Artists and spacial griots Andres L. Hernandez, Tonika Lewis Johnson and Roland Knowlden invite you to consider how socio-economic and geographic oppressions impact the way we see (or don’t see) our environments, in a conversation with SSCAC Exhibitions Manager and Curator Lola Ayisha Ogbara.
Hernandez uncovers embedded histories and systems of power within built and speculative landscapes to imagine these spaces otherwise. Social justice artist Lewis Johnson advocates for urban communities by documenting the disparities among Chicago residents who live on opposite ends of the same streets across the city’s racial and economic divides. Knowlden critically deconstructs the elements of our urban fabric and its architectural histories to reassemble them as cartographic abstractions and imagined landscapes. Gwendolyn Brooks, a brilliant author, poet, and life-long resident of the historic neighborhood of Bronzeville, becomes the Mecca of these stories as this exhibition interrogates dilapidation, buried histories, and what it could mean to be Black in space.
Themes in the exhibition reference and/or explore the following: Urban planning, socio-economics, equity, Mecca Flats, Psycho-geography: The impact that our physical space has on us, segregation, Gwendolyn Brooks, June Jordan, Chicago architecture, poetics of black spaces/environments, artists David Hammons and Jack Whitten.
This exhibition was organized and curated by SSCAC Exhibitions Manager Lola Ayisha Ogbara.
*Complimentary coffee and cake will be provided during the program.