And then…
Artists SPEAK in response to the COVID Epidemic by publishing their thoughts online
And Then is a phrase that marks a turning point.
In a historical record, this is when rubber hits road, shit hits fan, person meets maker. When writing a letter, this is how you declare that no one will believe what happens next. If you’re sitting around a campfire with friends, this is the part where the ghost story gets really good. In a court room, you now direct the jury to crucial evidence. During a heated argument, you list out a series of wrongs, and every time you use this phrase your voice gets a little louder.
We need to speak our truth. It’s important and it has consequences.
When we hit a turning point, we may be gripped by fear; but we also yearn for the possibilities brought on by change. Everything is in question, and speaking our truth gives it gravity. It reminds us who we are and where we are, in a time of deliberate chaos that is designed to make us forget both.
Telling our own stories means we control the narrative. And it means we have a better chance of harnessing the turning point.
Speak your truth.
Gretchen Hasse
Curator
October 2020
Scroll down to see each Artist’s Statement for this online publication/exhibition
I’ve been thinking a lot about what will come next (after COVID). These are weird times. I think COVID will make us aware of the others in relation to our selves. We wake up, work, sleep, have a couple of beers on the weekend, and share a little with our loved ones every once in a while.
Even in the middle of all of this, I was able to create meaningful connections with other people. Galleries, artist-run spaces, and museums are empty. It’s you against the other person and the artwork. In that situation, really good conversations thrived between the people in the space, the art, and me. Finally, I’m making friends in Chicago.
Based on these events I decided to ask the ones I don’t know, how are they? Are they ok? That’s how this project starts...in the need to talk to the other, to recognize them, to befriend them.
Venezuelan, b. 1994, Chicago Based
BFA at University of Los Andes
Alonso Galué is a multidisciplinary artist whose experimental use of traditional painting and sculpture articulates speeches on labor, existential crisis, and totalitarianism. Pulitzer Prize winner Jerry Saltz commented on Instagram that Galue’s work is “a strong voice of the future.”
I am currently a senior at Saint Xavier University, pursuing a degree in Studio Art and a minor in Graphic Design. I enjoy experimenting with different mediums however, my passion is Photography. I spend most of my time creating portraits/self- portraits, street photography, and conceptual photography.
Hamsen Peeler | @hammyjam
10 Aug 20
Chicago weeps instead
and her sky sickens greener-
5 years in her arms
and a twister finally caught up
from tornado alley.
The trees cling to the leaves
Being whipped away from them.
I succumb
to peril
•
My employment of 5 years
gently tugged from my hands
in sleep-
The list of goals on my fridge,
scrawled in January, before
the implosion, includes
-find new career path.
It grins in manifestation.
Time to go
•
Glass fragments coat the Mag Mile,
a glittering snow.
A storm, preventable by
abstaining from murder,
or a sliver of accountability.
Or even just
Giving a shit about those
with weighted collars,
Gasping
Riotous breaths
echoing demands
heard only by those
whose ears were already to the
ground
in unison:
Are You Ready
to Start Listening??
As soon as quarantine hit, I started doing yoga to make sure I was moving my body every day. I set a goal to be able to do a headstand, and after a couple months I could. I drew pieces of that pose, and then what I hope for the future: overthrowing gravity and all the other bullsh*t systems that work together to hold our community down.
_______________
Hamsen Peeler makes to-do lists in Chicago everyday, and usually completes them. They write poetry, make visual art, and meticulously look for ways to improve their surroundings (hence the lists). Sometimes this method is effective, other times not so much (but they’re still hopeful and doing their best).
@akira.portraits | akira-portraits.com
My photos tell the story of People tired and frustrated with the way the world is. My work tells the story of People wanting change in the world despite the risks. People are willing to take risks for their liberation.
Akira is an Undocumented artist and farmer from Chicago. Work focuses on the decolonization of the Americas through the mobilization of native youths.
@redflags.everywhere | andreacardinal.com
AND THEN:
WE WERE TEARGASSED
We left our self-imposed quarantine to attend a Community Solidarity Response Network event downtown Toledo, OH on May 30th, 2020. We assembled at the police headquarters and when the permit and programming were up, we marched in the streets around the block. The surge of joy that we were collectively creating was punctured by wooden bullets that met us at the corner. Running away from the bullets at our backs, my family and I were shot with teargas canisters from our right—without warning, while we were on the sidewalk, fleeing.
I carried this Red Flag at the march—its inaugural use—partly as a warning about the fascist terror that up until that point, I had been passively observing. I also use the flag pole as a cane to help with balance, which I struggle with due to physical disabilities and pain.
After being teargassed, we poured water on this fabric to wipe our faces and hands. The chemical smell still lingers.
The question that this show asks about "what happens next?" is exactly what my project, Red Flags Everywhere is about. It is an online, crowd-sourced interactive project based on the writings of Hannah Arendt and the recognition of fascism in America today. I have instructional videos for how to make different kinds of red flags from small, hand-held flags, to house flags, and oversize banners.
“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the convinced Communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction (i.e., the reality of experience) and the distinction between true and false (i.e., the standards of thought) no longer exist.”
“True goal of totalitarian propaganda is not persuasion, but organization of the polity. ... What convinces masses are not facts, and not even invented facts, but only the consistency of the system of which they are presumably part.”
— Hannah Arendt
Every time that something happens that feels wrong—for all the big and small injustices—I ask that you make a red flag. Any time something happens with our government, with the police, in your community, even with your friends and family, that feels like it's 'off', I ask that you manifest that feeling you have tangibly. Note the inconsistencies of the system.
Collaborator, accomplice, artist, designer, & educator. Andrea Cardinal is Assistant Professor of Design at Bowling Green State University and Co-Director of Talking Dolls Studio in Detroit. MFA in 2D Design at Cranbrook Academy of Art, BFA Graphic Design and BA History of Art from the University of Michigan.
@andreakaspryk | andreakaspryk.com
At a group life drawing session, I was pleasantly surprised to see gender minority community members pose together. I hope to see more such examples of broadening our sense of community and art in a post-pandemic world.
_______________
Most of my paintings, drawings and prints tell a story, and in the art world these are called narrative paintings. My past interest and pursuit of writing and studying literature informs my desire to tell a story through images. Invariably, though not always, I tell my own personal story as a transgender person through my art.
This scene represents the frustrating struggle that I as a transgender person experienced in trying to adhere to gender cultural conventions of masculine or feminine appearance and behavior.
For me this caused frustration because the prevailing system of gender expression and appearance is polarized, promoting an either/or model of identity, which I find (and likely most people) find limiting, uncomfortable, and which they do not align with.
In the painting, the yin-yang ball held by the squatting figure represents a cultural model of gender balance and calm that can prove harmful and elusive; hence, it is being cast down into the maw of the gender polarizing monster, which would otherwise consume, destroying the person who cannot conform to its cultural model of gender.
A focus on Beauty during these chaotic times. In the worst of times, it is a time of artists. We must make and give a reason for people to move forward.
Often hope and faith go hand in hand. “To hope is to have faith in the future.”
_______________
I am an artist who often applies more Traditional methods to his Art. My subject matters are often nature and life itself. I come from a simpler background in the countryside of Maryland. This has given me a sense of respect for the world around us.
Melon Fernsebner | @melon.a.friend | sferns7.wixsite.com/melonfriend
NO FUTURE / ONLY TRANS* : PREQUEL TO PENISWAVE MANIFESTO
Katya Zamolodchikova knows, “If you got one foot in the past, and the other in the future, you’re pissing on today.1”
I don’t think in terms of time. All I know is: I’m a trans* faggot. Disidentification of the past leaves too much room for the future. For the present. For the body in the present and the future. For the trans* in the present and the future.
Since the hospital I’ve been living day to day. I never stopped. I never found a healthier way. I smoke too much instead. Day comes, and I see today. I see myself, I know one thing: I’m a trans* faggot.
I hear these things, I don’t know how to respond. I see these things, I don’t know how to respond. I can only relate through my body. Relativity of present grips faster and stronger than the dysphoric past the erased and illuminated.
Object and my body, objectifying my body. Object of my body, only in today. I only know today. the traces of durational work, the performance that lasted all day - the body knows, knows more than me. It shows its time it owns its time. That I should not, would not. And afterwards, there is no comfort space but the lines of text the folds and bones have to teach. My investigation is inconclusive: I’m a trans* faggot. I could never get it right.
Approaching another I stand a trans*. I have no chance. I only know them in comparison to my body, its literate histories.
Compared, defined, inconclusive: I am a trans* faggot. Still, my only object of knowledge.
Comparative and undefined, acknowledged and tolerated, identity slowly obliterated. Speed has nothing to do with it. Response and mimesis of untranslated wrinkles defines the objectified objecthood of the trans* body-world. The only way of knowing is of my material. The only knowing is of my objectified body - comparatively with others.
The only thing I understand is: I’m a trans* faggot. Not without the others being cis. Being straight. I couldn’t be trans* without them as the cis. Without them as the straight. So I know it all.
