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Uncovered & Rediscovered: Stories of Jewish Chicago
Uncovered & Rediscovered: Stories of Jewish Chicago
Jewish Modernists in Chicago
Exhibit admission, including a multi-media screening station on the second floor, is free.
Uncovered & Rediscovered is an evolving eight-part exhibit that explores the Chicago Jewish experience. The exhibit unfolds over time in a series of intimate chapters (each on display for 3-6 months in the ground floor vestibule of the Spertus building).
Exhibit admission, including a multi-media screening station on the second floor, is free.
This chapter shares the work of an influential group of Jewish artists active in Chicago between 1920 and 1945. Predominately Eastern European immigrants or first generation Americans, many began their careers during the Great Depression as painters for the Works Progress Administration (WPA). The Modernists, as they were called, painted from personal experience and were influenced by the energy of Chicago's growing metropolis. See works by Todros Geller, A. Raymond Katz, Mitchell Siporin, Fritzi Brod, and others, and learn the stories of places they gathered including Hull House, the Jewish People's Institute, and Around the Palette (the forerunner of the American Jewish Artists Club).
Visit the Uncovered & Rediscovered exhibit page for a slideshow gallery of highlights from past chapters and for the Chicago Jewish Memory Map, a custom interactive map of personal stories of Chicago Jewish life. MORE>
Sponsors
Exhibits at Spertus are supported, in part, by a CityArts Program 4 Grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events and the Harry and Sadie Lasky Foundation.
