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Hairy Who & Chicago Imagists 

7/26/2016

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Monday, August 8th (6:00-7:15, 7:30-8:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


"Join us during our next meetup, when we're presenting and facilitating an open discussion about The Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists! Join us for a vibrant conversation covering amazing artists such as Jim Nutt, Suellen Rocca, Ed Paschke, Gladys Nilsson, Karl Wirsum, Christina Ramberg, Roger Brown, Sarah Canright, Art Green, James Falconer, Philip Hanson and Ed Flood.   

We’ll get into 60s and 70s culture and local influencers as well – Chicago Blues, neighborhoods, comic books, and post-war culture. We’ll be discussing Howlin’ Wolf, Maxwell Street, politics and diversity. It’s going to get wild, weird, and very Chicago.

Bring your musical instruments, art supplies and notebooks. These workshops are interactive and multidisciplinary. We have supplies and equipment on hand that workshop participants can use -- including pencils, pens, paint, a piano, other musical instruments.
Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registration: Click here or here to register for the summer term at the Chicago Park District website.

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about Borderbend's arts workshop series at Mozart Park.

Links:
  • Art Green exhibition at Corbett vs. Dempsey 
  • Barbara Rossi: Selected Works 1967-1990 -- exhibition at The Renaissance Society
  • Chicago Imagists at the Madison Museum of Art 
  • "A curated life: Suellen Rocca, curator and director of exhibits at Elmhurst College" by Christina Le Beau (Crain's Chicago Business)
  • Ed Paschke
  • "Eye Exam: Gladys and Eleanor" by Jason Foumberg (New City)
  • Hairy Who and the The Chicago Imagists (dir. Leslie Buchbinder)
  • Hairy Who Cat-a-log (Art Institute of Chicago)
  • How Nutt Paints (video produced by the MCA Chicago)
  • "The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston opens first solo museum exhibition of Christina Ramberg in 25 years" (press release)
  • Interviews with Ed Paschke (WTTW, edited by Jay Shefsky)
  • Jim Nutt: Coming into Character -- exhibition at the MCA Chicago
  • Karl Wirsum Eyeballs the Intuit Collection
  • "Meet the Business Man Behind the Ed Paschke Center" by Shia Kapos (Crains Chicago Business)
  • Philip Hanson exhibition at Corbett vs. Dempsey Gallery (2010)
  • "Portrait of the Artist: Philip Hanson" by Janina Ciezadlo
  • "Roger Brown's Last Wish" by Jeff Huebner (Chicago Reader)
  • Sarah Canright
  • Special Collections: Chicago Imagists Archive (at mixed-media-archives.com)
  • "The World According to Wirsum" by John Yau (Hyperallergic)
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Our Workshop on June 15th -- Win Stracke and Lois Weisberg

6/1/2015

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Monday, June 15th
(6:00-7:00, 7:15-8:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public
You're invited to come to our next workshop, which is inspired by Lois Weisberg and Win Stracke:
  • We will talk about Weisberg and Stracke's work, including their connections to Chicago;
  • We'll also discuss examples of people and organizations that are linked to and/or inspired by Weisberg and Stracke's work and legacy; and
  • Workshop participants will have opportunities to create music and writings  inspired by Weisberg and Stracke.  your musical
Bring your musical instruments, art supplies and notebooks. These workshops are interactive and multidisciplinary. We have supplies and equipment on hand that workshop participants can use -- including pencils, pens, paint, a piano, other musical instruments. 

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting. 

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers.

Registering for Chicago Portraits & Arts Journeys: Click here or here to register for the summer term at the Chicago Park District website.