She is the woman, because she knows the man. He is the man, because he knows of woman.
The Solar Anus swallows its self hole. The mimetic Jew is in denial.
I can only exist as the trans* because of the cis in me.
I can only be trans* by knowing the cis outside of me.
I can only be a faggot through banishing the straight.
I can only see with the eyes of comparative objectification.
My past is erased and my history pre-arranged.
I’ve lived my future many times over. I haven’t lived it yet as a trans* faggot. I have lived my past many times as a trans* faggot. Not in real life.
I live today as a trans* faggot by the definition of myself as I was yesterday. Am I erasing? Highlighting? I objectify. I compare myself. Subconsciously highlighting the erasure.
Planning tomorrow’s simulation: trans* identity. Planning tomorrow’s yesterday memory: trans* faggot.
The future is trans* - that’s all I know. That’s all I care to know.
That’s all I choose to understand.
It shows me it all, anyways.
What do I know? I’m a trans* faggot.
Katya knows, “I was a short, fat, slut”. She really knows everything.
Through myself, I know you.
I don’t know myself, and I don’t know you.
I only know a trans* faggot.
I know everything.
1Katya Zamolodchikova, (Two-Time RuPaul’s Drag Race Contestant) quote in
YouTube series wiht Trixie Mattel, “UNHhhh”, episode 64.
________________________________
My work was both created during the pandemic confusion and lockdown/quarantine, using what I had available. These works demonstrate the mentality I’ve been in since COVID became such a threat to society... express these things through my work as I address future, identity, and what it means to live in our strange society as a trans* person today.
My fear of the post-quarantine world, is that our interactions and self-image will be forever morphed. We’ve gotten so used to masked faces (eyes only), interacting through screens, and avoiding strangers in the past few months. How can we view ourselves in this void?I hope these impulses can be reversed once we return to some kind of normalcy. Online, I’ve seen many posts claiming that ‘things will never go back to normal.’ I don’t fully believe that, as our traditional structures are extremely resistant to change. But, I do have hope that things can go back to a better normal. Normal has always failed so many anyways.
_______________
Anneasha Hogan is a Chicago-based artist. She graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2017 with a BFA in studio arts.
@baysanyuksel | baysanyuksel.com
I’m imagining a better world with understanding, a better communication, respect and compassion. This work shows that we are the ones who would realize that world. There is only one world for us to live in and it is in here; wherever we are.
_______________
Baysan Yüksel completed her master’s degree in Painting at Marmara University in 2010. She has exhibited her works in Turkey and abroad such as New York, Bristol, Amsterdam, Berlin and Barcelona. Yüksel produces works in multidisciplinary areas such as drawing, collage, artist books, video, installation, writing and she illustrates books.
@benformation
This work represents one of the huge problems of our time - plastic pollution in the oceans. It also represents a hopeful solution. Ben has been collecting discarded objects since 2014 and recycling them and/or making art out of them. These items were gathered in 2019 in the beach city of Marina del Rey, near the water’s edge. The piece shows the small colorful plastic items He documents his environmental work on Instagram. Ben has saved thousands and thousands of items from being washed into the oceans. He has a bright vision of the future in which people no longer pollute, the carbon is all captured, and trees cover the planet. He wants a world where humans know what to do to save the earth and they do it. He is taking action by picking up the trash himself, promoting awareness of the problem through his art and his Instagram, and teaching about all things environmental to “the younger generation” as a volunteer teacher at a local summer camp.
_______________
Ben Novak is a 22 year old artist and environmentalist on the Autism Spectrum. He has been gathering discarded items around his city of Los Angeles, and on his travels, since 2014. He creates art from many of the items, and recycles the rest.
@jenformation
Ben and I both imagine a world after Covid 19 in which humans are kind and thoughtful about how we treat each other and the environment. In my dream world, creative people have more avenues to share their creations and their visions with others.
I created the Welcome to My World art show in 2017 to provide a venue for my son and 2 other artists on the Autism Spectrum who were creating huge amounts of art. The artists kept all the money from sales, we had a big party catered by a catering company staffed entirely by individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.
A world where powerful people exploit more vulnerable people is a scary world, and in order to create something better, where people are celebrated and represented, we need to take action now, where we are. If every human takes action, using whatever resources and talents they have, to lift others up, good things will happen. Our family supports and encourages Ben in his artistic and environmental efforts, and over the past 4 years we have given 8 artists on the spectrum a place to show and sell their work. It has been the most fun and satisfying thing I have ever done.
The confidence of the artists grows as they see their work being appreciated and purchased. My dream is that the little ripples of good feeling and hope that come from being represented and appreciated will empower these artists to go out into the world and become bigger waves of confidence and creativity.
_______________
Jenny Novak is the Creator and Curator of the Welcome To My World Art Show, and the mother of Artist and Environmentalist Ben Novak. Being Ben’s mom and advocate is her main gig. Her heroes are Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Buddhist nun Pema Chodron.
The way forward for me changed drastically when I found out I had a heart condition and that morphed into needing an emergency pacemaker. I’m a nurse too, I thought this piece was going to be more the way nursing goes into Covid than how *I* go into the next phase. Like me, it has morphed into where I was and how I get out.
_______________
I'm a photographer, animal lover, horse trainer with a bent sense of humor and a semi functional body. I see the world a little bit sideways.
@_bretttaylor
bretttaylorprints.com
The body, as object, exists in a constant state of becoming. A process of uninterrupted bodybuilding by which a person orders and reorders the self, responding to resistance. Negotiations with the fluctuating spatial conditions, the body is forced to resist the environmental restrictions in an effort to grow beyond them. This stimulus for physical change is only obstructed by the will of the mind. The potential self is never realized exasperated by the failure to achieve maximum capacity. Beings strive to identify the physical boundaries that define them only to identify new ones that confine them. Growth centered around inadequacies seeks failure to strive for infinite improvement. The tension between the interior and exterior being leaves the body in a developmental state, never quite complete.
_______________
Brett Taylor is an artist and art educator from South Florida. He earned his BFA from the University of Florida and is currently pursuing his MFA at The Ohio State University. Taylor’s transdisciplinary practice investigates the continuous construction of the self through lenses of queerness, masculinity, and ability.
@ChelcieSPorter.art |
Youtube: RootsandCultureTravel
These pieces reflect the future that we face which will be a need to return to the past. Black Americans as seeking repatriation in larger numbers and will begin leaving the United States to return to Africa.
Chelcie S Porter is a black female photographer traveling the world with a goal of living well and telling the stories of women and documenting her transitions along the way.
Andre Vasquez
My Agitation
I remember when my worst stress was having bad credit/
Now I find myself leading my people through a pandemic.
It hurts my heart to look at my kids.
These beautiful, mindful little sprouts that my wife and I brought into this world.
Into this world.
Into THIS world.
I see them now, in this home, and every second I wonder what their world will be like. Seeing them grow is bittersweet, as it is for all parents. In a pandemic, however, that feeling is more pronounced. The pain is deeper and there is a feeling of guilt. We have seen how profit driven motives have ruined our society and moved us further away from being one whole community, yet here we are bringing babies into THIS world.
The havenots have even less.
The haves are using every bit of strength they have to bring things “back to normal,” ignorant of the fact that we can’t ever go back.
We can’t go back after so many injustices have been made worse
due to Capitalism and Covid.
So many have died.
Due to Covid.
Due to racism, homophobia, xenophobia, misogyny, and other forms of bigotry.
Now it’s all on smartphone camera footage for the world to see, over and over again.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt once said, “We have nothing to fear but fear itself.” The irrational fear that others feel has effects on our society, and in 2020 we are all afraid of the consequences of those fears. We have a President who is an apex opportunist. Someone who feeds off those fears and utilizes them for personal gain, all while being supported by a party that puts power over patriotism and over people. There is no going “back to normal”.
What we can do is adapt to a new normal. We can create a new normal together. We can focus on community, on supporting those who need it the most, on saving the environment we need to survive. The same environment that our kids will inherit.
We CAN do that.
Yet in government there are so many that lack the will or creativity to take us there. There are many who lack the courage that comes with a purpose larger than comfort. They jockey for position while speaking in platitudes, knowing that they won’t push too hard.
On our side of the equation? We have many who understand we need fundamental, radical change, but they are so overwhelmed with just trying to survive, that the time they can invest needs a return they can see, so as to feel that their time is being spent well. It drives many to go to the protests, to put up the window signs, but it becomes more challenging to long term build infrastructure to build a movement that is not only agile, but also resolute. The same return isn’t visible or felt, because we fight for change we may not live to see. So many impatiently go from issue to issue, while those in power build in place so as to reach higher levels of power so to influence change.
I find myself at the intersection of all those realities as I govern, with the added variable being that those who I serve have a multitude of perspectives. As a representative, I have to walk the line of truly listening to every view, and finding the opportunities to find common ground and move people. It takes patience, empathy, and courage. It also takes more than one person. It takes a community and organization.
