DISARM: Artmaking Workshop with Artists William Estrada and Damon Locks
@ Weinberg/Newton Gallery
688 N Milwaukee Ave, Chicago IL 60642
Opening Saturday, August 19th, from 5PM - 8PM
On view through Saturday, September 9th
Artmaking Workshop with Artists William Estrada and Damon Locks
About the exhibition
After nine years of serving the Chicago community through arts and social justice, Weinberg/Newton Gallery (688 N. Milwaukee Ave.), a non-commercial gallery dedicated to promoting social justice causes through art and programming, is partnering with Firebird Community Arts and Gun Violence Prevention PAC (G-PAC) to present its final exhibition, “DISARM, Everyday Violence, Every Day,” an exploration of the challenges of structural racism and violence that Chicago still faces today, on view June 23 – Sept. 9, 2023. Weinberg/Newton Gallery will permanently close its doors on September 9 with a public, celebratory closing party to take place that evening.
“The hard work and creativity of the Weinberg/Newton Gallery team and the artists that have exhibited here, has allowed us to carry out our mission and engage in a wide range of social justice issues through art,” said Founder of Weinberg/Newton Gallery, David Weinberg. “We have been able to reach the Chicago community with our messaging through our dedicated staff and artists with strong voices. Thank you to all that have supported and contributed to the
gallery’s mission throughout the years.”
The final exhibition features artwork by local and national artists, each speaking to the clear fracture line from the Chicago Race Riots of 1919 to today’s segregated public spaces, such as beaches and parks, to the bounded areas of city disinvestment and the plague of gun violence it creates.
On July 27, 1919, Eugene Williams, a black teenager was stoned and drowned by a white man for floating his raft over an invisible line into a “whites-only” South Side beach – an event that sparked the most violent week in Chicago’s history. The Chicago Race Riot of 1919, plus countless other incidents of violence by white people against black people in and around public spaces, provides an origin story for the challenges of structural racism and violence that
Chicago faces today.
Firebird Community Arts is an arts organization located in Chicago’s East Garfield Park that works to empower and connect people through the healing practice of glassblowing and ceramics. As part of “DISARM, Everyday Violence, Every Day,” artists participating in Firebird’s flagship program, Project FIRE, have created an immersive experience in the gallery’s enclosed video room that represents the imaginary race line Eugene Williams crossed in 1919 at Lake Michigan. Sand will be on the floor of the room, with a roped dividing line, and ambient beach sounds will be playing.
Outside of this room there will be an intricately blown-glass marker with a poem on it written by Firebird youth participants honoring Eugene. Firebird will also present five glass markers that are part of a larger set of 38 being produced to memorialize each life taken by the Chicago Race Riots of 1919. These markers will be placed at the location of each individual’s death. The exhibition will also feature eight large scale photographs of the Firebird community participating in a memorial event at the site of Eugene Williams death.
“Until we reflect on and open up dialogue with this painful history and its context of poverty and structural racism, we will be unable to unravel the complex public health crisis of gun violence,” says Nabiha Khan-Giordano, Executive Director and Curator of the exhibition.
The main gallery space will be transformed into an immersive dark room to spotlight a video installation by celebrated Director, Photographer, and Cinematographer, Carlos Javier Ortiz, who was also the first exhibiting artist at the gallery in 2014. Ortiz’ films “A Thousand Midnights” and “Shikaakwa” explore the devastation of violence on youths within the context of structural racism as a public health crisis.
Additional artists featured in “DISARM, Everyday Violence, Every Day” include Jennifer Nagle Myers presenting “A City Without Guns” and Jefferson Pinder presenting “float.”
Weinberg/Newton Gallery is also proud to join forces with political action committee Gun Violence Prevention PAC, which is working to counter the political influence of the gun industry and their lobby in Springfield. G-PAC raises the resources necessary to elect and protect public officials with the courage to stand up to the gun lobby and keep guns out of the hands of criminals, gang members, domestic abusers, and the dangerously mentally ill.
Related on-site programming will take place in partnership with Firebird Community Arts and Gun Violence Prevention PAC including an opening reception on June 23 from 5 – 8 p.m. at the gallery. Reservations can be made here.
“DISARM, Everyday Violence, Every Day” is curated by Weinberg/Newton Gallery Executive Director Nabiha Khan-Giordano and presented in partnership with Firebird Community Arts and Gun Violence Prevention PAC.
Hours and Appointments
Thursday – Saturday: 11am-5pm
Exhibitions are free and open to the public.
Image info: Carlos Javier Ortiz, We All We Got, 2009
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