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Portraits & Arts Journeys workshop series.
Links:
  • After School Matters
  • Arts Workshop at Mozart Park inspired by Big Bill Broonzy, Memphis Minnie & Howlin' Wolf (2014)
  • Arts Workshop at Mozart Park inspired by Studs Terkel (2014)
  • Association for Cultural Equity
  • Chicago Gospel Music Festival
  • "City makes amends with Lois Weisberg, ex-cultural affairs commissioner" by Melissa Harris (Chicago Tribune, 9/12/2014)
  • Fifth Star Awards honoree, Lois Weisberg (2014)
  • Gallery 37
  • Old Town School of Folk Music
  • Paul Bunyan -- 80 at 80 at the Museum of Science and Technology (2013 exhibition) 
  • "The 'Pocket Guide To Hell' History Project Salutes Classic Chicago Children's Television" (chicagoist.com)
  • "Six Degrees of Lois Weisberg" by Malcolm Galdwell (1999)
  • Win Stracke: Chicago's Troubadour (Old Town School of Folk Music)
  • Win Stracke Collection (University of Illinois at Chicago)


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Our Next Arts Workshop: Margaret Walker, Haki Madhubuti, Carol D. Lee, and Sterling Plumpp

3/31/2015

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Monday, April 13th
(6:00-7:00, 7:15-8:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public
You're invited to come to our next workshop, which is inspired by Dr. Margaret Walker, Dr. Haki R. Madhubuti, Dr. Carol D. Lee, and Sterling Plumpp. We will:
  • Talk about their work, including their connections to Chicago; 
  • Make music and create text-and-image collages inspired by work by Walker, Madhubuti, Lee, and Plumpp.
Bring your musical instruments, your poetry, your art supplies! These workshops are interactive and multidisciplinary. We have supplies and equipment on hand that workshop participants can use -- including pencils, pens, paint, a piano, other musical instruments.  

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Portraits & Arts Journeys: Click here or here to register for the spring term at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Portraits & Arts Journeys workshop series.
Links:
  • "Confronting the Warpland" by Ed Herrmann (The Poetry Foundation)
  • Dr. Carol D. Lee (Northwestern University)
  • "For Malcolm X" by Margaret Walker (The Poetry Foundation)
  • Gwendolyn Brooks-inspired arts workshop at Mozart Park (2014)
  • Lorraine Hansberry-, Bruce Norris-, and Pam Mackinnon-inspired workshop at Mozart Park (2014)
  • Margaret Walker (Alabama's Literary Landscape)
  • Margaret Walker (Modern American Poetry, University of Illinois)
  • Margaret Walker (Voices from the Gap, University of Minnesota)
  • "Mississippi Suite" by Sterling Plumpp (TriQuarterly, January 2013)
  • "Poet Sterling Plumpp captures rhythms of the blues" by Howard Reich (Chicago Tribune, 6/4/2013)
  • "Quality: Gwendolyn Brooks at 73" by Haki Madhubuti (The Poetry Foundation)
  • "Reader of the Week: Dr. Haki R. Madhubuti" (Chicago Tribune)
  • South Side Community Art Center
  • Sterling D. Plumpp (The Poetry Foundation)
  • "Sterling Plumpp: Interview" by Reginald Gibbons (TriQuarterly, 4/27/2010)
  • Sun Ra- and Ed Roberson-inspired workshop at Mozart Park (2014)
  • Third World Press
  • This Is My Century: Margaret Walker Centennial (Margaret Walker Center, Jackson State University)













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Our Next Workshop: Oscar Brown Jr., Abbey Lincoln & Maggie Brown

9/21/2014

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Monday, September 22nd
(6:00-7:00, 7:15-8:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


You're invited to come to our next arts workshop at Mozart Park, which focuses on the work and legacies of Oscar Brown Jr., Abbey Lincoln and Maggie Brown. We will: 
  • Learn more about those artists' work, and listen to several songs that they recorded and/or composed. 
  • Talk about how songs composed, recorded and performed by those three artists relate to Civil Rights dynamics of the 1950s till today. 
  • Write poetry and create music inspired by the work of Oscar Brown Jr., Abbey Lincoln and Maggie Brown.  

These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. We often use an upright piano during workshops as well. 

