Moon Healing Escalation
Apr
26
to Jun 7

Moon Healing Escalation

Co-Prosperity is excited to announce the exhibition, Moon Healing Escalation, by Bay Area-based multimedia artist Gericault De La Rose. The exhibition will take place April 26 – June 7 at Co-Prosperity’s window vitrines. Opening reception is April 26th, 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM. This will be De La Rose’s first solo exhibition in Chicago.

Adorning the window vitrines with lustrous satin, rhinestones, sequins, and glitters, Moon Healing Escalation, composed of both previous work and new creations, is a ritualistic triptych that unfolds as a passage that bridges the past and the present through magical and spiritual transcendence. The window exhibition invites the viewers into a celebration of love and friendship, a liminal space where beautiful metamorphosis is constantly being materialized. It is nonetheless also a deeply personal installation for De La Rose to look back at her life, ingest her past trauma as a trans woman surviving in this world, and trace the journey of her healing imbued with support and compassion from her community.

The first work is a mark of history, of something old. Severance includes two larger-than-life tapestries the artist made for a previous performance. Loosely draped from the wall by the top corners, the jacquard-loom-woven fabrics are soft photographs that show the exposed bellies of De La Rose’s parents: Her mom’s stretched marks from her pregnancies juxtaposed to her dad’s scar from an operation. In De La Rose’s previous performance, the artist wore a jacquard overall that showed an image of her own scarred body. She pulled on the threads to unravel the hanging tapestries, creating wrinkles, folds, but also irreversible damage to the laboriously made weaves. These ruptures are visible in the display and the suit will also be shown in the installation.

Scars should be celebrated as the body’s history, its perseverance and resilience, time-marked by vitality. Scars, of which the past tense is wounds, visible and invisible, literal and metaphorical, thread through this exhibition that endorses them as portals to possibilities and openings for umbilical cords to form new and strong bonds. Reveal, the centerpiece, is a new ambitious performance that draws the connection between magical girl transformations, drag, and transition. The performance is inspired by Sailor Moon, the Japanese manga series and anime that has enraptured the hearts and imaginations of fans around the world with its embodiment of courage, compassion, and camaraderie. One of the most memorable moments in this anime is undoubtedly the magical girl transformations, where the adventurous protagonists go through spectacular bodily upgrades from daring middle-schoolers to powerful guardians of the Earth. Reveal considers these liminal moments and reframes them as rituals of passage in a queer context. Shrouded by glittering embellishments, ornaments, wig hair, and radiant fabric, De La Rose will perform drag to high-energy hyperpop music, enacting the moment of phenomenal rebirth like how a butterfly leaves its cocoon.

The final panel of the triptych consists of a brand-new tapestry and prints the artist makes for this exhibition. A panel dedicated to found and chosen family, Tethered is a piece of weaving—made in a similar process as that of Severance—with images of the artist’s and her friends’ hands, nodding to the hand signs prominently featured in Sailor Moon’s magical girl transformations. The tapestry is framed by colorful prints produced by De La Rose’s signature dermatographia skin stamping technique. Dermatographia is a skin condition for which the skin is prone to pressure and will produce a welt in the shape of the applied external force. Creatively turning this condition to her advantage, De La Rose uses her skin as a canvas and printing surface. In Tangled, she invites her friends to each describe their friendships or their first encounters and to write these words with fingertips directly onto her skin. After Time does her magic, the slightly elevated skin surface becomes a printing block that can yield a few prints before the swelling clears out. Conversing with the permanent scars recorded and commemorated in Severance, dermatographic prints evoke temporary scars that are themselves expressions of love and acceptance. Like temporary tattoos but only in reverse, De La Rose uses this body print technique as a poetic vehicle to mark “tattoos” as proofs of touch and intimacy, of her presence in relation to others, and of her body—a body that has suffered and will suffer but chooses to only suffer fabulously. - Nicky Ni