This is what my mind screams to me as I do every possible function of my role - from potholes to public safety - looking for those opportunities to listen, to teach, to move, and to build.
I know why I do it.
Even as I lose more and more time with my sprouts, I work with every last bit of energy to give them more time. So that they can find their moments of joy, of love, of life, as they continue the fight towards solidarity. I lose time with them so that I can give them more time.
My parents did it for me - I will do it for them. I am in this position in this time of pandemic for a reason. I am thankful for it and never take that for granted.
I remember when my worst stress was having bad credit/
Now I find myself leading my people through a pandemic.
Andre Vasquez is a father, husband, community organizer, former rapper, and current Alderman of the 40th Ward in Chicago.
@kennethandreys | kennethandreys.com
When I started this project, it was just to correspond with family and friends in an amusing way that addressed the current global situation. Because I wanted to send a personal message to each recipient, I decided that a postcard would be ideal to use for this project; not to mention I would design it to my own specifications.
There is something magical about the written word and the intimacy that it conveys; let’s not forget as well the nostalgia because who really corresponds like this anymore? Over time the project has grown from a correspondence for a handful of people, to a printed postcard sent to now over 100 recipients in 12 states and 9 countries. In the end I hope I was able to give everyone a smile, a challenge, and a reminder that even in a global pandemic we will prevail.
_______________
Kenneth Andreys is a visual artist located in Chicago, Illinois. With a BA, Columbia College Chicago and an MFA, Academy of Art University, San Francisco. Kenneth is known for his eclectic approach to Art & Design; which has taken him to his current endeavor simply known as PROJECT 2.
Toma Smith
DEFENDING THE DAVE MATTHEWS BAND
CHARACTERS
TASHA - Black, 37, female, temp receptionist BERT - White, 46, male, IT director
JAY - White, 50, male, IT tech support
LOCATION
Casimir University, Chicago, Illinois – a private institution known for superb academics
PLACE
Front desk/lobby of Casimir University’s communications department
TIME
Day 2 for the three employees who continue to come to work due to the COVID-19 protocol.
NOTES
(--) indicates interruption
Lights up on the office lobby, where TASHA, cute and mature with groomed chin-length black hair, diamond-esque stud earrings, dressed in a crisp white button-down and black jacket, pants, and shoes sits at the front desk and looks busy. BERT, a silver fox with great bone structure wearing stylish cowboy boots and a bluish-gray pressed button-down with gray pants that could pass for jeans, enters from stage right holding an empty coffee cup and plops down in a chair (stage right) in the lobby. TASHA hears him and looks over her shoulder at him, then looks at her computer screen.
BERT
These professors!
TASHA
(turns office chair toward BERT)
Seems like some of them been around since da Vinci. (beat) I feel for you.
BERTThe problem isn’t getting all the classes online, but teaching these Grumpy Old Men [and Women] how to teach online. (beat) Teaching them how to teach online isn’t my job.
TASHA
I could only imagine. (thinks) My sister is a late baby boomer and I had to explain to her the other day what a hashtag is.
BERT
You know what I’m dealing with. (beat) They’re gonna have to use their TAs to teach them.
TASHA
(beat) I’ve already finished the spreadsheets that list all the faculty, their contact info, and theirregistered students for next quarter. I hope that helps.
BERT
(beat) You should go home. (pause) I’m not your supervisor, but you should go home.
TASHA
I’m scheduled until this Friday.
BERT (perplexed) ...
TASHA
If I don’t work, I don’t get paid! (beat) Welcome to my world, the world of temping!
BERT
You’ll find something else.
TASHA
I hope so! (yawns and stretches arms out) I didn’t sleep at all last night. (beat) I had to listen to Dave Matthews Band this morning to calm my nerves.
BERT
(stands up) (beat) DAVE MATTHEWS?!
TASHA
Yeah, Dave Matthews!
BERT
We can’t be friends!(BERT exits stage right.)
TASHA (confused) ...
JAY enters from stage right, holding a cup of coffee. JAY is cool as fuck, looks like he bought his outfit for the Ozzfest in 1996 and never purchased new clothes, has a black chain wallet, small silver hoop earring in his right earlobe, and chin-length curly black hair.
JAY
(giggling) Time for a refill! (pause) (to TASHA) What’s wrong?
TASHA
Nothing, just tired. Maybe I should have a cup of coffee! (pause) I didn’t get any sleep last night.
JAY
I know what you mean, I had four beers last night instead of my normal two!
TASHA
Four beers? I could never drink four beers (pause) on a weeknight. (smiles and slightly laughs)
JAY (laughs)
BERT returns from stage right.
BERT
Are you all laughing about Dave Matthews?
JAY
Dave Matthews?
TASHA
Yeah, I like the Dave Matthews Band! A while back, I saw them in my hometown, Louisville. They were awesome! (thinks) Willie Nelson opened for them.
JAY
Willie Nelson?
TASHA
Yeah. (beat) My stepmother likes Willie Nelson. (smiles) His cameo in Half Baked was hilarious! I could watch that movie over and over again.
BERT and JAY sit in chairs (stage left) in the lobby. TASHA turns office chair to face BERT and JAY.
BERT
(beat) Let’s get back to Dave Matthews Band
TASHA
What’s wrong with Dave Matthews?
JAY
I can’t believe what I am hearing.
BERT
(to TASHA) You don’t know?
JAY
(to TASHA) When they were in Chicago, their tour bus - -
BERT
stopped on one of those bridges with grates and emptied their toilet - -
TASHA
WHAT?!
BERT
And all their poop and piss landed on a boat full of tourists!
JAY
(laughs) I think it was 800 pounds of shit!
TASHA
Oh my God! That’s disgusting! I didn’t know about that.
JAY
(Still laughing) You are definitely not from here!
BERT
Look it up!
JAY
Type in Dave Matthews Band, Chicago. (laughs)
BERT
You know what would have been worse? If they stopped their bus and got out and did an acoustic set!
TASHA and JAY (laugh)
TASHA
(contains laughter/thinks) (to JAY) Oh, I meant to tell you I watched a documentary online about the Spanish flu you were telling me about.
JAY
(beat) Yeah, the Spanish flu started in 1918. (beat) Every 100 years for something like this – a virus comes along and affects the whole world. (beat) I was talking to my parents this weekend and they said they never been through anything like this, like --
BERT
(beat) The coronavirus.
TASHA
(to JAY and BERT) Hopefully, these shutdowns will contain it. (beat) The Spanish flu was awful. This doctor on there said some patients who had it would bleed from their eyes, nose, and ears.
JAY
That’s so gross.
TASHA
(puts her hands on her face) Blood coming out of people’s faces! (removes hands) I can’t think of anything grosser than that.
BERT
(to JAY and TASHA) I can, the Dave Matthews Band!
(TASHA, JAY, and BERT laugh.) (Blackout.)
END
_______________
Toma is a Chicago-based actor and playwright with a B.A. in communication from the University of Louisville.
@flash_abc
artisticbombingcrew.com
My hope is that my work inspires others to reach for their full potential. I created art at a young age, then stopprd. I felt I had become a productive member of society yet always felt the need to do more.
I want my art to look as if a graffiti artist did it, because that’s where I started.
My hope after the virus it for a more pleasant world. The hate that we see now is only temporary. It will be our job as community builders to remember all that was lost, and to remember everyone’s dreams and inspiration before 2020.
We as artists can do It because of our passion for life. I was born in 1967, the summer of love. I feel passionate to work with others who are willing to do it in the name of peace and harmony.
Born in Humboldt Park and raised in Logan Square. Gabriel “FLASH” Carrasquillo JR. has lived in Logan Square since 1971. In 1982 he joined a one of the first Graffiti Crews in Chicago and Logan Square. He is known not only for documenting his own crew, but other crews around the city. He has a vast collection of 80’s pictures that have been used in publications such as the Fly Paper and Roger Gastons History of American Graffiti. ABC has been documented as one of the first crews to paint on the Blue Line in order to bring art to the masses.
Dark vision of the current state of affairs. A metaphoric transformation.
_______________
I grew up in Chicago, studied at Columbia College Chicago and SAIC. Currently living in New Orleans. I am interested in the feminine perspective in history and mythology.
@juancarlosperez927
juan-carlosperez.com
In my art investigation, I challenge how perspectives today continue to be shaped by a past colonial rule: A blueprint of laws that have created and normalized a culture or narrative built to dominate and create systems of power that have led to today’s social & class divides and issues that have historically disenfranchised communities of color. Perspectives determined to own through aggression and dominance. The same social/racial issues that incoming immigrants and new generations of Mexicanos still face today.
We are in a time and history where, we have found inner-strength rooted in our culture, ethnicity and indigenous-ancestry. What I hope to see happening next is how we utilize the tools and resources passed on to us and how we will manifest, fight and change a structure built to dominate us.
_______________
Juan-Carlos Perez was born in Juarez, Chihuahua Mexico and raised in California. He received a degree in Fine Art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. His work has been on exhibit throughout the United States and most recently at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago.
