
About this Event
Join us for a glimpse into this year's Radicle Residents distinct practices and visions for the year-long residency, followed by a communal dinner.
Sabba S. Elahi is an interdisciplinary artist and educator who grew up in a Pakistani household in the Midwest. Elahi received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and is recipient of artist residencies at the Chicago Artists Coalition, Ragdale, and finalist for the Moth Art Prize (2020). Her art across fibers, drawing, performance, and installation, seeks to resist dehumanization and erasure, intersecting narratives of self, community, and structures of power.
Irene Hsiao is a dancer, writer, and multidisciplinary artist. She creates performances in conversation with visual art in museums, galleries, and public spaces, a practice that includes site-specific interaction with visual artworks and experimental engagement with artists, institutions, and the public. This year, she is working on Mond(e): 月亮代表我的心, a performance installation and community art project that bridges places and people, times and cultures, mesmerized by moons and humans.
Norman W. Long is a multi-disciplinary sound, video, and performing artist. His practice involves walking, collecting, performing, and recording to create objects, environments, and situations in which he and the audience are engaged in dialogues about memory, ecology, race/ethnicity, space, value, silence, and the invisible. His artistic endeavors have been showcased at diverse venues, including Experimental Sound Studio, Kavi Gupta Gallery, Renaissance Society, Yale University, Chicago Artists Coalition Gallery, Illinois State University Galleries, Elastic Arts, and Constellation.
Leticia Pardo is an artist and architect from Mexico City, based in Chicago. Her practice, influenced by her background in architecture, reflects on the ways in which place-making, migration, and political borders manifest in the built environment. Her work has been shown at the Foto Museo Cuatro Caminos in Mexico City, the São Paulo Architecture Biennial, the Chicago Architecture Biennial, among others. Leticia is currently an Assistant Professor at Indiana University Bloomington.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Hyde Park Art Center, 5020 South Cornell Avenue, Chicago, United States
USD 0.00