicagoauthors.org/performances.html
The structure of Louder than a Bomb requires kids to work together in teams, presenting, critiquing, and rewriting their pieces, as opposed to focusing on individual performances.  To succeed, teams have to create an environment of mutual trust and support. For many kids, being a part of such an environment is life-changing.

Chicago Program students viewed the passionate and inspirational film, LOUDER THAN A BOMB, and then met with Lamar Jordan, one of the stars of the film.  http://www.louderthanabombfilm.com/about-the-film.php
Jordan spoke about his experiences and shared some of soulful and inspirational poetry. 

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Chicago has a long history of social change.

Chicago Program students learned about the work of Jane Addams, as we toured the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum.   


Jane Addams had this radical idea that you can make change happen by just moving into a neighborhood. (Jody Kretzmann)    She first experienced this radical idea when she toured a settlement house in East London.  In 1889, she and Ellen Gates Starr bought a mansion in one of the toughest neighborhoods in Chicago, back of the stockyards.  The two opened their doors, and, by listening to people, and observing the conditions they faced, they began to create a specific agenda of services and reform.   Hull-House soon offered a day nursery for children, a club for working girls, lectures and cultural programs, and meeting space for neighborhood political groups.   http://www.uic.edu/jaddams/hull/_learn/_aboutjane/aboutjane.html   By it’s second year of existence, Hull House was host to 2,000 people a week.   http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1931/addams-bio.html    
A highlight of the tour was walking into Addams' bedroom and viewing two sides of Addams’ life -- her Nobel Peace Prize… showcased alongside pages of her FBI file.  Addams was the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931 for her work in the peace movement.    Her FBI file concerns a treason investigation opened in 1924 involving the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, of which Addams was a founding member.


Next, we headed to the Heirloom Farm of Hull House, an urban farm that, in addition to other projects, provides fresh and organic vegetables for the Re-thinking Soup kitchen.    
Re-thinking Soup Kitchen
Every Tuesday the Hull-House Museum hosts a modern day soup kitchen that is a public and communal event where folks gather together and eat delicious, healthy, soup and have fresh, organic conversation about social justice issues.   We met in a space where the likes of Upton Sinclair, Ida B. Wells, W.E.B. Du Bois, Gertrude Stein and other important social reformers met to share meals and ideas, debate one another, and conspire to change the world.  http://www.uic.edu/jaddams/hull/_programsevents/_kitchen/_rethinkingsoup/rethinkingsoup.html


The day we dined at the Re-thinking Soup kitchen they served delicious Smokey Sensual Eggplant soup.  We put our taste, touch and hearing senses to work as we closed our eyes and listened to audio documentaries from the Third Coast International Audio Festival.  One story focused on the experiences of a woman who taste-tests  chocolate for a living (yum!).  Another story had us visiting a restaurant in the dark, only able to hear the sound of waiters and clattering dishes, and feeling our way around the table for our bowl, spoon and bread.
Later that day we took a bus tour through historic neighborhoods in the city.  It was a cold, blustery day, but we were able to see some of the beautiful architecture of the city, including Chinatown and the south loop.  We also saw beautiful murals in Pilsen, learned about the Haymarket riot and rode through the Old Skid Row and what once was Maxwell Street, a lively, open air marketplace.

CP students shake hands with Mayor Rahm Emanuel


At a meeting with Alderman Joe Moore on the north side of Chicago September 16, Chicago Program students were thrilled to meet with Mayor Rahm Emaneul, who was holding an impromptu press conference that morning!   The Mayor shook hands with Chicago Program students and opened the press conference by welcoming students of the ACM program. 


At the press conference, Mayor Emanuel announced the city’s partnership with Foursquare https://foursquare.com/explorechicago .  The goal is to get folks to explore different parts of the city.  If you check in at five of 20 spots around the city, you can earn an official city badge, and brag to all your friends that you’ve earned the badge.
The press conference was held at the Heartland Café, http://www.heartlandcafe.com, located in Rogers Park on the far north side of Chicago.  The Heartland Café is one of the 20 locations in Chicago's Foursquare initiative.  One of the owners of the café, Katy Hogan, was a faculty member of the ACM Urban Studies Program, and was actually one of Joe Moore’s teachers when he was a student on the program.  Joe is an alumnus of Knox College, class of 78.
Alderman Joe Moore spoke to our group about the responsibilities of an alderman, and the powers  and  abuses of power.  He also talked about participatory budgeting, where people in the community decide how community dollars are spent.   In response to student questions, Moore talked about the beautiful murals abundant in the community and empowering youth by allowing youth 16 years old and above to vote on the spending decisions in the community.    