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 
Links: 
  • "A Depression-Era Anthem For Our Times" (NPR, 11/2008)
  • "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?" by Yip Harburg Jay Gorney, performed by Abbey Lincoln
  • Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call Out to Jazz and Africa by Ingrid Monson (excerpt at amherst.edu)
  • Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call Out to Jazz and Africa by Ingrid Monson (review by Brian Gilmore, JazzTimes, 2009)
  • Liner Notes — We Insist! Max Roach’s "Freedom Now Suite," by Nat Hentoff (Jerry Jazz Musician)
  • Maggie Brown: Tribute to Oscar Brown Jr. at Ravinia (8/22/2014)
  • Oscar Brown, Jr. (National Living Visionary Project)
  • "Oscar Brown Jr.: Legendary jazz vocalist, poet and social activist" by Todd S. Jenkins (jazzhouse.org)
  • "Oscar Brown, Jr.’s Work Song" by Ayana Contreras (darkjive.com, 7/18/2011)
  • "Revisited! The Freedom Now Suite" by Ingrid Monson (Jazz Times, 9/2001)
  • Something About Oscar Brown, Jr. by Morris Gearring
  • "A Tribute To Abbey Lincoln On JazzSet" by Becca Pulliam (NPR, 1/14/2014)
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Our Arts Workshop on September 29th: Marc Smith and the Poetry Slam

9/10/2014

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Monday, September 29th (6:00-7:00, 3:15-7:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


Sometimes one person can make a worldwide difference – one of those people is Marc Kelly Smith, the Slampapi of Slam Poetry. Charlie Newman and Wayne Allen Jones will lead our next “Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys” workshop about Marc Smith, the origin of the Slam, and its growth into an international community around the world.

During the workshop we will:
  • Learn more about Marc Smith's ideas about and work in poetry. 
  • Find out more about what a Poetry Slam and a Slam Poem are. 
  • Review the development of Poetry Slams from its origin in Chicago to the present. 
  • Write and perform slam poems in a Poetry Slam.  

These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. We often use an upright piano during workshops as well. 

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 
Links: 
  • 25th Annual National Poetry Slam (August 5-9, 2014, Oakland, CA)
  • Dream of a Word (edited by Quraysh Ali Lansana and Toni Asante Lightfoot, Tia Chucha Press)
  • Fractal Edge Press
  • "From the Editor: Curveballs at the Un-Magazine" by Carey Winfrey (The Smithsonian Magazine, August 2010)
  • The Green Mill
  • Jeff Helgeson
  • "An Incomplete History of Slam" by Kurt Heintz (e-poets.org)
  • Toni Asante Lightfoot
  • Louder Than a Bomb (Siskel/Jacobs Productions, 2011)
  • Poetry at the Periphery: the Slam Poetry Scene in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil by Chloe Hill (Words Without Borders, 4/9/2014)
  • Poetry Landmark: The Green Mill Cocktail Lounge in Chicago, IL
  • "Patricia Smith: Exploring Life Through the Poetry of Personas" by Grant Faulkner (National Writing Project)
  • "Slam Poetry: A Blue-Collar Chicago Movement" by Tessa Fegen, Kellen Winters and Vince Floress (chicagostorytelling.com)
  • Marc Kelly Smith
  • Patricia Smith (Poetry Foundation)
  • Tucson Youth Poetry Slam
  • Young Chicago Authors
  • Youth Speaks (San Francisco)
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Harriet Monroe-Inspired Workshop on July 25th

7/23/2014

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Friday, July 25th (4:30-5:30, 5:45-7:00 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


You're invited to come to our next "Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys" workshop, when we focus on the life and legacy of Harriet Monroe. During this workshop we will:
  • Talk about aspects of Monroe's biography; 
  • Read selections of writings by Monroe; 
  • Read poems by great poets with whom she worked; 
  • Write poetry inspired by Harriet Monroe and her legacy. 
  • More info TBA. 
These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. We often use an upright piano during workshops as well. 

