Aug 19th 2023

Black August: Solidarity Quilting Workshop

@ Logan Center Exhibitions

915 E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637

Opening Saturday, August 19th, from 12PM - 3PM

On view through Sunday, September 10th

Black August: Solidarity Quilting Workshop
Saturday, August 19 | 12-3:00PM
Logan Center Rooms 801 + 802
Send messages to incarcerated police torture survivors by making quilt patches with Dorothy Burge. Featuring guest speakers Mary L. Johnson (mother of Michael Johnson, incarcerated torture survivor) and Gregory Banks (torture survivor).

About the Exhibition
Logan Center Exhibitions, the Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture (CSRPC), and the Pozen Center Human Rights Lab (HRL) at the University of Chicago are pleased to present “Makes Me Wanna Holla: Art, Death & Imprisonment” featuring 2022-23 “Artist for the People” Practitioner Fellows Dorothy Burge and Michelle Daniel Jones with Mourning Our Losses.

Burge and Daniel Jones completed year-long fellowship residencies co-hosted by CSRPC and HRL that explored the injustices of the carceral system. Their work engages critical race and human rights issues by looking back at forgotten, ignored, or suppressed stories and people. This exhibition asks: “Who gets remembered?”

For this exhibition, Burge presents “Won’t You Help to Sing These Songs of Freedom?”, a series of portrait quilts depicting survivors of Chicago police torture; two quilts honoring African American trans women murdered in Chicago in 2022; and a lifesize portrait quilt of Albert Woodfox of the Angola 3 who survived four decades of solitary confinement. Accompanying the torture survivor quilts are newly collected oral histories, artworks, family photos, and poems compiled by students at the School of the Art Institute.

As both curator and artist, Daniel Jones presents the Mourning Our Losses (MOL) Traveling Memorial, “We Shall Remember”. This exhibit immerses attendees in a multi-sensory experience of COVID-19 in prisons using sound, statistics and the artistry of those currently and formerly incarcerated that speaks to the horrors of the pandemic. MOL highlights the moral cost of mass incarceration while honoring the lives of all who died while living or working behind bars.

“Makes Me Wanna Holla: Art, Death & Imprisonment” is presented by Logan Center Exhibitions, the Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture, and the Pozen Center Human Rights Lab at the University of Chicago. Practitioner Fellows are supported in part by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to the Centering Race Consortium, a partnership between race studies centers at Brown University, Stanford University, UChicago, and Yale University to center the study of race in the arts and humanities. MOL’s Traveling Memorial is also supported by the Prison Neighborhood + Arts/Education Program and Illinois Humanities.

PROGRAMMING

Black August: Solidarity Quilting Workshop
Saturday, August 19 | 12-3:00PM
Logan Center Rooms 801 + 802
Send messages to incarcerated police torture survivors by making quilt patches with Dorothy Burge. Featuring guest speakers Mary L. Johnson (mother of Michael Johnson, incarcerated torture survivor) and Gregory Banks (torture survivor).

Artists Live with Dorothy Burge and Michelle Daniel Jones
​Wednesday, ​September​ 6 | 6-7:30PM
Logan Center Performance Penthouse

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