Gericault De La Rose is a queer trans Filipinx, multidisciplinary artist, and educator. While developing her art practice, she worked as a Co-curator of Philippine Objects at the Field Museum of Natural History where she organized a series of monthly events called Pamanang Pinoy using the objects within the collection as conduits for community discussion. After graduating with a BFA with an emphasis in Art History from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, she formed an artist collective, Export Quality, together with other Queer Filipinx alumni. De La Rose has also showcased her work in group shows in cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, Johnson City, New York, Toronto, and Oakland. De La Rose attended the ACRE residency in Steuben, Wisconsin and the HATCH artist residency for the Chicago Artist Coalition in 2020. Most recently in 2022, she received the San Francisco Foundation’s Jack K. and Gertrude Murphy Award and received her MFA from UC Berkeley in 2023. 


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More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row
Apr
27
to Jun 6

More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row

American history is longer, larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything anyone has ever said about it.
— James Baldwin

Public Opening Reception: 7:00 - 9:00 PM, April 27, 2024 

OPEN HOURS: Saturdays 12-5pm and by appointment (email: info @ publicmediainstitute . com).

More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row is a counter-narrative, a sustained act of resistance, an exhibition that reveals the intimate experiences, transformative ideas, and beautiful dreams of people facing the stark realities of life sentencing in Illinois. These sentences are commonly described as death by incarceration because they condemn people to confinement until their death. Nevertheless, as contributing artist, Reginald BoClair, states, “Though sentenced to die in prison, we are alive.”

In the United States, more than 200,000 people are serving life sentences. In Illinois, approximately 4,300 people are serving life or de facto life, a sentence of forty years or more. In 1978 Illinois eliminated parole, making it one of the six states where all life sentences are imposed without the possibility of parole. Of the people serving life without parole in Illinois, 67% are Black and 53% are 55 years old or older, statistics that underscore the racism and decades-long impact of life sentencing. Yet, every human represented in these numbers is so much more than a statistic. 

Inspired by the popular Humans of New York photography project highlighting stories and photographs of the varied people on the streets of New York, More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row explores the views, hopes, worries, aspirations, and everyday lives of the diverse array of people concealed by the logics and structures of mass incarceration. Through personal narratives, artistic expressions, installations, and poetic verse, this exhibition shines a light on the people who inhabit 'life row.'

The collected works create space for contributing artists, family members, policy makers, public officials, and the wider public to learn more about themselves, each other, society, and the consequences of life sentencing in hopes to inspire alternative forms of justice, accountability, and healing.

P+NAP Think Tank 

This exhibition is part of a broader Humans of Life Row initiative that emerged from the Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project (PNAP) Think Tank at Stateville Prison. The Think Tank is composed of scholars, writers, and artists who seek to transform the material and ideological conditions created by carceral logics through in-depth research, policy analysis and advocacy, alongside creative cultural projects. The Think Tank seeks to make key interventions and offer critical insights to the broader movement to end mass-incarceration from within one of the most brutal geographies of the prison-industrial-complex. As Devon Terrell, an inaugural Think Tank member, put it: “[we] walk into the future by visualizing it today.”

The Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project is a visual arts and education project that connects teaching artists and scholars to incarcerated students at Stateville Prison through classes, workshops, guest lectures, and a think tank. 

Featuring contributions from:

