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Illinois Humanities and South Side Home Movie Project Bring Chicago Style to Art Design Chicago on September 21

Press Releases
Illinois Humanities

Read Time 4 minutes
August 28, 2024

For Immediate Release   

Contact:
Sarah Sommers
Phone: (773) 251 - 4772
Email: communications@ilhumanities.org

The fashion show and debut of an archival film will explore Black fashion on Chicago’s south side from the 1930s through the 80s.

CHICAGO, AUGUST 28, 2024 — Illinois Humanities and the South Side Home Movie Project present Chicago StyleChicago Style uses the power of design to unite South Side home movies, fashion archives, personal narratives, and community legacies to link past and present This multifaceted project will culminate in a fashion show and film debut scored and curated by cultural historian, radio DJ and “fashion archaeologist” Ayana Contreras on September 21st at the Green Line Performing Arts Center 

Chicago Style brings together a five-person cohort of community members with diverse expertise and connections to fashion. Under the direction of educators, community organizers, and fashion experts AnnMarie Brown and Edvetté Jones, the Chicago Style Cohort is working with the South Side Home Movie Project archive to re-envision historical elements of everyday Black fashion, exploring the question: How does fashion thread through generations?

“To me, fashion serves as a form of powerful visual expression. The opportunity to study dimensions of those expressions (notably color and movement of garment) that are all too often flattened in historical reference materials is rare.” Contreras shared. “As part of this project, working with a trove of film full of movement and color that emanated from the South Side of Chicago as early as the 1940s has been transformative.”

“Fashion is a powerful tool for self-expression. It’s how most of us engage with the world of design in our daily lives,” Illinois Humanities Executive Director Gabrielle Lyon shared. “I love how this project gives us a way to look with new eyes and appreciate in deep ways such familiar things: home movies, back issues of Jet or Ebony, the thrift and vintage stores down the street. This project gives us a chance to shine a light on the ways people design their own identities while also showcasing the history that has made Chicago a mecca for Black fashion.”

Illinois Humanities’ Chicago Style Film and Fashion Show will take place September 21, 2024, 3:00-6:00 p.m. CT at the Green Line Performing Arts Center329 E Garfield Blvd, Chicago, IL 60637. Admission is free and pre-registration is required. Join us for a fashion-filled afternoon where history collides with the present. Dress up, see the looks, explore clothing from a local vendor, enjoy refreshments, and experience stories of Chicago's style.

Chicago Style is part of Art Design Chicago, an initiative of the Terra Foundation for American Art and collaborators that highlight the voices and stories that are part of Chicago’s unique artistic heritage and creative communities. Continuing into 2025, Art Design Chicago’s events and exhibitions across 30 Chicago neighborhoods and suburban communities showcase the work of hundreds of artists.

Cohort under L tracks Group3

The Chicago Style Cohort members, listed clockwise, are Karen Jenkins, Linda Pitts, KJ Turnage, Nicole Bond, and Linford Vaughn. (Shot on film by Han Teverbaugh.)

Learn more at ILHumanities.org/Film-and-Fashion.

About Illinois Humanities

Illinois Humanities, the Illinois affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, is a statewide nonprofit organization that activates the humanities through free public programs, grants, and educational opportunities that foster reflection, spark conversation, build community, and strengthen civic engagement. We provide free, high-quality humanities experiences throughout Illinois, particularly for communities of color, individuals living on low incomes, counties and towns in rural areas, small arts and cultural organizations, and communities highly impacted by mass incarceration. Founded in 1974, Illinois Humanities is supported by state, federal, and private funds. Stay connected with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn @ILHumanities.

About the South Side Home Movie Project

The South Side Home Movie Project (SSHMP) is a research and archival initiative to collect, preserve, digitize, exhibit, and research small-gauge home movies made by residents of Chicago’s South Side neighborhoods. By asking owners of home movies to share their footage and describe it from their personal perspectives, SSHMP seeks to increase understanding of amateur filmmaking practices, and of the many histories and cultures comprising Chicago’s South Side. The project brings materials that are typically kept in private collections into public light and discussion. Unique in its focus on home movies from this region, SSHMP aims to build an alternative, accessible visual record, filling gaps in existing written and visual histories, and ensuring that the diverse experiences and perspectives of South Siders will be available to larger audiences and to future generations.

Explore the South Side Home Movie Project archive!

About Art Design Chicago

Art Design Chicago is a special series of events and exhibitions that highlight the city’s unique artistic heritage and creative communities. An initiative of the Terra Foundation for American Art in partnership with artists and arts organizations across the city, Art Design Chicago seeks to expand narratives of American art with an emphasis on the city’s diverse and vibrant creative cultures and the stories they tell. Learn more at artdesignchicago.org.

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