@streetartistjr | @buchen.kate
We met on February 7th in Chicago, in an Artist friend’s studio. We spent that week end together, visiting the Art Institute and Shed Aquarium. Kate lives in Florida and is a collage artist and painter. I live in Evanston and collect Art and paint.
Kate sent many collage post cards, to me during this time, along with talking an hour every day on the phone and texting.
Kate returned to Chicago, in Early March, and stayed with me for ten days. As with all Long-distance relationships, we were planning to continuing to fly back and forth. Then on March 17th, the world started to change, Covid 19 started to shut down the World.
We talked every day on the phone for hours and continued to plan our future together.
We finally planned on meeting again in early June. Kate booked a flight, she was told they were practicing safe distancing, when she got on the plane it was full, she then felt unsafe and got off the plane. I drove down to Florida in mid- July to pick her up, and she came back to Chicago with me. Covid has made times difficult. Long distance relationships are difficult, and most people keep telling us to find someone where you live, but we continue on.
While the future is always uncertain, we still Love each other, and need Hope. This collaborative piece is one way for us as a couple to have hope for a future together. I created a studio space for Kate in my home, where in the future, we will hopefully be collaborating on many other pieces of Art. Hopefully when Agitator puts the show up in the Gallery for public viewing, Kate will be there to meet everyone and see all the work in person.
The piece we collaborated on is of Kate, at Evanston Hospital. She is better now, and recovered, I was by her side during this. The piece is a photo I took and over-painted, Kate added the Angels.
Artist Kate Buchen Studied painting at RSID and graduated from the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design. Her work has been shown in Chicago, recently she has been creating collage postcards which she sells and sends out to friends using vintage magazine photos. Junad Rizki collects Art and paints for fun. He graduated in Architecture and Structural Engineering, from the University of Michigan.
We are fighting you now
We are fighting you so we can breathe
You stand on our chest
You rise, we fall, and we sink deep deep deep
You and your piggyback crowd
That likes to get fat off our meat
It didn’t have to go this way at all
But you forced us into your groove of greed and doubt
What else can we do and not lash out
Like a spring of hope that’s pushed down too long
We’ll break free
You are fighting us now
You are fighting evolve from this beast Just try to dream bigger
The world can be more than you see It didn’t have to go this way at all If together we learned to bounce so high off each other
We’d reach so high ‘til every step was divine
Like a spring of hope that’s pushed down too long
We’ll break free
We are light as a feather
_______________
Lyrics & Music by: Ami Saraiya
Song Video Written & Animated by: Gretchen Hasse
Music Recorded & Produced by: Mark Messing
Music Mixed by: Neil Strauch
Ami Saraiya: Vocals/Accordion
Courtney Glascoe: Vocals
Gary Kalar: Guitar
Marc Piane: Bass
Shirley Rogiers: Vocals/Glockenspiel
Daniel Villarreal-Carrillo: Drums/Percussion
_______________
I wrote this song dreaming of a future where we no longer have to fight oppression, racism, and greed for everyone to be equally valued. Where we see each other for the divine beings that we all are. I imagine the places we’ll go when we finally realize that our true power lies in our love and cooperation with each other.
My work is deeply personal, and most of it was made during quarantine and while going through a personal crisis. These pieces were made after revisiting notes I took while reading literature, including Susan Sontag’s In America and George Eliot’s Middlemarch. The work is about my hopes, dreams, and fears about the future and myself.
Leah Busby was born in Michigan in 1987. She worked as a civil rights lawyer for 8 years before developing her art practice. Leah will be starting a master’s degree in folklore this fall at Berkeley. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
The incompetence and arrogance displayed in the current administration’s handling of the pandemic (among other things) shows we need more humane, progressive, inclusive leadership.
I thought I would envision a future United States that would elect a woman as both president and vice president. Although I don’t believe women are morally superior to men, I do believe because of the socialization of both sexes, women have to be more careful and circumspect than men do-- women of color even more so than white women. I think those acquired skills of women will be beneficial in our future leaders.
Hopefully, when the next pandemic inevitably occurs, our leaders then will be more responsible and humane than our leadership has been during the COVID-19 pandemic.
_______________
The process of art itself fascinates me. I am motivated to create something more than surface art, to do work that withstands multiple viewings and interpretations. Painting can be about revelation: revealing the artist’s mind, the hidden world of the subject, the raw, the veiled, the unspoken. In my figurative work, I am interested in my subject’s complexities and vulnerabilities; in what causes people to behave the way they do; in the myriad ways people interact with each other; and in the subtle but unavoidable demands of functioning—both acceptably and unacceptably— in one’s society.
@itsmonicatrinidad | monicatrinidad.com
Both of these illustrations were created as “rapid responses” at the start of the pandemic. We Keep Each Other Safe speaks to the inspiring acts of kindness and brilliance that community members extended towards each other and especially immunocompromised and elderly folks. Free Them All was a call to remember women, elderly folks, and survivors of DV locked up when we talk about prisons and COVID-19.
Monica Trinidad is a queer Latinx artist and organizer in Chicago. She is the co- founder of For the People Artists Collective, Brown and Proud Press, and the People’s Response Team. She is currently an emerging Justseeds Artists Cooperative member.
Joshua Mei | @humgry_art | artstation.com/humgry_art
Single Soul
It was a Friday night on the beach by the lake. Mid-September. They had a case of Redd’s Apple Ale. And they had each other. It was just him and her under the sky again. Five years since The Year of Visual Acuity, ten since they last spoke to each other.
“I remember the first time I came to this beach fifteen years ago, the sand reached further out. Now there’s barely any beach for us to walk on, unless I brought us to a different beach. But I’m pretty sure we are in the same one,” he said.
“I’m sure you haven’t mistaken,” she responded.
“Must be climate change, but I don’t know how much it affects Lake Michigan’s sea level. Wanna grab a seat over there?”
“Okay.”
They sat down on a stone bench. The cool sensation from the surface pierced through their jeans. They did not sit super close together. He didn’t want her to feel uncomfortable.
“You want one?” He held a bottle up to her.
“Sure.”
He opened it and passed it to her. She took a sip, smiling faintly.
“I can’t believe you and I are talking again,” he said.
“I can’t believe it too.”
“Listen, I’m really sorry what happened.”
“It’s okay. You shouldn’t be sorry. It wasn’t completely your fault.”
“No, it was. For the longest time, I felt like I ruined your life. Even now. I don’t think you understand how grateful I am that you are willing to talk to me again, let alone sitting down with me and finally having a drink together.”
He laughed, while opening a bottle for himself.
“So much was going on. Tonight’s not the kinda night to get into everything, but I’m glad you are doing okay. You must have been through a lot,” she said.
“Not as much as you have, I’m sure.” She took another sip.
“I gotta admit, my attitude was really bad near the end. Being short-tempered and all,” he continued. “But I promise you it has gotten better. At least I try my best to catch myself when shit begins to hit the fan. And all the politics didn’t help either. I’m so sorry I let my frustrations out on you. Things got really stressful. You didn’t deserve being mistreated. You were going through so much getting your fair share from your family already. I shouldn’t have dragged you into the fray.”
The cycle. He apologizes, she reassures, he apologizes again.
They were silent. Years of self-loathing have worn him out. His wish was a simple one: to walk beside her and be her friend again. And for what felt like an eternity, they were looking out to the lake. Into the neverending darkness with its small glimmers of green and red stars.
She broke the silence: “At least we don’t have to deal with moisty mask breath anymore!” Her voice went up an octave.
He was dumbfounded. They giggled like children. Moisty.
“I miss hearing you laugh.”
“I miss you, Big Bro.”
His arms were open. She gave him a big hug. A hug bigger than any he ever dreamed.
_______________
Single Soul is a fictional imagining of a post-pandemic future where two old friends reunite since their fallout, long before the pandemic. Even though the pandemic is gone, the male protagonist fears his behavior would push the female protagonist away again. Nevertheless, he hopes to be her friend once more. I wrote this story with the hope that the radical changes the pandemic brought about also includes changes in personal attitudes and our relationships with one another.
_______________
Joshua Mei is a Chicago-based visual artist with interests in digital illustration, mosaics, sketching, and typography. His work critically addresses current social and political issues. He is an artist-curator at Agitator Co-operative Gallery.
@uglybitchfilms
insidioustudios.bigcartel.com
This piece relates to the paranoia and anxiety that many people, myself included, felt during the pandemic. I wanted to portray the overwhelming emotions at the beginning of the pandemic, in which almost everyone was plagued with worry and fear about what the virus would do to us in the future. Additionally, I wanted to portray the true lifestyles of people at home. How many people turned to alcohol and substance abuse during quarantine.
The reality around the woman fades and she herself fades into a different dimension (the world we live in now).
_______________
I’m a 22 year old artist. I dabble in a lot of mediums, film and photography are my favorite. I work on music video on the side. I’m also a designer for Insidious Studios!
