Monthly Archives: September 2011

exploring pilsen’s art community

The smell of paint stings the air as you stand in a stranger’s kitchen. Adjusting a pair of headphones, you take a long sip of wine considering a surreal multi-media installation. Next, you turn down a dim alley, following a sign that promises, “Bad Reading” only to happen upon a courtyard adorned in strands of twinkling light. One room resonates with the visceral stomp of a gorgeous flamenco troupe, and you can’t even see through the spectator thronged windows. Two writers spin supernatural stories in the room across the way. Wrapped up in their yarns, you catch a chill, but it’s only an early autumn breeze blowing in tinsel that hangs in the door frame. You amble toward a gallery around the corner. It’s Friday night and you’re in Pilsen.

Known as the Chicago Arts District, the area in Pilsen surrounding South Halsted and 18th Streets is home to several galleries, studios, and creative spaces. Each month, around 30 of the area’s artistic spaces are open to the public as part of the 2nd Fridays Gallery Night. Between 6 and 10 pm, this free event gives you access to the places where Chicago artists live, create, and showcase their work. This weekend, the 41st Annual PilsenEast Artists’ Open House offers another opportunity to experience first-hand the faces and spaces of this creative community. As part of Chicago Artists Month in October, more than 65 artistic environments will be open for public exploration.

Pick up a map at the event information center (1821 S Halsted St.) or just stroll between open spaces on this self-guided tour. You may be drawn in by the siren song of a live blues band, or a bright light display artist. Other spaces are marked with a makeshift sign in a dimly lit corridor directing you to a “gallery” upstairs. One window display features stark elemental wood sculptures, one a curious yarn installation, and the next a probing social commentary utilizing televisions. A collection of pen & ink drawings interpreting Pinocchio are revealed to be the stirring catharsis in coping with a parent’s death, as discovered in a rare and enlightening discussion with the artist herself.

Pilsen, while growing ever more popular, is still an overlooked feast of inspiration in Chicago. The Artists’ Open House and 2nd Fridays offer an unequivocally intimate encounter with artists and galleriests in their working and living spaces. When I ask an artist why they produce in Pilsen, chatting in her living room and nibbling on pastries made by her aunt, the reply is straightforward, “the artistic community is unequaled.” As much as my spirit soars in an art museum, and ruminates in a well-curated gallery selection, the connection made viewing a work in its birth space cannot be overestimated. Noticing disregarded paint spatters on the floor, a sheet hanging to cover the exposed contents of a closet or pantry, the sleeping space in a small gallery, the dishes in the sink – all of this reminds you that this is someone’s passion, that they are living it. Suddenly, no matter your initial reaction to their work, a deeper significance is illuminated.

Back on the street, you find yourself taking place in an interactive music installation. “We want to engage people with music and everyday items they can interact with,” you are told while drumming with PVC pipe. “This way everyone is a part of it, and the experience keeps changing.” The Chicago Arts District reminds us that art is out there.  It needn’t be erudite or unapproachable. Walk with it, breathe it in, play it, question it, and consume it in Pilsen.


The PilsenEast Artists’ Open House
9/30:  6-10 pm
10/1 and10/2: 12-7 pm

Chicago Arts District Information Center
1821 S. Halsted St.
Chicago, IL 60616
[View Full Map]

street scene: columbus cycle tavern

The 16-person self-propelled Cycle Tavern is the latest word in bar crawl conveyance. - Columbus, OH

Columbus peddles under the influence with the Euro imported Cycle Tavern.

chicagoans share their favorite memories

What is your favorite memory?
Cherished childhood moments? First love? Incredible travels? The simple everyday moments that don’t stand out until they are gone?

This short film by social media agency Brand Nua asked 50 people in Chicago one question, “What is your favorite memory?” Their responses are as varied as those who share them, and each answer strike a chord. Director Galvea Kelly captures the poignant replies along with gorgeous downtown views.



“I think you just made my day,” one respondent exclaimed. “It’s just this flooding back of all these really great things.” So next time you’re dashing about downtown, stop and take in the sweeping views and the strangers who share your city – you could be creating your new favorite memory.

My favorite memory is summers spent camping with my family. Sunny afternoons fishing with my dad, cooking elaborate meals by campfire with my mom, running through the woods with my siblings and our imaginations, classic rock on the radio and nothing to distract us from just being together.
[via Refinery29]

For Further Exploration:
Fifty People One Question – New York
Fifty People One Question – London

the bahá’í house of worship: chicago’s suburban sanctuary

A proud white dome gleams along Lake Michigan, surpassing the surrounding treetops and suburban manses. The magnificent structure feels out-of-place, calling to mind faraway lands…India, Narnia. Yet she stands on Chicago’s North Shore.