Carlos Barberena, Michael Bell, Reginald BoClair, Stephanie Bonds, Sarah Brannon, Dorothy Burge, Carri Cook, Monica Cosby, Robert Curry, Michelle Daniel Jones, Devon Daniels, Dignidad Rebelde (Jesus Barraza & Melanie Cervantes), Christian Dior Noel, Joseph Dole, Raul Dorado, William Estrada, Darrell W. Fair, Charles Hill, Renaldo Hudson, Candace Hunter, Antonio ‘TK’ Kendrick, Darnell Lane, Lisa Lee & the National Public Housing Museum, Damon Locks, Rodney Love, Lucky Pierre, (Kevin Kaempf, Michael Thomas, & Mary Zerkel), Juan Luna, Breanna Maldonado, Jerel Matthews, Shaneva McReynolds, Pablo Mendoza, Ryan Miller, Lakeshia Murph, Leslie Peace, Daniel Perkins, Maria Pike, Fernanda Ponce, Steven P. Ramirez, Erika Ray, Olivia Mikolai Ridge, Benny Rios DonJuan, Sarah Ross, Carlvosier Smith, Lonnie Smith, James Soto, Michael Simmons, Michael M. Sullivan, Johnny Taylor, Devon Terrell, Chip Thomas, Antwon Tyler, jina valentine & Sylvan Palm Valentine, Connie Vantlin, Angie Varriale, Decedrick Walker, Eric Watkins, Anna Martine Whitehead, Carl Williams, and more

This exhibition is presented by Co-Prosperity, the Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project, and the Center for the Study of Race, Politics & Culture’s Beyond Prisons Initiative at the University of Chicago and is supported in part by Illinois Humanities, Woods Fund Chicago, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Special thanks to Antony Ablan and Rebirth of Sound, Victoria Alvarez, Ben Austen, Ahniya Butler, Anaga Dalal, Raphel Jackson,  Noah Karapanagiotidis, Tierra Kilpatrick, S.Y. Lim, Tracye Matthews, Pablo Mendoza, Marilyn Richardson, Arianna Salgado, Gina Samuels, Indigo Wright, and Nick Wylie.


PUBLIC PROGRAMS

Note: Given the legionnaires crisis inside IDOC, the exhibition will serve as a water collection site in collaboration with the Coalition to Decarcerate Illinois. Attendees are invited to bring sealed bottles of water to the collection site to be donated to communities in Stateville.


Opening Reception

Saturday, April 27, 2024, 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM  

Join Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project in celebrating the opening More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row. Exhibition organizers and artists will share reflections and insight on the featured artworks. The program will conclude with a special performance by Anna Martine Whitehead responding to Lonnie Smith’s poem “Am I a Person.”

[There will be a private light reception at 6:00 PM for contributors and family members.]  



Parole Illinois Throughout the Years 

Thursday, May 2, 2024, 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Join Parole Illinois for an insightful program that sheds light on the evolution of parole systems in Illinois. Through panel discussions, and fundraising efforts, attendees will be invited into meaningful conversations on parole reform and its impact on communities. Panelists include Jimmy Soto, Kevin Blumenberg (Swack), James Lenoir, Ben Austen, and Shaneva McReynolds moderated by Ashton Hoselton



Chicago Humanities Festival

Saturday, May 4, 2024

11:00 AM | Everyday Objects from the Public Housing to Prison Pipeline 

Join Lisa Lee (Executive Director, National Public Housing Museum), Dorothy Burge (artist and educator) and Colette Payne (Director, Reclamation Project, Women's Justice Institute) in conversation about the Everyday Objects from the Public Housing to Prison Pipeline. After the discussion Aaron Hughes, Exhibition Co-organizer and Co-curator, will lead the gallery walk. 

1:00 PM | Two Tales of (In)Justice: Fighting Death by Incarceration from the Inside Out 

Join James Soto and Renaldo Hudson as they share their stories and pathways to freedom moderated by Alice Kim. Both men survived decades of long-term incarceration. 



Lessons & Learnings from Teaching at Logan

Thursday, May 16, 2024, 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Join Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project for a comprehensive report back and update on PNAP’s two-year initiative at Logan Prison. Starting as listening sessions, the Logan Initiative has evolved into various course tracks and reading groups inside. As we continue to shape the initiative, our team is visualizing & dissecting the long term implications of our work at Logan. Members of our team will dive into the various aspects of this work and show a snapshot of our current zine project set to be shared in June.




Power of Art

Tuesday, May 21, 2024, 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

Join More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row featured artists to discuss the exhibition and the transformative power of art.




