The current show at the
Chicago Cultural Center,
African American Designers in Chicago: Art, Commerce and the Politics of Race, is the kind of show I know I will revisit several times while it's here because there is so much to see. I had an opportunity to attend
The Designs of African American Life Symposium held in conjunction with the show and learned so much about the history of Black designers in Chicago that I had never known before. As a Black designer myself, having endured so many obstacles in my attempts to get my interior design career off the ground, I can only imagine how much more difficult it must have been for those who came before me at a time when this segregated city was even worse than it is now. Yet despite everything, they persevered and made great work. This show celebrates that.
I want to begin with a page from my maternal grandmother's yearbook. One of the first artifacts I saw was from the Wendell Phillips High School yearbook from 1925, which was during the time she attended the school.
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Clarence Lawson |
I was already thinking of her because she was a prominent seamstress and the show encompasses fashion as well as other design disciplines, but there was something really powerful about seeing something that would have once belonged to her.
And this poster advertises the kind of art shows my mother used to participate in.
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Unknown Designer |
I feel a deep connection to the work in this show.
I first learned about Patty-Jo dolls from the
Black Doll Collecting blog. I was excited to see one in person. She is based on a character originated by Jackie Ormes, the first African-American woman to have a syndicated comic strip.
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Jackie Ormes |
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Jackie Ormes |
Several years ago when he was receiving an award, I had an opportunity to meet industrial designer
Charles Harrison, who invented the View-Master. He worked for Sears and designed numerous everyday objects, like this sewing machine and this chair.
Here are more designs that caught my eye. As always, I have tried to include the designers' names in my photo captions, but may have missed someone.
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Tom Miller |
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Charles Dawson |
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Charles Dawson |
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Advertising photography by Gordon Parks |
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An ad by Vince Cullers for his agency |
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Robert Savon Pious |
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A diorama by Charles Dawson of Crispus Attucks getting killed in the Boston Massacre |
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Charles Dawson |
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Unknown Designer |
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Unknown Designer |
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Charles Dawson |
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Charles Dawson |
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Charles White |
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Herb Nipson and Norman L. Hunter |
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Herbert Temple |
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Herbert Temple |
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LeRoy Winbush |
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LeRoy Winbush |
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LeRoy Winbush |
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LeRoy Winbush |
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Jay Jackson |
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Jay Jackson |
The show continues through March 3rd, 2019. The building hours are Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. –7 pm and Saturday – Sunday, 10 a.m. –5 p.m. and admission is free.