I don’t often venture to Chicago’s suburbs. I’m no Illinois native, so aside from the occasional IKEA spree, why would I leave the city to visit [insert adjective] Dale/Forest/Glen/Grove/Lake? Lest we forget, an open mind and ready eye are explorers’ keenest tools, as some of the world’s greatest beauty lies in the unexpected.

So I find myself in a downpour thirty minutes outside of the city, gripping the slick railing as I avoid slipping on the many steps approaching the opulent temple, my gaze distracted by its grandeur. The Bahá’í House of Worship in Wilmette is one of only seven Bahá’í temples in the world, and the only one in North America.

The Bahá’í’s core beliefs promote the unity of humanity and of all world religions. Completed in 1953, the temple is open for all people to worship in song or quiet meditation. All existing Bahá’í temples feature a series of outdoor gardens and fountains in addition to a nine-sided shape, as the number nine symbolizes perfection in the Bahá’í faith. The Bahá’í House of Worship for North America’s design radiates a powerful presence. Stately, white, and trim, it is ornate without being overwrought – devoid of any design elements save the intertwining of religious symbols from many faiths that weave up lean columns 138 feet toward the dome’s center. The tracery of the dome is breathtaking; made of the same strong blended concrete as the rest of the temple, yet interwoven as delicate lace. The grand space never feels imposing, and the open, meditative auditorium offers a welcoming serenity.

My first visit to the Bahá’í temple is as a wedding guest. Since speaking is not permitted inside the auditorium, nor is photography, the couple grabs umbrellas and head outdoors despite the downpour. Rich voices are heard over the thunderous rain as first a man and then a woman sing a Bahá’í hymns. The simple ceremony’s only requirement is that the Bahá’í wedding vow be recited: “We will all, verily, abide by the will of God.”

A visitor’s center beneath the auditorium offers a multi-media array of information on the building the Bahá’í House of Worship for North America and on the history of the Bahá’í faith. It’s incredible to learn that I am standing in the oldest surviving such temple, a place of pilgrimage from all over the world (not to mention one of the Seven Wonders of Illinois), and that place is in the suburbs. I am so grateful for having the opportunity to share in the warmth and receptivity of the members of the Bahá’í faith, and to visit the House of Worship. It is a refreshing reminder to embody the Bahá’í tenets of unity and openness in everyday interactions and to look beyond the everyday in explorations.

The Baha’i House of Worship
100 Linden Ave.
Wilmette, IL 60091

For Further Exploration:
360-degree views of the Bahá’í House of Worship

Remembering 9/11 at The Art Institute

“I fervently hope that the bell that tolled this morning in honor of this convention may be the death-knell of all fanaticism, of all persecutions with the sword or with the pen, and of all uncharitable feelings between persons wending their way to the same goal.” - Swami Vivekananda

On September 11, 1893, Swami Vivekananda expressed his message of unity and tolerance in an address at First World Parliament of Religions. Held in what is now the Art Institute’s Fullerton Hall, the Parliament was held in conjunction with the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Steps away from where his speech was delivered, Vivekananda’s words are memorialized in Public Notice 3, an art installation by Jitish Kallat.

Kallat’s work displays the text of the speech in LED displays on the steps of the magnificent Woman’s Board Grand Staircase. As a juxtaposition to the transcendent message of Vivekananda’s address and a reflection on the events of September 11, 2001, its text is displayed in alternating colors of the Department of Homeland Security alert system.

Today is the closing date of Public Notice 3, which has been on display since September 11, 2010. The Art Institute will also offering visitors a place for reflection on the tenth anniversary of 9/11 in Fullerton Hall, the site of the Parliament and its message of religious respect worldwide. As we remember the anniversary of 9/11, let Kallat’s powerful installation be a reminder that while there is much ground to be covered in the path toward tolerance, the first steps must begin with us.

north coast music festival

After devoting several summer weekends to music festivalsstreet fairs, and general merriment one would think we’d be ready for fest season to close. Not so. Thankfully, North Coast Music Festival is back for its second year to give Chicagoans a final fix.

Playing this weekend in Union Park, North Coast features an eclectic electronica and hip-hop focused lineup. While still a newcomer by Chicago fest standards, North Coast’s impressive lineup includes David Guetta, Common, Fatboy Slim, Of Montreal, Bassnectar, Wiz Khalifa, Rusko, and Thievery Corporation.

Go bask in the joy of listening in the sun for hours with thousands of sweaty strangers while you can! After all, it’s “Summer’s Last Stand.”