Saturday, July 31, 2010

Chicago News Cooperative

Coming in 2010: An innovative news site dedicated to building communities through quality journalism

A Lament for the Blues in Their Backyard

Legendary blues player Buddy Guy and Mayor Richard Daley at new Legends Jazz Club in the 700 block of South Wabash Avenue.
Jose More/Chicago News Cooperative

Buddy Guy said he is worried about the blues.

He worried even as he oversaw the finishing touches on the new location of his club, Buddy Guy’s Legends, which is part musical venue, part museum. He is worried that his club can’t provide enough exposure for all the musical talent that comes through Chicago, and worried that young people aren’t exposed to the music he has loved all his life. He is worried, in short, that the city’s long, proud reign as the world’s unequivocal blues capital may be fading into memory. (more…)

Hospital’s Design Is Guided by Experiences of Youth

Construction workers on top of the windows on the two-story, 5,000-square-foot Crown sky garden.
José Moré/Chicago News Cooperative

It was one of the first meetings of the Kid’s Advisory Board of Children’s Memorial Hospital, and 17-year-old Kendall Ciesemier was telling the high-priced architects designing the new $915 million hospital that they needed to go back to the drawing board.

It was imperative there be an outdoor space, she said, a place to escape from the confines of the hospital. The architects resisted, telling Kendall that it would be difficult to design a space that could withstand the extremes of heat and cold.
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Ripples From Gulf Oil Spill Will Be Felt in Chicago

Daniel Yousif, of Galveston with Fabian Seafood, weighs some red snapper for a customer at the Red Barn Market in Woodstock.
John Konstantaras/Chicago News Cooperative

On a damp morning last Friday, Maureen Fitzgerald pulled four fish out of a paper bag. “This looks beautiful,” she said, pointing to the clear eyes of the red snappers, and the firm, bright red skin. “We don’t have anything like this around here.”

“Here” was a gravel parking lot off a highway in Woodstock, more than 1,000 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. A truck from Fabian Seafood, a family-owned company that buys fresh fish on the docks in its Galveston, Tex., home base, then transports it to Illinois and other Midwestern states, was making its first Illinois stop since an oil rig explosion April 20 that caused a still-spewing leak in the gulf. Business in the muddy parking lot was far better than usual.
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At Museum, ‘RoboSue’ Roars to Life

Sue is the skeleton of a 67-million-year-old T. rex.
José Moré/Chicago News Cooperative

The Field Museum of Natural History this week will open an exhibit that features a reincarnated Sue — the museum’s iconic Tyrannosaurus rex — as a lifelike animatronic creature that turns its head to track visitors’ movements and lets out a loud roar.
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Money Woes May Imperil Dance Program

Onam Lansana, 10, and Arden Balis, 11, are among the fifth graders taking a ballroom dancing class at Alcott Elementary in Lincoln Park. The final competition is scheduled for this weekend.
Bonnie Trafelet/Chicago News Cooperative

Nicole Erickson strode across the floor of the Edwards Elementary School gym, her high-heeled dance shoes clicking authoritatively against the hardwood floor.

“Heads up!” she commanded, and 50 fifth graders raised their eyes from the floor to fixed points on the wall, poised to begin the Cha-Cha. “Fingers together, strong frames … no talking! And … one, two, three …”
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Studs Terkel Getting New Life Online

If someone was an important figure in American culture in the 20th century, chances are he or she was interviewed by Studs Terkel.

Conversations with Rosa Parks, Bob Dylan, Martin Luther King Jr. and Louis Armstrong are among the nearly 6,000 hours of interviews conducted by Mr. Terkel, the colorful Chicago author and oral historian, for WFMT radio from 1952 to 1997.
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A Thriving Business Built on Geeks’ Backs

Barb Staples, center, overseeing a fitting of Matt Leuck in his King Randor costume at limebarb in Chicago. The company is North America’s largest independent maker of costumes for cosplay. Sally Ryan/Chicago News Cooperative

Barb Staples makes geek dreams come true.

