EDITION #27

EDITION #27

T of the Town It’s on like Donkey Kong, Chicago. Once Chicago’s gets a glimpse of the sun, it’s on. What’s the T? has been all over the place in the last two weeks– openings, screenings, weddings, auctions, limos, basements, you name it....

What You Should Have Noticed in March 2014

Welcome back to the second installment of What You Should Have Noticed, my monthly roundup of those salient conversations and notable events worthy of attention, even in retrospect. March has me feeling doubly unequipped to write this, given all that’s gone on in...
Top 5 Weekend Picks! (3/28-3/30)

Top 5 Weekend Picks! (3/28-3/30)

1. Love to Love You at Roots and Culture Work by Sara Condo and Oli Rodriguez. Roots and Culture is located at 1034 N. Milwaukee Ave. Reception Friday, 6-9pm. 2. Frozen Borderline at Ballroom Projects Work by Jeff Prokash, Kyle Nilan and Danny Floyd. Ballroom Projects...
Salvaged Dwellings: In Search of Place, Part I

Salvaged Dwellings: In Search of Place, Part I

Atlanta has been experiencing growth in its art community, particularly within the past few years. Organizations like Dashboard Co-Op look to the abandoned and uninhabited spaces of the city as sites to host exhibitions. Efforts to expand gallery spaces to downtown...
Layering of Slices: ATOM-r Presents The Operature

Layering of Slices: ATOM-r Presents The Operature

  By Autumn Hays This past Friday I attended The Operature an exhibition by the collective ATOM-r (Anatomical Theatres of Mixed Reality) at the National Museum of Health and Medicine Chicago. This exhibition was held in two parts an interactive installation and 90...

A conversation with Renzo Martens at a cafe

This is work, somehow. Just talk about your own ideas and somebody else’s ideas that are fun and write about it. So many people talk about precarious labour in the arts, and it’s important I think, but it seems to be blind for half of the world’s population that never has a fucking cappuccino while thinking about one’s own ideas because they’re just working in mines and cleaning bedrooms and god knows what they’re all doing.