A People's Salon

Ilhumanitiessalonhousehome11202024 0745

Illinois Humanities cordially invites you to join us at Haymarket House for A People’s Salon: four energizing evenings of chef-driven meals, creative performances, and lively discussions about the big ideas and cultural movements of our moment. Each salon is curated around important current issues and features artists, thinkers, and organizers who will present original works that spark connections between our lived experiences, expert opinions, and the futures we want to see. Free food and drinks will be provided by the creative culinary studios TXA TXA Club and Kestral Wine and Spirits, and Revolution Brewing. Bring a friend or come alone – either way, you will leave with new ideas and new connections. 

Jane and Sylvia cr Glitter Guts peoplessalonclimate08282024 0317

Cohosts Jane Beachy and Sylvia Ewing get things rolling. Photo by GlitterGuts Photography.

Ilhumanitiessalonhousehome11202024 0867

HOUSE & HOME: A People's Salon event attendees wearing their blankets and notes about what makes a home for them. Photo by GlitterGuts Photography.

Upcoming Salons

Register below to join us for FREE at Haymarket House for dinner, presentations, and performances! Bring a friend.

Registration for the following events will open at least four weeks before the date of the Salon.

(RE)GENERATION: A People’s Salon
Wednesday, April 23, 2025 | 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. 
Haymarket House | 800 W Buena Ave, Chicago, IL 60613 

Presenters and Performers

TBD

Spring is a time for tilling the soil and making way for fresh growth – nourished by the life, lessons, and loss that came before. How can connecting to our roots help keep us grounded, receptive, and creative as we bloom into new forms? How do our inherited experiences position us to learn, and how will they inform the way we live into the future?

   

RSVP Today

Ilhumanitiespeoplessalonfear10302024 0053

What’s a salon?

A brief history of salons
Insp Image 3

Salons (the gatherings, not the beauty shops) have existed and proliferated around the world for thousands of years and their existence has been recorded as far back as pre-Islamic Arabia and Ancient Greece. While the specifics have varied wildly across time and geography, at their core, salons are intentional gatherings created by a host to promote the exchange of compelling thought and art. 

Although there are many examples over the course of history of salons being hosted in elitist environments, they have also played a deeply substantial (and often subversive) role in cultural and philosophical evolution. Historically, salons have been hosted by women – salonières – who set the agenda, invite the guests, and preside over the affair. This platform has allowed women to wield tremendous influence over the political, social, and cultural discourse of many eras that would not have formally acknowledged them.

And from the salons of the 600s CE Arabian Peninsula (such as those hosted by Sukaynah Bint Al-Husayn) to salons of the Weimar era hosted by Jewish women including Sara Levy and Fanny Von Arnstein, to those hosted by lesbian expat salonières Gertrude Stein and Natalie Clifford Barney in early 1900s Paris, to the salons of the Harlem Renaissance hosted by A’lelia Walker and Zora Neale Hurston, this form of gathering has long served as a vehicle for individuals who are marginalized by their contemporary society to have a profound impact on the ideas and culture that shape our lives. 

Past A People's Salon Events
Salon Series HERO Banner 2

THE CLIMATE: A People’s Salon
Presenters and Performers: Air Credits, Rachel Havrelock, Candace Hunter, Respair Media (Damon Williams & Daniel Kisslinger), Sylvia Ewing, Timothy David Rey

 

THE DREAM: A People’s Salon
Presenters and Performers: Fairouz AbuGhazaleh, Zeshan B, Faylita Hicks, Willy Palomo, Bindu Poroori, and Iván Resendiz

Fear Itself Background

FEAR ITSELF: A People’s Salon
Presenters and Performers: Fictional writer and adult and forensic psychiatrist Willie Mae Jackson, M.D., M.A.; Writer, director, and lip gloss connoisseur Coya Paz; Advocate and community-driven public servant Senator Robert Peters; Actor, writer, and visual artist Mary Williamson

 

HOUSE & HOME: A People’s Salon
Presenters and Performers: Arts and culture organizer and performance poet Tiff Beatty; Art collector, photographer, and retired environmental chemist Patric McCoy; Policy advocate and community organizer Laurie Jo Reynolds; Director and artist Robyn Mineko Williams

Contact Us

Martin Matsuyuki Kruase
Manager, Special Initiatives

events@ilhumanities.org
(312) 374-1547

Funders
Partners
SHARE