Category Archives: the loop

Chicago Architectural Illustration Featured In The Happiness Machine

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We never tire of admiring Chicago’s stunning skyline, but just how closely are you looking? British artist Mark Lascelles Thornton highlighted Chicago’s architecture in incredible detail as part of his drawing project,
The Happiness Machine.”

Lacelles Thornton uses a rotring pen and white paper to bring the intricacy of architectural scenes to life, from fire escape stairs to swirling clouds above the Hancock. His meticulous work is even more impressive given the massive 8 x 5 foot scale of the drawing. Continue reading

Freebie: Unveiled at the Art Institute with ‘Nighthawks’

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I’m often asked whether I’m able to attend so many events by getting in free (no) or being paid to attend (hell no). I do spend a great  deal of time researching the intersections of interest and opportunity with regard to goings-on in my area, and people are surprised by how accessible cultural events often are. In the interest of saving you time and spurning exploration, I’ve started a series on free local events. Continue reading

Chicago Ideas Week: Old School Institutions Enter the Age of Disruptive Innovation

If Benjamin Franklin were to return in the present day, the world would be an incomprehensibly different place – except in a few areas. For all the advancement humanity has seen in the centuries since Franklin, a celebrated disruptor himself, institutions such as education and politics look pretty much the same. Students still gather in classrooms watching teachers write on the blackboard and dutiful citizens still head to the polling booth to cast their vote.

Luckily, “a little disruption goes a long way,” as Aza Raskin asserted at Tuesday’s Disruptive Innovation: Reinventing Our World discussion. Having each launched startups in some of society’s least flexible fields, Raskin, Dan Rosenweig, and Elaine Chang imparted the challenging necessity of disruptive innovation for Chicago Ideas Week.

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Chicago Ideas Week: The Presidents Club Playbook

Chicago Ideas Week is a series featuring over 200 passionate speakers that host talks and labs throughout Chicago. Now celebrating its second year, CIW events will foster innovation, inspiration, and connection in all corners of the city through October 14.  I’m thrilled to be covering Chicago Ideas Week as a live correspondent and hope you’ll enjoy following along via Twitter and the Ideasphere blog.

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color jam: chicago in living color


“Is there an exhibit entrance over here?” A retiree gestures toward a sealed building entrance, a Berghoff takeout bag slung over her wrist, silver-haired husband in tow.

I simply reply, “You’re in it.”

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lollapalooza’s chow town features fest food fit for a rock star

The corn dog has returned. It’s a staple at any summer festival, but Lollapalooza is no neighborhood street fair and Graham Elliot’s lobster corn dog topped with lemon aioli is a gourmet take on the deep-fried favorite.

For the third consecutive year, Elliot has assembled an eclectic lineup of food vendors at Lollapalooza’s Chow Town. His signature corn dog will be featured at Grahamwhich, who will join over thirty additional vendors to serve the 90,000 person crowds each day of the three-day festival this August.

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street scene: corridor to the new year

Have you ever seen the tunnel at the Jackson stop look so serene? Like the passage from the red to blue line, it's a fitting transition for the New Year. - Chicago, IL

a winter’s tale: chicago city hall holiday concert series

Looking for somewhere warm to pop in during your last mad shopping dash? If you’re in the Chicago Loop at lunchtime consider a stroll through City Hall. Children’s choirs from all over the city will be performing every weekday between noon and 1 pm through December 21.

City Hall’s gorgeous hundred-year-old hallways are bathed in festive lighting as they reverberate with the carols of Chicago’s young voices.

 

Happy holidays from the Keller Regional Gifted Center!

Chicago City Hall
121 North La Salle Street
Chicago, IL 60602

a winter’s tale: ice skating in millenium park

Chicago is known for packing in outdoor fun in the summer months, but don’t assume a drop in degrees scares everyone inside. Chicagoans can be seen gliding, staggering, slipping, and pirouetting on the ice all winter long.

Nestled under The Bean along Michigan Avenue,  the McCormick Tribune Ice Rink at Millenium Park is the most recognizable of the ten rinks citywide. Admission to all rinks is free, with the exception of the Rink at Wrigley and the McFetridge Sports Center, which is year-round indoor rink. Bring your own skates or rent them for a nominal fee and you’re off on the ice!

It’s one thing to admire the postcard-worthy vantage of the Millenium Park rink and quite another to sail gracefully into the scene with impeccable balance and rosy cheeks, the difference being that skating is much more fun! I have fond memories of ice skating as a kid, when the distance to fall was far less, but the memory of months more recently spent in a shoulder cast kept me shy of the rink for too long.

Haven’t skated in a while, or ever? It’s a bit like riding a bike, or rather, roller blading. The real challenge isn’t in the footwork, but the entertaining awareness of your fellow skaters. It’s easy to get distracted by the woman performing double axels at center ice and overlook the fellow who’s lost his balance, grasping for the edge and heading straight for you. A kid up to your knee-caps maneuvers laps between all as you manage to avoid crashing into the high school clique skating four-across around a turn.

Skating in the city, with a refreshing chill in the air, a cup of cocoa, and Mariah Carey’s encouragement through the speakers, is only improved after a few turns round the rink when you’re able to look up and enjoy the stunning skyline. The $10 skate rental fee is well worth an hour or entire afternoon of winter delight downtown, in an activity that I’m surprised to say I’ll be enjoying much more before March 11, 2012 at the close of rink’s skating season.

McCormick Tribune Ice Rink
Michigan Ave. & Washington St.
Chicago, IL 60602

Mon -Thurs: 12 pm — 8 pm
Fri: 12 pm — 10 pm
Sat (through Dec.17): 10 am — 10 pm
Sat (beginning Jan. 7): 10 am — 9 pm
Sun: 10 am — 9 pm

vintage chicago street scenes: celebrating a city in motion

  

“Where anything might happen – and usually does,” the narrator of this 1930′s newsreel describes Chicago, “a city of superlatives.” The forces of energy and movement, this sense of anticipation are what attracts so many people to city living. Whether or not you’re a nerd for history, any viewer enjoys seeing their city on the screen. It’s fascinating to compare the world you know to a past, fictionalized, or futuristic version.

 This clip allows us to tour places we now take for granted through the lens of the extraordinary superlatives they were at the time. The skyline seems strangely stark behind the Wrigley Building and Water Tower. Rail yards line Michigan Avenue in what has only recently become Millennium Park. The Haymarket Police Statue is on public display in a park sometime between attempted bombing attacks. We dash from the Union Stockyards to the buildings of the 1893 and 1933 World’s Fairs, admire gypsy women at a market on Maxwell Street, and then bask in the State Street’s bright lights.

[via Lee Bey]

Thomas Edison shot Chicago’s second movie ever in 1897 at the corner of State and Madison (a police parade film preceded it by a year). Yet on a corner that is still one of Chicago’s busiest, we see no stolid sepia-faced citizens posing stiffly. Streetcars and horses pass through a sea of bowler and boater-capped heads, while picketers brandish indistinguishable signs in the thirty-second clip. The city is a measure in motion.

With shape-shifting neighborhoods and movements that come and go, our contemporary street corner will morph someday as well, sooner than we know. Compare Edison’s intersection with the State and Madison intersection of 2009.

Cities changes every day, it’s why we’re drawn to them. Step out on the
sidewalk, inhale the energy, and examine what’s in motion around you. After
all, anything can happen.

For Further Exploration
street scene: vintage outdoor ads in chicago