@lilcactusbabies | nicolemgonzalez.net
Plants and animals, these are things that are precious and beautiful aspects of life that I cherish. Never before have I had such appreciation for the beauty in this world then when I am kept from enjoying even the smallest of simplicities during quarantine.The magnificence of an avocado to the beauty of a bunch of roses from the garden. Monstera, papaya, Orchid Cactus when I’m daydreaming of walks in Hawaii that seem like a lifetime ago. Will normal life ever be again? Deep in thought in conversation with myself in silence. Space lobsters, whales, snails, bridging the physical and non physical worlds. Feelings and thoughts that need to be expressed in visual form. Connection with our humanity in a time when everything is uncertain, missing our loved ones, moments of complete loneliness and isolation. Looking for the beauty in this life where I can find it.
Nicole is a San Francisco Bay Area Native. Her lifelong love of plants and nature is translated into works of art by use of rich color, organic shapes and movement. Her paintings often feature cacti, as a symbol of cultural influence and her heritage. Nicole is currently exploring the notion that there is oneness in nature, life experience, and self discovery. All her artwork is created from within herself, and her heart. To share these experiences with her audience is her goal.
Anna Mielniczuk | @annamielniczukstudio | anna-mielniczuk.com
Listen
Listen to the world
Let it tell you you are not alone
Listen for a moment to the songs
of the birds
And let them sing to you when you feel cold
_______________
Grace
To remember Grace
A morning melody
sung by a songbird
A peacock dancing
At sunset, a seagull flying
A walk through a forest
with a deer grazing
A foggy meadow patch
A morning yawn
And a stretch to match
_______________
My written work is largely about finding peace, hope, and healing. All these things, I think are very important during these times. I hope these words offer a quiet reflective moment for the reader.
_______________
Anna Mielniczuk studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is an interdisciplinary artist. Largely interested in art history, she uses her work to explore themes of play, peace, and nature. She has had her work published in Thalia magazine and has shown her work in various galleries in Chicago and Europe.
During quarantine we all want to be close to our loved ones. I hope for the well being of my loved one, as we are unable to reach to each other like we did before the pandemic. I fear each time he goes to work, even though he wears a mask. The kind of world I want is where everyone does not have to be afraid for the health of the people we cherish each time they go outside. We must come together and take care of one another as one, big family in order to ensure our future.
_______________
I am now a sophomore as a Studio Art Major at SXU. I am nineteen years old and have always loved to draw. I want to become an Art Director in the future to continue my passion. Drawing is what makes me feel alive and it always has. It flows throughout my core.
Amanda Dee | @spookyghostwriter | amandadee.work
my resilience tat
will tap-dance over graves
it will
smile, at least, all teeth
a disco ball of bone under which
the others will boogie
down
the sleeve
on my body there will be places,
a floating garden, family album,
blankies wrapped around my arms
where muscles will grow from
taking more weight on
still
old ones continue weighing (memory’s a gravity, you know)
so I’ll get swole somewhere new
in response: to all that’s hurting
the old places will wrinkle with
the smile lines
the danse macabre
will slow
but imagine, just imagine
what it’ll feel like
to be touched
for hours
by
a stranger
breathing the same air in
a much too tiny room
_______________
This poem sprung from the longing to be in a future when we can be intimate with strangers without anxiety, when people and art can be physically close in ways they once were. This poem also speaks to the theme of art as resilience and to the tradition of art as resistance.
_______________
Amanda Dee is a multimedia storyteller fixed on Midwestern identities and relationships to place. She is a writer at Sixty Inches from Center and the former editor-in-chief of Dayton City Paper.
When you’re isolated at home, you’re presented with an opportunity to better yourself and analyze your well being. I took this opportunity to think about those close to me. I can openly say I love my friends and family. This is something I’ve struggled to say. I photograph the rawness of my life as I’m documenting my encounters with my loved ones. I’ve learned to not be ashamed of where I come from. I may not live in the safest neighbourhood, but it’s a part of me and I’ll never forget my roots. From a contemporary photographer named Vuhlandes, I’ve learned not everything is sunshine and rainbows. My artwork can reflect this.
My name is Osbaldo, but I go by Ozzy. I’m a Film Photographer from Chicago Lawn. Over the past 4 years I’ve learned to photograph, scan, and develop my own film. I photograph the rawness of my reality to show people a world they’re not used to seeing.
@paloma_shaloma_xicago |
paloma@stroboscopia.com
I believe there is a future where we will have a whole new way of communicating and subsequently we will let go of conflicts based on old systems of thought and communication. In my work I am striving to abandon figurative signifiers and searching for new meaning through color and form.
B. 1964, XALAPA, MEXICO
Paloma Trecka is an artist and educator based in Chicago. She studied Montreal and has a BFA from Concordia University.Her collage-based work explores abstraction in both the flat medium of collage and through time-based media.
Gretchen Hasse @gbhasse | gretchenhasse.com
Friday
Lanky vision of loveliness in a sun dappled bed; small room painted unlikely colors and covered with art. Phone rings. Extend a brown arm, find phone. It's G. Hey lover. Happy Friday. Pause, listen, purr. Of course. I always make that on Friday. It's your favorite. Roll over, twist hair around a thumb, frown. I need eggs though. That will be hard, the stores are still out. I'll text Martin for a pickup. Smile again. Love you too. Let's FaceTime when I'm cooking, okay? Hang up and stretch like a cat.
Enter kitchen, texting, talking to self. Hi Martin! Need four eggs. Sending cash now. Send money and put phone on counter. Glance around. Jenny? Jenny! Pick up a hoodie, some socks, a plate. JennnnnEEEE? You need to pick up your shit, and oh? Find post-it note on cupboard door. Biked to the Lake - back later. Crumple up and throw away. That's nice. You better wear your mask and stay clear of the cops.
Grab container for eggs, and another hoodie. Produce out of nowhere a beautiful mask. Slip over face, put on hoodie, head to Martin's. Half dancing, looking elegant. Earbuds pump ethereal music. Walk by the carved hand statue in Palmer Park, the bike fence on Lyndale, places like old friends. No one else is around. Maybe someone is just rounding a corner, going into a doorway?
Walk through Martin's back gate, chicken coops in the yard. No one around. Knock on back door. No answer. Take out earbuds, truncated scream in the distance. No, it can't be. Martin? Martin did you get my text? Shrug it off and pick out four eggs. Right before leaving, call back to the house. Martin? I took the eggs! Note to self: I paid for these, why does it feel like stealing? Turn to leave, look back. Quietly: Thanks Martin.
Back home in the garden, harvest a basketful of sumptuous vegetables. Glistening, edible jewels. Phone buzzes. Hi Baby! I'm in the garden. It's soooo lush! I've never seen it like this! Call me back in like ten. I'll be in the kitchen.
Make veggie quiche in the kitchen. Lover G is a tiny square of light on the phone, sitting in the lab, wearing a lab coat, smiling at dinner they see being made. It's good to see you! What a long week. Smile coquettishly, me too. As you know, I think you are such a super hero for spending every week at the lab saving the world, but on the weekend you are all mine. Six o'clock like usual? G smiles too. Oh, yeah if not sooner. Lab dorms are the worst. Frown. Ugh, you put up with so much. I wish people knew how much all of you sacrifice for our safety. G smiles. Me too. Roll eyes, You're so humble. G laughs.
Dress in a flowing robe, prepare a table for two in the garden. Sit down, pour glass of wine. Look at neighboring yards, windows. Nobody is around. Another sip of wine. A definite scream, closer now. Jump, spill wine. Run into front yard, look up and down the street. Several yards away, someone in utter agony holds a phone. Shakes their head, throws phone far away, runs into a house and slams the door.
Stumble back into garden, dial phone, collapse into chair. Babe BABE. Please get home. Something is wrong. Maybe it's not my problem but I really need you here. Try to pour another glass of wine. Give up and take a swig from the bottle. Giggle nervously. Phone buzz, a FaceTime call. Lover G's worried face appears. What's wrong? Gulp wine. There was a scream. I saw the scream happen.
Did you see what they were screaming at? I think at the phone. Lover G stifles a laugh. After two seconds, together: BAAAAAAAAD BREAKUP! Both laugh. But you should just come home before I'm too drunk. You're missing the fun part! Lover G stops smiling.
Frown. Don't tell me the decontamination chamber is messed up again. Lover G sad laughs. No it's fine. Feel impatient. When are you coming home? A long bunch of seconds. Lover G shakes their head. Um ... never. Long Pause.
Growl. Oh, I see. Still the bad breakup joke. You're a jerk. Lover G's image on the phone glitches a little. Dammit, don't you go all bad reception on me now too! We're not breaking up over the phone. Lover G pleads PLEASE don't hang up. I have to tell you something, right now. Frown again, is this a medical thing? Lover G laughs, No. Well thank god. G looks sad. Please listen, I don't have much time. Shrug. Well I guess I have all the time in the world. Lover G fights back tears. Remember the big project? The really big one? Drink from the bottle. There are so many. How is it going? G smiles but isn't happy. It's going well. It went well. We're finished. It worked. Cock head. That was fast. I thought you just started on Monday. G is serious. We started on **a** Monday. Blink. When am I going to see you again? Lover G Babe, I'm not here, anymore. Another glitch.