At limebarb, Ms. Staples’s company and North America’s largest independent manufacturer of costumes for cosplay — derived from “costume” and “play”— the words “geek,” “nerd” and “dork” are not terms of derision. Customers, who dress up as their favorite characters from popular Web and video games, often refer to themselves that way.
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Designers’ Mantra: Learn in Chicago, Then Leave

Katie King, a senior at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, working on her garments for Fashion Design Tuesday. She does not plan to stay in Chicago after graduation.
José Moré/Chicago News Cooperative

It is widely agreed that Chicago is a great place to learn fashion design.

Big enough and diverse enough to inspire young designers, Chicago is also affordable and accessible, two things that fashion powerhouses New York and Los Angeles (and Paris and Milan and London) are not. Throw in a top-notch design school — the School of the Art Institute of Chicago — and you’ve got an enormously appealing training ground for the next generation of Marc Jacobses and Phoebe Philos.
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New Curator Is Chosen for M.C.A.

Michael Darling
Jennifer Richard

When Madeleine Grynsztejn became director at Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art in 2008, the then-40-year-old institution was in the throes of what she called “a healthy midlife crisis”: slightly adrift, re-examining its place and purpose in an art landscape dominated by the Art Institute and its coming Modern Wing.

Ms. Grynsztejn vowed to make the M.C.A. more relevant and accessible to a broader audience, to build on its history while attracting a new range of emerging and underground artists. She pledged to make the museum more essential to the city’s overall social fabric while maintaining its ties to Chicago’s core art community.

Gauging her success, of course, will take time. But one critical marker is incontestable: attendance at the museum is at record levels.

Ms. Grynsztejn has made the museum a more youthful place, not only in its programming, which has skewed younger since her arrival, but also in staffing. That movement came into sharp relief Thursday when she announced that she had chosen Michael Darling, 42, to become the museum’s chief curator, replacing Elizabeth Smith, 51, who resigned last year. Mr. Darling takes over in July.

Mr. Darling, the curator of modern and contemporary art at the Seattle Art Museum, has a record that suggests he can embrace high and low culture with equal gusto. He has the requisite degrees: a bachelor of arts from Stanford and a master of arts and Ph.D. from the University of California, Santa Barbara. But he is also clued into popular culture.

A case in point: his final exhibition in Seattle is a look at Kurt Cobain’s profound impact on a generation. In hopes of expanding the program’s appeal beyond aging Gen-Xers, the museum will pair “Kurt” with an exploration of Andy Warhol’s depictions of fame, death, gender and loss.

“This got me so excited,” Ms. Grynsztejn said of the Cobain-Warhol juxtaposition. “Michael has a really intelligent way of looking at aspects of art history, like Andy Warhol, that we may feel have been studied to death. He’s addressing it from left field, reviving Warhol and pointing to modern culture and the most important issues of our time.”

Ms. Grynsztejn chose Mr. Darling, someone with established tastes and opinions, because she wanted someone who would challenge her in decisions involving the museum’s collections and exhibitions. “I was not looking for a mini-me,” she said.

Mr. Darling’s appointment reverses his last professional transition, which took him out of a thriving contemporary art environment — the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles — to Seattle, where he became only the second curator of that museum’s modern and contemporary collection.

“I’ve tried, in Seattle, to insert a very active contemporary art collection into an existing museum,” he said.

At Seattle, the emphasis was broader and more general. At the Chicago museum, he said, “I’m looking forward to being all contemporary, all the time.”

Capone’s Legacy Endures, to Chicago’s Dismay

The popular Untouchable Tours take people to the city's “old gangster hot spots and hit spots.”
José Moré/Chicago News Cooperative

Chicago, as any proud city official will tell you, is known for many things: its stunning architecture, its extensive green spaces, its hapless yet beloved sports teams. It likes to sell itself as America’s 21st-century city, defined not by its often sordid past, but by its relatively glamorous present and future.
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