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 
Links:
  • "At 100, poem 'Chicago' still fierce, fresh" by Steve Johnson (Chicago Tribune)
  • Gwendolyn Brooks
  • "Chicago" by Carl Sandburg (Poetry, March 1914)
  • Harriet Monroe Biography (poetryfoundation.org)
  • Harriet Monroe Poetry Collection (The University of Chicago Library)
  • "Letter by Letter" by Richard Mertens (University of Chicago Magazine)
  • "A Lover" by Amy Lowell (Poetry, March 1917) 
  • "The Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock" by T.S. Eliot (Poetry, June 1915)
  • Poetry Foundation
  • Poetry Magazine
  • "Review of A Poet's Life by Harriet Monroe" by William Carlos Williams (The New Republic, 4/27/1938)
  • Carl Sandburg
  • Valeria and Other Poems by Harriet Monroe (A.C. McClurg & Company, 1893)
  • "We Real Cool" by Gwendolyn Brooks (Poetry, September 1959)
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Our Workshop on July 18th: The AACM

7/13/2014

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Friday, July 18th (4:30-5:30, 5:45-7:00 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public
You're invited to come to our next "Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys" workshop, when focus on the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM). During this workshop we will: 
  • Listen to music created by the AACM and its members; &
  • Collaboratively create music using a variety of instruments. 

July 18th is World Listening Day. It's a nice serendipity that this workshop, which focuses on listening and creating inventive music, happens on WLD. Check out the World Listening Project website for more info about World Listening Day! 

These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. We often use an upright piano during workshops as well. 


Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series.
 
Links: 
  • 8 Bold Souls
  • Muhal Richard Abrams
  • Fred Anderson
  • Art Ensemble of Chicago
  • Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM)
  • Renée Baker
  • Mwata Bowden
  • Blutopia: Visions of the Future and Revisions of the Past in the Work of Sun Ra, Duke Ellington, and Anthony Braxton by Graham Lock (Duke University Press)
  • Anthony Braxton Discography (restructures.net) 
  • Ari Brown
  • Kelan Phil Cohran
  • Ernest Dawkins
  • Dusty Groove
  • Douglas R. Ewart
  • Forces in Motion: Anthony Braxton and the Meta-reality of Creative Music: Interviews and Tour Notes, England 1985 by Graham Lock
  • Henry Threadgill (Pi Recordings)
  • Henry Threadgill's Zooid performs “All The Way Light Touch” (Roulette TV)
  • “I Dreamed of Other Worlds”: An Interview with Nicole Mitchell by Ellen Waterman, University of Guelph
  • Joseph Jarman Interview by Jason Gross (Perfect Sound Forever)
  • Jason Moran on Muhal Richard Abrams
  • Jazz Institute of Chicago
  • Jazz Record Mart
  • Josh Sinton on Ed Wilkerson, Jr. — A Gentleman from Chicago (destination-out.org)
  • George Lewis
  • Nicole Mitchell
  • NEA Jazz Masters: Interview with Muhal Richard Abrams
  • A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music by George Lewis (University of Chicago Press)
  • Roscoe Mitchell
  • Reckless Records
  • "The Sixties, Chicago, and the AACM" by Sam Ottenhoff
  • Sun Ra
  • The Tri-Centric Foundation
  • TUNTUI performs "Narrow Road, Suite 2" at PianoForte (4/9/2010)
  • Ann Ward
  • Edward Wilkerson, Jr. 
  • Saalik Ziyad

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Our Next Arts Workshop: Chicago Blues Legends

7/7/2014

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Friday, July 11th (4:30-5:30, 5:45-7:00 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public
You're invited to come to our next "Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys" workshop, when we celebrate the lives and legacies of these Blues legends -- Muddy Waters, Koko Taylor, Buddy Guy and Etta James: 
  • We listen to and talk about music by those four artists;   
  • We play several songs recorded by those artists; 
  • We create contour poems, blues renga and pattern poetry inspired by Chicago Blues artists. 

Borderbend is among the organizations that is presenting programming during the upcoming Armitage Arts Festival, on September 6th. Festival programming happens at four venues along Armitage Ave., including Rosa's Lounge -- which is one of Chicago's great blues venues. So the focus of our next workshop is a nice way to pay homage to the Blues, one of America's original art forms, in anticipation of the festival that will be happening in this neighborhood in less than two months! 

Note: There are so many great Blues artists who are associated with Chicago (besides the four listed abovbe), including Big Bill Broonzy, Paul Butterfield, Bo Diddley, Lightning Hopkins, Howlin' Wolf, Pinetop Perkins, Sugar Blue, Melvin Taylor, Junior Wells and many others. We will have more workshops that focus on other Chicago Blues artists in the future, for sure.  