Stop glitching.
Babe AI got, like, really good. If we're talking now, it's so good you didn't even notice. Laugh. It really got that good since Monday, huh? G sighs, Babe? I made everything for you. Now out of wine. Made what? Lover G paints a picture: I made our house, and our bedroom. I made the garden, but I made it just a little bit better. I made the street, I made the bike fence. I made that weird hand sculpture in the park, I know how you love that weird ass thing. I made Martin's house but Martin had to stay behind. Ask, confused: Where's Martin? And Jenny? Where's everybody? Lover G can't lie: Babe the virus got so bad, we had to lock down the lab and go into overdrive on the big project. The only project. My last project.
Babe stop talking like you're dead. G glitches again. We chose a few scientists in every field. And some historians, some teachers. I told them they need an artist. At least one. And the artist needs a place that inspires them. I said the new place we built was going to be the place that inspires you. The new world starts with your world. Soft laugh. But I couldn't build everything. If you go down to North and Central Park, you'll be at the end of the world. It's a nice place though. It's got potential. And it's got air. That was a big deal.
Begin to understand. Where am I? Lover G shrugs. It's probably just a number, or something dumb like Genesis 2. We put everyone into a deep sleep and sent you off in that general direction. We had no idea if you'd make it, but I guess you did. Look at garden. You did a beautiful job. I'm really far away, right? And I'm like, in the future. Lover G nods. Way in the future. Understand. You really are dead, aren't you. For lots of centuries, probably. Like I said. AI got really good. You have no idea. Wistful smile. Actually I do. Laugh softly together. So it's not Friday? I don't think it matters. It's today. Let tears flow. Spontaneously start to sing together. That one song. Lover G glitches more and more. Then the phone just goes dead. Stare, try to turn it back on. Nothing works. After a second, hurl the phone with mighty strength as far away as possible, and scream.
The person from earlier walks into the backyard. Look at them, nod, and walk toward one another. A New World begins.
_______________
Gretchen Hasse is a storyteller working in comics, collage, public art, and moving images. She holds a BA in Anthropology from Northern Illinois University, and an MFA in Film, Video and New Media from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She has exhibited work throughout the city, and her films have screened in Berlin, Chicago, New York City, London, and computer screens everywhere. Gretchen is a co-founder of Agitator Co-operative Gallery.
My photos are a depiction of what happens next, literally. I’ve seen dictatorships spring up in countries that were once democracies or were on their ways to become one. I’m not optimistic about the future of America, and my photos aim to capture my anxiety about the future of this nation.
I was born in Iran. My artistic background is in Persian calligraphy, but I also paint and take photos. In my day job I’m a professor at UIC. I had a one day show at Agitator last October.
Jae Green | threelegged.wixsite.com/jae-green
Operators Are Standing By
It was the 70’s. Everything was crazy for a bit in the 60’s with Vietnam and the protests, but everything came together later. Her grandmother was fifty-five and still turned heads. She worshipped Jackie O. and she was never outside without a giant pair of shades perched on her wide, pretty nose.
“Black don’t crack, but it does bend.”
And Granny would pluck a pair of Foster Grant’s from a chipped bowl that she kept by the door. By the time she was 80, Granny’s neck had loosened like a schoolboy’s tie but her eyes were still lineless, tilted almonds, dark and devastatingly direct. She wondered what granny would think if she could see how Lisa protected herself. A fleece lining over the undergarments, that day’s clothing, a workman’s boilersuit zipped to the neck, a muslin cloth pinned under the chin, rubber boots buckled at the knee, gauntlets, tight cap, a mask with a color-changing filter and of course smoked eye coverings so much like Granny’s gradient sunglasses. Only Lisa fretted about her retinas instead of wrinkles. With everything who could tell if she was 17 or the 75 she actually was. After she returned home the entire process would be reversed, the clothing bagged for decontamination and a shower with water made undrinkable in large amounts by the chemical that the government added to kill the virus.
She checked for her stipend. it was impossible to live without them.Everyone got some kind of stipend, supplement or grant. Sometimes three or four of different types, one for being old, or hazzard work or inheritances accessible after years of legal sparring. Lisa got the standard amount for being over 60, but there was a second envelope because twice a week she taught a large group of children how to draw in a classroom on the nearly empty U of C campus. Rich kids with two immune parents. Instead of cobbled together pieces of ppe there was an issued uniform of yellow. Yellow until they were just a slick group of black-eyed canaries perched on their chairs, heads tilted.
She would call through her mask,“What should we draw today, children?” And they would answer back loud and indecipherable and varied.
She never knew what they said and she would just draw what she wanted, as long as it wasn’t from less than five lessons ago. Some of the kids would clap and nod. Some would slump and fold their arms. It didn’t matter if a cat or a dog was on the screen.
And of course sometimes she begged. If the weather was good and the stores full she earned a few cheaters in a week. A ‘cheater’ was what they called the last tangible money issued by the government twenty years after the pandemic. They were larger than a quarter, kinda like the Kennedy coins they had when she was a kid. They called them cheaters because President Trump was the effigy. And because of software (or human) error 90% of the coins had Donald’s face on BOTH sides. Heads I win. Heads you lose. They bent easily and some shopkeepers would toss them back to you like you had tried to pay with a used condom. Government machines would take them though and a government machine was where she was headed. The bus would take hours to get there. But, the hours would give her time to prepare, to make the most of her time and the five warped coins in her pocket.
Three years into the pandemic a quiet South Korean scientist came forward with an invention. Really two inventions that he had married together in his parent’s tiny apartment after he was sent home from med school. Jang Seul Hyeok had listened to his father rattle and designed on his macbook. One part mapped the brain, sequencing neurons, reactions, speech, and memory, into an algorithm of a human subject. Nothing could hide from the thing. Not a first kiss, not a secret zucchini bread recipe.The other half of the machine was ergonomics. It worked by creating a hologram of ticks, smiles, blushes and laughs that could clone any human subject. Jang’s mother was the first transplant.
When the hologram was presented to the public-critics noted the small scar across two knuckles and the way her nose wrinkled as she told The World, ‘I have not known you, but I have loved you.’ When things had gone from bad, to worse, to apocalyptic,
a scramble began to store as many people as possible. Robert DeNiro had volounteered from his hospital bed and his hologram was still very popular. Post-Covid kids fans of “Taxi Driver” got a kick from yelling “Yeah, I’m talking to you!”
DeNiro, The Dali Lama, Michelle Obama. Kim Kardashian was mute but users watched her take selfies of herself with a bulky 2020 phone. Eventually, more ordinary people entered the database. Teachers, doctors, a girl who sang a lovely version of “Umbrella”. Kevin had been one of the everyday folk and his immune clients had stared at each other over their masks in relief. Air high-fives and palms pressed together in namaste as they sat a careful six feet apart. That was decades ago. And while she had aged, (the neck, the neck is always the first to go) Kevin stayed the same. Tall, distinguished, steelhaired and slightly amused as she talked. The hologram therapist even drank hologram tea. Two bags. In fact as time passed and her weak eyes weakened more, the illusion became smoother, more seamless. Perhaps the machine was learning? Occasionally, there was a slight pause after a puzzling question or comment while the computer searched its storehouse for the proper response. The audible *click* that followed reminded her that Kevin and the world as it was was gone.
At the West Center there were twenty viewing stations. She preferred the last studio on the left. All the rooms, at all the locations were virtually the same-a cube about the size of an old fashioned peepshow booth. She supposed it was the same thing. Sitting alone, making yourself feel better, with people you didn’t know. Or who didn’t know you anymore.
She slipped her cheaters in the coinbox and panicked when machine spit one back, she worried that it would eat four and refuse to recognize the twisted, crooked thing as a dollar. A little bang to the side of the container settled its content and it accepted the final aluminium disk.
A buzz. A hum. A light-blue at the center and radiating out into a spectrum of lines and shadows. Finally Kevin was in front of her in full color and texture. She could see the nubs of fabric on what would have been called a Costco sweater, when Costco existed.
“Kevin!”
*click*
There was that pause as the code that stood for the life and soul of Kevin Morton synthesized. He seemed to recognize her.
“Lisa! How are you?! Are you ok? I was doing my best to treat you...to treat you all. You were one of my people. I’m so sorry. I got sick though and everything went to crap. I don’t remember that part well. I remember you and your art. I liked seeing your paintings. The public was getting excited about what you were doing. Are you still
making art Lisa? It would make me happy if you drew something!”
“I didn’t bring my supplies. And well, I came here to make a confession.” The hologram’s eyebrows drew together like knitting needles.
“Don’t get mad. I texted my ex-boyfriend....”
*CLICK!*
_______________
Jae Green is a poet, second generation artist, mother and cancer survivor originally from the South side of Chicago.
