Jul 8th 2022

Arts Incubator, Arts + Public Life | 301 E Garfield Blvd
Remarks & Toast at 6:30 PM at the Arts Incubator

Logan Center Exhibitions, Reva & David Logan Center for the Arts | 915 E 60th St
Remarks & Toast at 7:30 PM at the Logan Center

Free shuttles will run between the venues.

 

For the last decade, Arts + Public Life (APL) and the Center for the Study of Race, Politics and Culture (CSRPC) have co-hosted an Artists-in-Residence program intentionally designed to center Black and Brown artists working in Chicago’s South Side. Ten years later, these AIRs alumni are among Chicago’s most compelling and successful artists, continuing the rich and broad legacy of South Side cultural production that the program was designed to honor. All That Light celebrates the remarkable impact and ongoing global reach of these ten cohorts.

Opening Reception: JULY 8, 6-8 PM

Performance Showcase: SEPT 9, starts at  7PM

Curated by Tracie D. Hall, the show will feature a wide range of multimedia works and performances from the program’s alumni  including: Anna Martine Whitehead, Faheem Majeed, Krista Franklin, Brittney Leeanne Williams, Ayana Contreras, and many more.

The exhibition will run simultaneously across two locations:

  • Arts + Public Life’s Arts Incubator Gallery
    301 E Garfield Blvd, Chicago, IL
  • Logan Center Exhibitions
    915 E 60th Street, Chicago IL
Free shuttles between the two galleries will be available. Additional programming, tours, conversations, and performances will be offered throughout the course of the exhibition, and this site will be updated regularly.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
Yaw Agyeman, AQ, LeRoy Bach, David Boykin, Jarvis Boyland, Greg Bray, Brandon Breaux, Ayana Contreras, Delano Dunn, Stephen Flemister, Krista Franklin, Ben LaMar Gay, James T. Green, Andres L. Hernandez, David Leggett, Nazafarin Lotfi , Faheem Majeed, Victoria Martinez , A.J. McClenon, Cecil McDonald, Jr., Alva Mooses, eliza myrie, Lola Ayisha Ogbara, zakkiyyah najeebah dumas o’neal , Tomeka Reid, Amina Ross , Arif Smith, Cauleen Smith, Anna Martine Whitehead

The exhibition’s title All That Light is borrowed from a public conversation Hall led between Theaster Gates, Jacqueline Stewart, and Adrienne Brown, APL’s successive leaders, acknowledging the program’s reputation for identifying some of Chicago’s most ascendant artists and makers.

Seeking to play on the multiple meanings of light: to make things visible, to illuminate or ignite, and something that is easily carried— this exhibition is a critical survey of the cumulative impact the APL-CSRPC Artist in Residence Program (AIR) has had on the artists who have participated as well as on the audiences and communities it has drawn and convened in its first decade.

ABOUT THE CURATOR

Artist, arts administrator, curator, and librarian Tracie D. Hall founded the small, but influential Rootwork Gallery in Chicago in 2016 and four years later, became the tenth Executive Director of the American Library Association, the oldest and largest library association in the world.

Prior to that appointment Hall served as Director of the Joyce Foundation’s Culture Program where she originated the Arts Leader of Color Fellowship in association with Americans for the Arts; Retool 21, an early-career development program for aspiring arts preparators in partnership with the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; the Artist as Problem Solver summits which convened artists and organizers working on arts based community development initiatives in the Midwest; and the Chicago Black Dance Legacy Project with the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts.

Hall also served as Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) for the City of Chicago, where she oversaw the Arts and Creative Industries Division which included the visual and performing arts, arts-based small business, and the Chicago Film Office.

Hall has curated several breakout exhibitions including: ICONIC: Black Panther Chicago commemorating the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Black Panther Party in Illinois; Everyday Rituals: Bridging the Black Secular and the Divine; and Altar Call: The Architecture of Black Sacred Space. In 2019, she was listed among Chicago’s 50 Visual Vanguards by New City. Hall is currently at work developing a residency program for artists and writers in the South.

Official Website

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