Friday, September 16, 2011

Wow! What a week at Chicago Program for Arts, Entrepreneurship and Urban Studies!

The week  began with a visit to the Chicago History Museum, providing us with a little background on Chicago  http://chicagohistory.org/  .





Students also visited the Mark Bradford Project exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art. 


Bradford uses the neighborhoods as his works of art.” Chicago Works
"Deeply influenced by his experience growing up in South Central Los Angeles, the titles of his works often allude to stereotypes and the dynamics of class, race, and gender-based economies that structure urban society in the United States, specifically those of Los Angeles where he lives and works. “ http://themarkbradfordproject.org/  


“You want me to twist my body into the letter… what??!!”    

Students were challenged and had a hilarious time acting outside their comfort zones as they were treated to an improv olympics workshop led by Jason Shotts, instructor and member of the iO Theater.






Jason taught us moment to moment listening and how to build on what we just heard.  We learned to act and respond quickly and creatively --  to make up sounds, stories, gestures and body movements.   






We also learned to support and help each other out on stage, the philosophy of the iO Theater http://chicago.ioimprov.com .

    

  Vivian brought in delicious mooncakes in honor of the Chinese Moon Festival this week.  The festival is for lunar worship and moon watching. Mooncakes are offered between friends or on family gatherings while celebrating the festival.  Yumm!  Thanks for sharing, Vivian! 
 

Chicago is a hot-bed for entrepreneurs and start-up businesses.  This week students met with the founder of Sleepyhead, a drink “formulated to help you fall asleep pronto.   We’re not an intense prescription pill or pain killer that will leave you groggy in the morning.  We’re refreshing, rejuvenating, ice cold (or piping hot), toffee/caramely goodness… and we’re at your fingertips.”       
Sweet dreams, CP students! 


“Chicago is the capital of the world in terms of inventing ways to make change.” 

That's what John (Jody) Kretzmann told CP students this week.  Jody is one of the founders of the ACM Urban Studies Program, which had its first semester in 1969.  As a founder and Co-Director of the Asset-Based Community Development Institute at Northwestern University, Jody has been at the forefront of a movement to re-focus community development efforts in the U.S. and internationally.
Jody gave us a little history of community development and organizing in Chicago, starting with the work of Jane Addams and Hull House. Then he entertained us with stories of creative tactics used by Saul Alinsky, the father of modern urban community organizing, to empower people to get their voices heard.  
Jody  challenged us to use the approach of Asset-Based Community Development as we examine Chicago’s neighborhoods this fall.  He encouraged us to “try on a new pair of glasses,” that allows us to see more than the neighborhood’s problems, it’s crime and decay.  He persuaded us to look for the resources,  the gifts, the skills, the assets, the potential interest a community has to offer.  The goal is to move from charity to communities to investment in communities.  


“I hope Chicago grabs you and doesn’t let you go,” Jody told CP students.  “We need your energy and dedication.”

Friday, September 9, 2011

First Week at Chicago Program: Arts, Entrepreneurship & Urban Studies!

Hi everyone!  I’m Julie Ruano, business manager at Chicago Program and official blogger for the program.  I’ll keep you posted on what’s happening at Chicago Program each week.



The fall semester of the Chicago Program opened on Labor Day, with 37 students from 14 different campuses moving into three neighborhoods in Chicago:  Logan Square (a vibrant community on the northwest side of Chicago), Hyde Park (Chicago home of President Obama is located here, on the southeast side of Chicago) and the Gold Coast (a neighborhood  with numerous high rises and a bustling shopping district on the Near North Side of Chicago).
 

Highlights of the week included exploring Chicago's neighborhoods for a “scavenger hunt.”
First day of the semester, 37 students on the Chicago Program along with 14 Newberry seminar students “ventured forth onto the sunny streets to get a taste – figuratively and literally – of the city they’ll call home for the next 15 weeks.  Splitting up into eight groups, they embarked on a “scavenger hunt.”


  The assignment: figure out how to take the bus to their designated neighborhood, see some sites, chat with residents to find out what they think about their neighborhoods, and bring back food to share for a potluck dinner.”  

 You can read more about the Chicago Program scavenger hunt at http://www.acm.edu/features/feature/83?&programid=18&program=chicago  .





Thursday  we enjoyed an entertaining boat ride as we toured the city via the Chicago River and Lake Michigan.



From out on Lake Michigan, we watched a glorious sunset over the Chicago skyline.


Students received their first Friday Memo today, a weekly email with program updates and reminders, suggestions for "cheap eats," museum information, as well as a list of events going on in Chicago this weekend. 

Have a great first weekend in Chicago, everyone!