Happy Squid is a collage-based piece installed behind a street-facing window of my parents’ home. The giant squid (Architeuthis dux) is one of the largest living organisms but has remained elusive to scientists until relatively recently. The first image of a giant squid in its natural habitat was taken in 2004, and there is still scant video evidence of the giant squid’s existence. The giant squid is thought to be solitary, living its entire life alone. I thought this was a nice parallel to our current global state of quarantine.
_______________
Richard Medina is an artist, curator, and filmmaker based in Chicago, IL. He has exhibited at Gallery 400, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Project 1612, The Condo Association, and Roman Susan, among others. In 2016 Richard was awarded the Jeffrey Ahn, Jr. Fellowship. He serves on the board of directors for the nonprofit organization Terrain Exhibitions, and was the Director of the Terrain Biennial 2019. He is currently seeking his BFA at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2021).
Snežana Žabić
What Did You Write on 3/24/20 in Chicago?
I wrote oatmeal in the morning, rolled oats, raspberries, and raw hemp seed. I wrote a cup of loose-leaf black tea imported from Russia while my oatmeal bowl cooled, Royal Tea Czar Nicolas II, the box said, the same emperor who ordered pogroms (the box omitted that part). His empire fell one March day, but people never learn. I wrote my red bowl, my rose-colored cereal, my maple syrup that glimmered over it all.
Exactly twenty-one years ago I spent that March day in Belgrade waiting for the missiles, and the missiles arrived, and I went to my building’s basement full of neighbors and books, but no washers and dryers. An old Cadillac covered in dust.
Today I wrote a hot shower at 10 pm after I wrote the thermostat down
to sixty-five. I wrote a hearty pasta dinner, a sauce I built on a foundation of celery, carrots, scallions, garlic, and red wine. I wrote two loads of laundry, four quarters per load in my building’s basement, four quarters per load in the dryer. Had to revise the dryer cycle, my stuff still damp the first time, four quarters more. I wrote a hot shower in the afternoon, that’s when my hair went from oily to clean under my fingers massaging my scalp. I wrote my body dry with my red towel, I wrote my skin supple with perfumed lotion.
That’s what I wrote today when in the progress of the pandemic I lived like a king--not because I deserved it--as petite bourgeoisie do before each collapse.
_______________
How is our present shaped by our past? More importantly: can we make any educated guesses about the future based on what we know about the present? Those are the questions we’re forever mulling over. And mulling over the unknowable is a way of coping, of staving off fear about the unknowable.
_______________
Snežana Žabić is the author of the short story collection In a Lifetime (KOS, Serbia, 1996), the memoir Broken Records (punctum books, USA, 2016), and the poetry collection The Breath Capital (New Meridian Arts, USA, 2016). She co-authored, with Ivana Percl, the poetry collection Po(jest)zija/Po(eat)ry (SKC NS, Serbia, 2013).
@salvador.campos.art |
salvadorcamposartbrute.com
What I fear is that we as a society will never look upon each other without distrust, anxiety and fear again.
I am a self-taught artist. For the past 20 years I have worked with found objects and painted on a variety of surfaces to create paintings, assemblages, figures, masks and sculptures.
At the core of these works is the idea that even though so many of us are feeling fractured, broken, and exhausted by this pandemic, it is possible to rebuild after collective trauma. What results is not the perfectly placed human (or figure) that we were before, but an amalgamation of the broken parts of ourselves that we build back up.
My work explores the realities and the struggles of being an empowered womxn both inside and outside of my work in the sex industry. I mainly work with charcoal, using repetition, prints, and collage to make organic shapes out of the drawings. At the core of my work is the centralized idea that bodies of femmes (especially sex workers) are consistently damaged and torn down throughout our lives, and we are faced with the task of putting them back together. While the rebuild after trauma may not end up being what we originally were, while it may not be what society deems “correct” or “proper,” the way that we rebuild still is able to evoke some sense of belonging and unity.
@sonalikolhatkar | SonaliKolhatkar.com
The future is brown skinned and female. This strange and frightening new world we live in is held together by the essential work of largely nonwhite women working for low wages, or health workers, many of whom are immigrants. My paintings depict the fierce resistance that our very existence denotes, and the demand for dignity, respect, recognition, and power as we move forward.
Sonali Kolhatkar is an award-winning broadcast and print journalist, visual artist, and amateur musician, seamstress, and baker. She has exhibited her works widely in numerous solo and group shows including the Los Angeles based shows, RAW Artists and Chocolate and Art. Her primary medium is acrylic on canvas.
Poem created on 8/23/2020, using 1970s Hermes 3000 Typewriter.
_______________
David W. Pedersen is a Midwestern author, poet, screenwriter, labor activist, and lm director. His first book is titled, “Love is Meat”.David W. Pedersen is a Midwestern author, poet, screenwriter, labor activist, and lm director. His first book is titled, “Love is Meat”.
I don’t know what the future may bring, but this piece is, in my summation, a decent encapsulation of our current year.
_______________
Choesoui exists for now.
@bobrok1998
bobrok.bandcamp.com
This piece is combining two characters from the Mexican Card game Loteria. And then to me means a new take on Mexican art and culture.
_______________
Nick Garcia is a writer and artist living in Chicago Illinois. He performs music and comedy under the name Bob Rok. He has performed at various musical and comedy venues around the city of Chicago. He is currently working on a comic book called “El Gallo Borracho.”
Bob Rok and DJ DOUG | Storefront Glass
Storefront glass / bursts onto the city streets / A country shouting loudly and it wonders if you’re listening / Cautious and Exhausted / As it mumbles its soliloquy / Buildings burn like cigarettes / Your leader gassed the ministry / No problem with elections / It’s the options that you giving me / It’s why these rockstars turn cop cars to chimneys / Bobby wide awake / While you sleeping with the enemy / Power to the people / Till we’re equal over everything / Cause nothings ever banned like a hand with a wedding ring / Choke a man to death and televise the evidence / Oedipus on reddit / Like they should’ve practiced etiquette / The proof is in the pudding and the puddings full of medicine / You hopping off the fence / I’m a menace to the menacing / Fuck Joe Biden / What the fucks the point of settling / Build an institution and the senate would be trembling / I’m sick to death of centrists and everything they’re peddling / You people aren’t the answer / It’s the question that’s unsettling / What is freedom worth if it never leads to better things? / I’d rather kill your kings than keep voting for your presidents / I’d rather clip its wings than add wings upon my residence / Where brutality is legal the laws become irrelevant / You want to start an era in a period of sentences? / Beg for validation that you traded for your relevance / Mimicking your masters cause their slavery was elegant / It’s why you getting jacked / In a room full of elephants / My thoughts are very sobering / You coming down from sedatives / Knock before you enter and do disturb the Mexican / I swear to God you motherfucks are going to be the death of him
I remember thinking words were building blocks for pyramids/ Bumping Hieroglyphics hoping some would take it serious / Hoping against hope I don’t feel this way forever / A bunch of manic episodes / That sleep will string together
The plot thickens we are trapped in a page / In a hole in the wall like a rat in a cage / History and violence are rehearsed like a play / We’re played like card and carted away / Can we think can we act / Can we collectively change? / Is how we treat others / What we expect in exchange / It makes them nervous / When the people find a purpose / Gotta watch what you eat / Gotta practice what you preach / Gotta learn gotta teach / No Justice, No peace / You take away a life / People take away the street/ It’s not about the mask or what’s hidden underneath / It’s not about your party having parties at the beach / I try to be the sheperd with a flock of fucking sheep / But who am I to lead? I’m exhausted as my feet / Throwing caution to wind / feeling winded when I speak / I’m sickness I’m the symptom / Quoting Milhouse in my sleep / Oh Puppy Goo Goo fetch me a dream / Running from a creature / From the comfort of a jeep / Screaming in a camera like I’m Meryl fucking Streep / Raindrops crash still water in a glass / I escape, I am Great, I’m awake in a flash
Look at that, I wanted what I have / I turned the written word into grifted gift of gab / I am not a writer I’m a thinker with a plan / I blink the big picture that the simple understand / But vanity persists posting pics on the Gram / I’m a spic, sailing down the river Styxx in a raft / I am hip, I’m the shit, I am rich, I am sad / Watch a country profit flip every kid it can grab / I get pissed, I persist, swing and miss, God Dam / I complicate the simple and I simplify the man / Then I put it over music and release it to the fans
Sid Yiddish | @SidYiddish
Short Season
I just saw time creep back.
Crawling on all fours.
Trying to fade to black.
Yet it couldn’t
Pandemic slamdemic smashdemic straight into our world.
No one asked for this one and still it’s here.
Comparable to a terrible baseball season that refuses to end.
Comparable to a guy who badmouths a team like an armchair critic who never
bends, just bitching and bitching and bitching.
It’s enough to make men break
Snap in two; question every belief they ever knew
A time of steady that’s never ready and keeps rolling back to the stack that
stands tall before it teeters over.
No four-leaf clover won’t save us now.
No demonstration no shocking damnation will stop the escalation of doom
marked in place.