Closing Program 

Saturday, June 1, 2024, 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Join Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project for a reception to celebrate the closing of More Beautiful, More Terrible: Humans of Life Row. Attendees of all ages will be invited to write letters, make buttons, and screen print designs from the artists at Stateville Prison with William Estrada and Aaron Hughes.

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Nicole Eisenman and David Velasco in Conversation
Apr
6
3:00 PM15:00

Nicole Eisenman and David Velasco in Conversation

Co-Prosperity is thrilled to host Nicole Eisenman and David Velasco in Conversation on April 6th at 3:00 PM. This talk will be recorded. Please RSVP by joining the guest list as spots are limited.  

Nicole Eisenman: What Happened opens at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago on April 6th and will be on view until September 22, 2024.

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Mar
20
7:00 PM19:00

TENGGER Concert with KIKÙ HIBINO

Co-Prosperity in collaboration with 062 is thrilled to present TENGGER. TENGGER is a traveling musical family, made up of Pan-Asian couple ITTA (from South Korea) and MARQIDO (from Japan), who create their brand of psychedelic New-Age drone magic through the use of voice, Indian harmonium, and toy instruments (played by ITTA), and synths and electronics (played by MARQIDO). The duo originally started out with the moniker “10,” but since the birth of their son RAAI (who joins them on tour and playing voice, synth, toy instruments, and dance performance on stage) in 2012, have called themselves TENGGER (meaning ‘unlimited expanse of sky’ in Mongolian) to mark the expansion of the family. It also means ‘huge sea’ in Hungarian. Travel, as a spiritual experience in real environments, and the sound between the space and the audience have been central themes of their works. The family’s yearly pilgrimages inform every aspect of their art.

Kikù Hibino will be opening the night and this concert is FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. Please join us on March 20, 2024. Doors open at 7:00 PM. 

Sound artist Kikù Hibino has dedicated his career to exploring the complex interplay between nature's inherent structures and the human imagination through electronic music. Inspired by the intricate beauty of human languages,  natural patterns, optical illusions and moirés, Kikù crafts electronic compositions that challenge traditional rhythmic structures and melodies, inviting listeners into a world where linear and non-linear converge harmoniously.

Represented by the Italian record label Superpang, Kikù's innovative work has been showcased in venues across the States, including the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, and Experimental Sound Studio, among others. His contributions to sound art have been recognized with a 2017 Individual Artist Grant from the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and a 2021 Outer Ear Artist in Residency at Experimental Sound Studio.

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Mar
8
9:00 PM21:00

Drag in the Round

Co-Prosperity is thrilled to present “DRAG IN THE ROUND”, a night of queer performance curated and hosted by Celeste.

Please join Irregular Girl, Stephanie, Po’Chop, Dutchesz Gemini, Alex Jenny and Celeste on March 8th from 9:00 PM - 10:30 PM at Co-Prosperity. This event is free and open to the public!

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Men I Have Ever Met
Mar
8
to Apr 14

Men I Have Ever Met

Co-Prosperity is thrilled to present Men I Have Ever Met, a group exhibition anchored on 100+ written encounters revisiting Sungjae Lee's queer journey navigating interpersonal relationships. Lee invited 5 queer Asian artists, Club Chow, Eugene I-Peng Tang, Jay Carlon, Jinu Hong, and Vincent Chong who are based in Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York to present creative responses to Lee’s stories. Please join the opening reception on Friday, March 8th from 7:00 to 9:00 PM (Live drawing by Vincent Chong from 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM and music by Club Chow from 8:00 PM to 8:45 PM).

Click here to view a map of the exhibition.

