The Significance of Community Gardens

The Significance of Community Gardens

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Tony Pena, Chicago Botanic Garden

Panelists: Sherry Williams, Michael Howard, Mario Longoni, Mattie Wilson, Angela Taylor and Johnnie Owens

A panel of community stakeholders, urban agriculturalists, and environmental anthropologists discuss the significance of community gardens in the wake of COVID-19. Community gardens are a source of wellness and are especially pertinent to local engagement with the great outdoors. Each panelist in this session is creatively utilizing community gardens to address neighborhood needs and will be sharing their work, as well as tips and suggestions for those interested in getting involved or starting their own garden.

Stories of Covid-19 Era Resilience

Stories of Covid-19 Era Resilience

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Cairo Dye, National Hellenic Museum

Panelists: James Deutsch, Jacob Campbell, Madeleine Tudor, Alicia Zeimet

How does one go about documenting a series of global events which not only impacted one community, but rocked the entire world? How might the process of museum collecting and storytelling create opportunities for reflection, solidarity, and healing? Learn how the Smithsonian Folklife Digital Magazine, Field Museum of Natural History Pandemic Collection Committee, and Chicago Cultural Alliance Stories of Arts Resilience project are leveraging community engagement, oral history, storytelling, and the generation of art in order to offer novel approaches toward museum collecting and documentation of the pandemic.

 

Strategies for Local Advocacy in the Arts

Strategies for Local Advocacy in the Arts

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Jonathan VanderBrug, Arts Alliance Illinois

Panelist: Ben Lau, Ahmed Flex Omar, Gabriela Juarez

Advocacy is critical to organizational sustainability. It is imperative that non-profit leaders, especially those working in the cultural sector, foster strong working relationships with their local representatives, including alder-people, officials in chambers of commerce, and visitors’ bureaus. Learn some of the effective strategies others in the non-profit sector have developed for advocacy and build strong working relationships with your local representatives in order to be a more effective champion for your community.

Contested Narratives: Chicago Monuments

Contested Narratives: Chicago Monuments

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Tiffany Tolbert, National Trust for Historic Preservation

Panelists: Jaime Rivera , Sherry Williams, Joi Boose, Elsie Hector Hernandez

Monuments and memorials frame our built environment in Chicago, both reflecting and impacting our civic life. Concern over which figures are memorialized is not new. However, over the past year the global pandemic and racial justice movements shed further light on deeply entrenched racism and discrimination which have been normalized in the fabric of our society. The Chicago Monuments Committee arose as a response, and opportunities now exist for the public to weigh in. Discover the complex legacies certain monuments embody, and foster a deeper understanding of why some communities are deeply impacted by their presence while others remain oblivious. Panelists also discuss alternative strategies of enlivening our public spaces.

New Frontiers in Digitization: Amplifying Stories

New Frontiers in Digitization: Amplifying Stories

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Anthonie Tumpag, BSW, MA, Filipino American Historical Society of Chicago

Panelists: Kate Flynn, Jorge Felix, Halyna Sarancha

Over the past two decades museum and archives professionals have been inundated with rallying cries to digitize, digitize, digitize. But digitized collections do not constitute an end, in and of themselves. Participants in this session will learn how to activate their digital collections through the Chicago Collections Consortium’s EXPLORE Portal. Panelists share their experience with digitizing collections, generating metadata, and sharing digital collections with the public utilizing EXPLORE. Discover novel methods of leveraging digital collections in your effort to amplify your stories in public and educational forums through this session. Thanks to Illinois Humanities for their generous support of the Stories of Im/Migration: Chicago collaboration with the Chicago Collections Consortium.