There is no mend.
The end of the end as we know the being of the end.
Has come home to settle in for a long spell of deathbed symphonic
strengthening, straightening, sweetening the sweep that of what others can’t
accept.
Is honestly,
The end.
Postalfart | Lyrics and Vocals by Sid Yiddish Music by Clean Boys
The other day I threw a letter
In the mailbox but the postal clerk
Rubberstamped it
Return to snagelfart sender
Was it a postalfart
offender sender bender?
Felt my brain
Push (shredded) straight through a parcelfart back ender
Couldn’t get my stamps, couldn’t get my cards
No use to trivialize what you can’t have
Come to realize when I told my mom the post office era is past her
It’s now the grocery clerk whose become the new
postalfart master
(Refrain-repeat once)
Fart-tramp-tramp-tramp
To get a fart-stamp-stamp-stamp
Down at Netto
The new postalfart ghetto
Next stop
Pony express
Next move, I don’t know
It’s such a mess
Internet assassinated
The mail carrier
The Internet is now the new
Postalfart slayer
Nobody takes a pen and a piece of paper
Or the time ever to write a letter without being (becoming) a trendsetter
Internet has choked the breath of what used to be
And now’s become, in reality, a dead postalfart letter
This generation
Has spread too much disinformation
Who gives a fuck, you’re shit outta luck
When it’s just another partyfart transformation
Just (gimme one) piece of junk mail
Instead of a piece of spam
I may go postalfart
with my own (fucking) fartplan
Refrain (repeat once)
Fart-tramp-tramp-tramp
To get a fart-stamp-stamp-stamp
Down at Netto
The new postalfart ghetto
_______________
PostalFart written & recorded August 23, 2018. Final Mix June 27, 2020. Lyrics and vocals by Sid Yiddish music by Clean Boys. PostalFart tells the story of Danish mail service slowing down to a crawl including nonexistent postal services & longing for the days of old. 3:46 (Please note there are many references to the word fart, which in Danish is defined as speed).
_______________
Sid Yiddish is a multidisciplinary artist and staple within the Chicago poetry, performance art and underground improvisation music scenes. Combining loves of poetry, improvisation, sound and performance, Yiddish has formed several experimental collaborative collectives that blend raw words with spontaneous theatrics. Presently he teaches laughing yoga, haiku and Zumba.
Kelly Hayes is the host of Truthout’s podcast Movement Memos, and a contributing writer at Truthout. Kelly’s written work can also be found in Teen Vogue, Bustle, Yes! Magazine, Pacific Standard, NBC Think, her blog Transformative Spaces, The Appeal, the anthology The Solidarity Struggle: How People of Color Succeed and Fail At Showing Up For Each Other In the Fight For Freedom and Truthout’s anthology on movements against state violence, Who Do You Serve, Who Do You Protect? Kelly is also a direct action trainer and a co-founder of the direct action collective Lifted Voices. Kelly was honored for her organizing and education work in 2014 with the Women to Celebrate award, and in 2018 with the Chicago Freedom School’s Champions of Justice Award. Kelly’s movement photography is featured in the Freedom and Resistance exhibit of the DuSable Museum of African American History.
Jennifer Hochgesang | Lovelybrokenness.com
October 3rd, 2020
Please Don’t Go
We were just doing normal and silly things
Picking up formula and four different kinds of juices
But I had to go, wanted to rush quickly down the aisle
For that conditioner I liked so much, that one,
That made my hair silky smooth I thought
You wanted to talk, you asked me to stay
Stood quietly in the aisle next to the soft Malbecs
We loved and still could not drink
I could tell you needed me
Your normally lean deer body thrusting out of your jeans
Like you had somehow stuffed a twelve pack of Coors
That we drank in high school down your pants
But the fluorescent lights were bothering me, angry and biting,
Hitting my headache like a slap in the face
I ignored the fact that your dark brown hair was still unwashed,
Up in a dirty bun from last Sunday which was four days ago
When I showed you how Ellie could stand and had started to walk
Taking a step forward and then another
And when we yelled out in excitement
She toppled straight to the ground and sideswiped the cereal box
Which burst its contents onto the floor like confetti and we laughed
Even when Ellie looked backed at us with tears in her green-grass eyes
There was amber sunlight in the room
And it felt like we had a warm blanket over all of us
And you radiated with Sadie in your arms, still breastfeeding her
We talked all afternoon, for hours and hours like we always could
It felt like one of those long summer afternoons from childhood with your best friend
Where you have all the time in the world.
Sometimes I close my eyes and I am there
I smell formula and cinnamon
Hear the breath of Sadie when she let me hold her
Falling asleep against my chest still grasping my finger tight
Her chest breathing deeply, inflating and deflating like a hot air balloon
I can hear it right now, the sound of her breath and I try to sync it to mine
A soft sucking in as she dreams of eating
Of you and her tiny pink tongue thrusts in and out
All of her muscles are calm
I only stop when I see you turn your blue eyes to me sadly
Imploringly, didn’t you want this, didn’t you want me?
And I look down fearfully to see Sadie crumble like talcum powder
Blow away into the night, back to you
And I can’t breathe right anymore
I don’t know how
I’m off tune, my chest rising and falling
But taking in nothing but pain.
In the store I saw that your eyes were glazed like mine had been,
When Ellie was not yet standing and sleep evaded me
I remember all the questions I had
How worried I was going to do something wrong
And how there was never anymore time for me at all
I remember exactly how much the lack of sleep hurt
How you needed it, like breathing
I saw it in your face that day
And I’m sure your light blue eyes stung
In the harsh glare of the store lights
Please, those eyes had said, please
I need you to stay for just a little bit longer
But I was busy and just didn’t have time
I remember saying I had so many things to do
As I flew down the aisle
I can’t remember any of those things now
But I can see the spit-up on your right shoulder
And the round wooden teething necklace around your neck
Nestled in the breasts that were suddenly way too
Large for your tiny body
And the slight flicker in your hand
That I mimic now with a nervous shake.
Please do not go
Please do not go
Please do not go
I hear that in the wind these days
I hear you
And I can’t ever go back to that store
When we got to the Church, I didn’t want to go in
And waited outside for twenty minutes
With Ellie fussing at me and playing on the curb
People walked by and would tell me where it was
As if I didn’t know
And I forced “thank you‘s’ out of my throat sounding like I was throwing rocks.
When I finally went in and saw the coffins
I fell straight to the floor and Ellie laughed
Two coffins, next to each other but not touching
Like distant friends or neighbors
Sadie’s coffin was way too tiny
It was too small
It was not right
She was all alone
Why wasn’t she in with you?
That’s what you would have wanted
But you hadn’t written anything down
You hadn’t prepared anything
You were so young
And hadn’t thought of coffins or gravestones or wills
Even when a pandemic came
And Sadie began to cough.
They sat us down, me and my daughter, in the front row,
At the Church, with so few people
It isn’t right, I wanted to scream
Where are all the people?
Where are the crowds?
Why isn’t someone stopping this?
With all the new social distancing rules
Everyone was sitting far apart
From one another like the last remaining pieces on a chess game
The rest just sent flowers
The church was covered in them
White lilies and orchids, yellow roses, red sunflowers and so many more
We ended up donating them to many places
You would’ve been quite pleased about that
But because people were so scared and so few came
When I looked around, it felt more like we were in a large family argument
Or a town meeting
So the scream I had been holding back around Ellie was about to come out
And I needed more than whatever this was, this plain white room
With light brown wood seats and one man standing
With a black mask covering half his face
So he felt more like a cult leader than someone
Who was supposed to be venerating my best friend
I needed a crowd of women ululating to the Gods
A prefiche of women tearing their hair out,
I needed there to be a great wail that changed the tides
And caused the sun to set in a different direction
There couldn’t just be this
Twelve people, two coffins and a man who didn’t even know you
I finally had to sit on my hands
Otherwise I thought I might put Sadie in with you
And I didn’t even know if that was the right thing to do anymore.
And I’m sorry, I’m so sorry
I left, I took Ellie and left
I could not watch them put you
And Sadie into the ground
I would worry you were cold
I would worry the baby was hungry
I would worry you hated your coffin
I would worry they got it all wrong
I just couldn’t see you like that for the last time.
I can still see you standing by the soft Malbecs
And your eyes wanting me to come to you, needing me
But my feet move swiftly in the other direction, toward the exit
Toward the sun that was setting
And the regret swishes in my mouth—
Before I let it out, I realize I won’t
I will be forever in that moment
Wanting to change my decision as if that would change
What happened.
Please don’t go
Please don’t go
Please don’t go.
_______________
Jennifer Hochgesang is a mother, chronic pain advocate and writer. She lives in Lake Forest, Illinois with her daughter, dog and sometimes two cats.
The contents of this exhibit are the decision of the Curator.
Participation in the exhibition does not imply that all artists agree with or support each other’s ideas.
Cover Art
Mister Davis by Ash H.G.
Special Thanks
Camilo Gonzalez
Ethan Cotton