What started as a solo exhibition for Sungjae (SJ) Lee turned into a collaborative fruition between himself and five other queer Asian artists. Lee’s Men I have Ever Met, is an ongoing project that describes his queer journey of navigating interpersonal relationships. These range from dating to one night stands since 2008, which have been documented here in written, redacted responses. This documentation begins in 2008 when Lee came out publicly in Seoul, until present day in Chicago. Aside from written responses, Lee has used performance, and installation as a means of activating the many encounters. In the past, he used ASMR (Autonomous Sensorial Meridian Response) podcast readings as a way to explore how audience members can digest his work outside of just reading through the texts. 

By using redactions in his work, Lee is keeping certain elements of his life confidential. As he is restricting himself, simultaneously, he is making space for the artists involved to fill in the holes. The five artists being extended an invitation to do so are Vincent Chong, Eugene I-Peng Tang, Jay Carlon, Jinu Hong, and Club Chow. By randomly selecting episodes, which is what Lee calls individual encounters, the artists are asked to translate the episodes into their own mediums. Chong paints queer and trans chosen family but also mixes this medium with traditional art, which includes calligraphy and performance. Tang uses photography much like Lee to capture intimate encounters. Carlon uses performance and sculpture to explore ideas of decolonization, resistance and pleasure embedded within his queer and Filipinx experience. Hong uses his graphic design background to challenge standard guidelines of printing. Club Chow uses music and mixing skills which will be used during the opening to activate words from the episodes. 

Though all the artists share similar identities, each one will expand on their lived experience, and overall shine a light on what futures can be dreamt up by bringing these individual and collective narratives to the foreground.

- Cristobal Alday, 2024

 

Lumpen Radio Special Series:

Men I Have Ever Met with host Sungjae Lee & Club Chow

Airs Fridays, 11PM - Midnight 

The radio show Men I Have Ever Met is a program in relation to the group exhibition with the same title at Co-Prosperity, presenting 6 queer Asian artists: Sungjae Lee, Club Chow, Eugene I-Peng Tang, Jay Carlon, Jinu Hong, and Vincent Chong. Responding to Lee’s redacted text installation, DJ Club Chow creates music employing words or sentences from the text as musical elements. Tune in to listen to the full context of the text in an ASMR style and queer Asian themed music! Every Friday, from March 15 to April 12, 11pm – 12am. An hour-long episode is composed of 4 or 5 stories and music in between.

 

About the Artists

Sungjae (SJ) Lee (이승재, he/they) is a Seoul-born, Chicago-based artist, educator, and writer who makes performance, installation, text, sound, and video. He received his B.F.A. in Sculpture from Seoul National University in 2014, during which time he discovered his deep interest in performance, writing, and other time-based mediums to represent the voices of marginalized groups. To further develop his practice as a performance artist, he pursued his M.F.A. in Performance Art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and graduated in 2019. While residing in the US, his practice has centered on the need for visibility and representation of queer Asians in a Western context. His work has been presented globally in South Korea, Sweden, Canada, New Zealand, and the US. He has had residencies at ACRE, High Concept Labs, HATCH Projects, Vermont Studio Center, Millay Arts, and Yaddo. He was selected for the 2022-2023 Kala Art Institute Fellowship, Franklin Furnace Fund for Performance Art 2021-22, and the 2020 AHL Foundation Artist Fellowship. In 2021-23, he has given readings of his manuscript Men I Have Ever Met in the Chicago-based READINGS series organized by Maud Lavin at different venues like the Poetry Foundation and Watershed.

Club (Kevin) Chow (周克文, he/they) is a Taiwanese-American DJ and promoter currently based in Chicago. An omnivorous selector, he blends music across genres and eras with a common undercurrent of euphoric energy and playfulness. Sonic influences include house, UKG, club music, and breakbeat. He holds a DJ residency at Steamworks Baths, organizes the queer day party Forbidden Fruitz, and soundtracks community-focused LGBTQ events in the city such as Dim Sum & Drag, a drag brunch showcasing queer AAPI performers. Club Chow's taste and versatility have brought him behind the decks at notable Chicago nightclubs such as SmartBar and Podlasie Club, as well as around the US - playing parties in Brooklyn, San Francisco, Atlanta, and throughout the Midwest.