These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. The fieldhouse has an upright piano that we have used during workshops as well. 

Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 
Links:
  • "13 Cartoon Portraits of Legendary Blues Artists" (Mother Jones)
  • Alligator Records 
  • Armitage Arts Festival
  • The Blues Foundation
  • Buddy Guy (Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)
  • Buddy Guy interview on Sound Opinions (1/5/2007)
  • Buddy Guy & Jimi Hendrix -- jam session
  • "Buddy Guy: A Man and His Blues" by Alan Di Perna (Guitar World Magazine)
  • "Buddy Guy Sets the Record Straight With New Book" by Greg Prato (4/25/2012 issue of Rolling Stone)
  • Buddy Guy's Legends
  • Buddy Guy's website
  • Cadillac Records (2008)
  • Chess Records feature (Sound Opinions #440)
  • Chicago Blues Festival
  • Delmark Records
  • Encore: Koko Taylor On Mountain Stage (NPR)
  • Etta James interviewed by Sue Simmons on Live At Five (1995)
  • "Hound Dog" performed by Big Mama Thornton, with Buddy Guy
  • "How the blues brothers behind Chess Records made all the right moves" by Elijah Wald (11/5/2010 edition of The Guardian)
  • I Am the Blues: The Willie Dixon Story by Willie Dixon with Don Snowden -- book review by Chris Goodrich (11/21/1990 edition of The Los Angeles Times)
  • "I'd Rather Go Blind" performed by Etta James (Montreaux, 1975)
  • "Illustrator William Stout's Legends of the Blues - exclusive excerpt" by Mark Frauenfelder (Boing Boing)
  • Interview with Robert Gordon, author of Can't Be Statisfied: The Life and Times of Muddy Waters (Fresh Air, 11/28/2008)
  • Koko Taylor Remembrance (Chicago Blues Guide)
  • The Last Waltz (bobmargolin.com)
  • "The Living Legends of Blues" with Muddy Waters, Koko Taylor, B.B. King, James Cotton, John Lee Hooker & Blind John Davis (1978)
  • Mississippi Blues Trail
  • "Pop Music’s Dreamgirl Awakens Her Earthy Side" by Alan Light (The New York Times, 11/14/2008)
  • "Queen of the Blues: Koko Taylor Talks About Her Subjects" by James Plath (Clockwatch Review)
  • Rosa's Lounge
  • Save Muddy Waters' House
  • "Ten Years Ago" -- Buddy Guy & Junior Wells (Live at the Montreaux Jazz Festival, 1974)
  • When I Left Home: My Story by Buddy Guy and David Ritz -- book review by Arlene R. Weiss (Guitar International, 9/11/2012)
  • Willie Dixon's Blues Heaven Foundation
  • Windy City Blues Society
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Our Next Arts Workshop: The Staple Singers, Don Cornelius & Frankie Knuckles 

6/26/2014

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Friday, June 27 (4:30-5:30, 5:45-7:00 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


You're invited to come to our next "Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys" workshop, when we focus on the lives and legacies of these musical legends -- The Staple Singers, Don Cornelius, and Frankie Knuckles. During this workshop we will: 
  • Listen to and talk about music created, produced, and presented by The Staple Singers, Don Cornelius, and Frankie Knuckles. We will also watch a few short videos that involve those music icons. 
  • Talk about the some of the cultural and political dynamics that pertain to their work (e.g. the Civil Rights movement, elements of Chicago's cultural landscape)
  • Create visual art and creative writings inspired by those American originals.  