Jinu Hong (홍진우, he/him) is a graphic designer and art director based in New York. He currently works as a member of art team at Alexander Wang and previously worked at Verizon and OnePlus as a branding creative. He also maintains an independent practice on the side with architects, artists, curators, and brands, primarily on prints, branding, websites, and exhibitions. He graduated from Yale School of Art with an MFA in Graphic Design in 2020. He has taught a class at Parsons School of Design and Pratt Institute and served as a guest critic and lecturer at Yale School of Architecture, Columbia GSAPP, Parsons School of Design, Pratt Institute, Boston University, and Northeastern University.

Jay Carlon (he/they) is a performance artist, choreographer and community organizer whose work is grounded in a collective journey toward decolonization and sustainability. His work facilitates shared healing and the exploration of post-colonial identity, ancestry, and the complex queer and Filipinx experience in relationship to site and space. The youngest of 12 in a Filipino Catholic migrant family, Carlon connects a global network of Filipinx creatives, organizing community around art and food. Carlon’s continued work with these collectives spans opera, dance, and installation. Named Dance Magazine’s 25 to Watch, Jay has performed and choreographed for the Metropolitan Opera, 2014 Olympics, 2019 Superbowl, Kanye West, Solange Knowles, and Mndsgn. He received the 2023 National Dance Project Award from the New England Foundation of the Arts to develop and tour his forthcoming work WAKE, a queer postcolonial ritual and meditation on grief (premiere 2024, touring through 2027).

Eugene I-Peng Tang (湯翊芃, he/him) is a Taiwanese artist based in Chicago. Using a conceptually-based photography practice, he explores intimate encounters and unconventional relationships that meld personal life experiences with those of his subjects. His work, A Fly on the Wall, a Deer in the Headlights, which addresses his youthful Asian gay body in relation to other stereotypes of race/age/class, has been shown at multiple galleries and screenings, including the Gene Siskel Film Center, The Plan, Ohklahomo, TNL, and SAIC Galleries. He works in photography, video/sound installation, and sculpture with an emphasis on provocative methodology. With a background in anthropology and filmmaking, he draws influences from relational aesthetics, queer studies, and his own desires. Tang has been awarded the Daniel Berger & Barbara DeGenevieve Graduate Merit Scholarship for Graduate studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, an Ox-Bow Scholarship, and the Jim Zanzi Scholarship to complete his MFA degree in 2023. He received the Student Leadership Award, and recently has been awarded a Berlin Institut Für Alles Mögliche Residency. He co-authored a book, ‘Grandma's Girlfriends - the Splendid Youth of Elder Lesbians’(阿媽的女朋友:彩虹熟女的多彩青春), which won 'Best Daily Book of the Year' of 'Openbook Award Taiwan (Openbook好書獎.年度生活書), in 2020.

Vincent Chong (莊志明, they/them) is a queer mixed-race Chinese-American artist working in Chinese calligraphy, seal carving, painting, drawing, and performance. They paint portraits of members of their QTAPI and QTBIPOC community and create performances combining high camp drag/gogo/gymnastics aesthetics with live large-scale calligraphy demonstration. They have shown work at Armature Projects, Lehman College, La MaMa, SoMad, Skånes Konstförening, Center for Book arts, Bodeguita 718, The Museum of Chinese in America, Site Brooklyn, and PAAM. They have performed at Columbus Park, Center for Performance Research, QNA, Inter Arts Center, Skånes Konstförening, MoMA PS1, Abrons Art Center, Movement Research, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Center for Book Arts. Residencies include ISCP, Gallim, the WOW Project Storefront Residency, Center for Book Arts Book Artist Residency, and Fire Island Artist Residency. Awards include NYFA/NYSCA fellowship, City Artist Corp Grant, and Huayu Enrichment Scholarship.

 
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