These arts workshops are free and open to the public, and all ages welcomed. Participants are invited to bring writing utensils and paper, although supplies will be provided if needed. Sometimes we play music and explore other art forms, so if you have a musical instrument that you'd like to bring, or if you have art supplies (e.g. colored pencils, pastels, etc.) you can bring those. The fieldhouse has an upright piano that we have using during workshops as well. 
Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 

Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 
Links:
  • "10 Things You Didn't Know About Mavis Staples" by Eric R. Danton (Paste Magazine)
  • Don Cornelius: Peace, love, soul -- and civil rights" by Greg Kot (Chicago Tribune, 2/1/2012)
  • "Jeff Tweedy And Mavis Staples Talk You Are Not Alone" by Evan Schlansky (American Songwriter)
  • "Frankie Knuckles Mural Goes Up in Prime Logan Spot For Graffiti Artists" by Darryl Holliday (DNAinfo Chicago)
  • "Freedom Highway" performed during the Summit For Civil Rights at the LBJ Presidential Library (2008)
  • "How a Family Spread Its Gospel: ‘I’ll Take You There,’ by Greg Kot" by Dwight Garner (The New York Times, 2/20/2014)
  • "I'll Take You There" by Frankie Knuckles, featuring Jamie Principle
  • Mavis Staples and Jeff Tweedy perform "You Are Not Alone"
  • Muscle Shoals (dir. Greg "Freddy" Camalier, 2013) 
  • Q&A: Greg Kot–I’ll Take You There: Mavis Staples, The Staple Singers, and the March up Freedom’s Highway (SoulTrain.com)
  • The Staple Singers (Stax Museum)
  • The Staple Singers cover "For What It's Worth" (Neilyoung.com"
  • The Staple Singers performing "I'll Take You There" at the 15th Grammy Awards
  • Uncloudy Day by the Staple Singers
  • "Where Do I Start With Frankie Knuckles?" by Nicholas Fonseca (Slate)
  • "The Whistle Song" by Frankie Knuckles
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Our Next Workshop: The Art Ensemble of Chicago

5/12/2014

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You're invited to come to our next Chicago Heroes & Arts Adventures workshop --
Monday, May 12 (6:00-7:15, 7:30-8:30 p.m.)

Mozart Park Fieldhouse
2036 N. Avers Ave.
Chicago, IL   60647

all ages, free & open to the public


During our next workshop we focus on the Art Ensemble of Chicago. We will: 
  • Listen to and talk about music by that legendary musical group; 
  • Talk about how the AEC connects with other people and things (e.g. examples of its influences and who it has influenced; how it pertains other musical ensembles such as the Sun Ra Arkestra and the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians); 
  • Talk about examples of AEC members' other artistic projects (such as Roscoe Mitchell's Nonaah and Lester Bowie's Brass Fantasy); 
  • Make music with voice, percussion and other instruments.  
Location: Mozart Park is in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. It's on the north side of Armitage Ave. -- several blocks east of Pulaski Rd., just south of Dickens and Shakespeare Streets. Our workshop series happens in the room to the left of fieldhouse lobby; some workshop sessions may happen outside in the park, weather permitting.  

Transportation & parking: Mozart Park can be reached by public transportation (such as the #73 Armitage Ave. bus, and not far from the Logan Square and Western Ave. stations on the CTA's blue line. Mozart Park has a parking lot on Armitage, east of Avers. 

Registering for Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys: You can register for this workshop series at the Chicago Park District website. 


Additional info: You can contact us by clicking here (if you have questions about this workshop or to RSVP). Click here to find out more about the Chicago Heroes & Arts Journeys workshop series. 


Links: 
  • Art Ensemble of Chicago website
  • The Art Ensemble of Chicago (NPR)
  • Art Ensemble of Chicago and Cecil Taylor, Live in Paris (dir. Frank Cassenti, 1984)
  • Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians
  • Brigitte Fontaine and the Art Ensemble of Chicago, 1969 (BoingBoing)
  • Famadou Don Moye
  • Kahil El'Zabar
  • Kelan Phil Cohran
  • Joseph Jarman: Buddhist Practice
  • "A Maestro Of Esoteric Invention Becomes Accessible" by Adam Shatz (The New York Times, 1998)
  • Malachi Favors Maghustus
  • A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music by George Lewis (University of Chicago Press)
  • Rétrospective: Brigitte Fontaine et Areski
  • Review of A Jackson in Your House by Dominique Leone (Pitchfork Media)
  • Roscoe Mitchell
  • Roscoe Mitchell by Anthony Coleman (BOMB)


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