Taste From Home – Announcement

Taste From Home – Announcement

Peter Vega, Executive Director, Chicago Cultural Alliance

Taste from Home is collection of recipes and stories inspired by the food that defines who we are and where we come from. As we are all home exploring new recipes and cuisines, we encourage you to share a recipe and story with us that connects you to your family and cultural heritage.

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation today, if you are able. If you are unable to donate, you can still participate by sharing a recipe by using hashtags #tastefromhome, #tastefromhomerecipe, & #chicagocultural on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.


 
I am humbled and honored to have the opportunity to lead the Chicago Cultural Alliance as its Executive Director and to advance its mission to support, promote, and connect museums and cultural heritage institutions.

The Members of the Alliance have taught me that museums and cultural heritage institutions are more than hosts for cultural events and performances. These institutions are pillars of their communities, neighborhoods, and the city overall. They are critical to the development of cross-cultural understanding by preserving and protecting the identity and characteristics of all the diverse cultures that make up the mosaic that is Chicago.

This is why it is imperative that we all participate in today’s historic Black Lives Matter movement. We must collectively support our Black communities and share the burden they’ve carried alone for hundreds of years. They need support from all of us. We must embrace, share, and amplify one another’s cultures, histories, and traditions.

Taste From Home was created to remind us of what makes us similar. Food and stories within each of our cultures help us to learn more about one another and celebrate our diversity, similarities, and differences. I hope you can join us in this celebration by participating in Taste From Home.

Tell us a story about your family and friends and how you all come together to celebrate your culture with food! The Chicago Cultural Alliance wants to elevate more diverse voices in our city. We do this by supporting cultural heritage museums and centers that promote and support cross-cultural understanding, diversity, and inclusion. We hope you will consider making a donation to help us continue this vital work.

Andrew’s Slovak Haluski (Grandma’s Recipe)

Andrew’s Slovak Haluski (Grandma’s Recipe)

Andrew Leith, Conservation and Collection Program Manager, Chicago Cultural Alliance

Taste from Home is collection of recipes and stories inspired by the food that defines who we are and where we come from. As we are all home exploring new recipes and cuisines, we encourage you to share a recipe and story with us that connects you to your family and cultural heritage.

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation today, if you are able. If you are unable to donate, you can still participate by sharing a recipe by using hashtags #tastefromhome, #tastefromhomerecipe, & #chicagocultural on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.


 

My name is Andrew Leith. I am the Conservation and Collections Program Manager at the Chicago Cultural Alliance. I have been at the Alliance since the beginning to 2017 but my relationship with this incredible organization dates back considerably further than that. You could say the Alliance and I came of age together over the past 16 years. When I was a young anthropologist in undergrad at Loyola University Chicago, I began volunteering as a facilitator for a recently minted program known as Cultural Connections through the Field Museum’s Center for Cultural Understanding and Change (CCUC).  It was through that formative experience with community collaboration that I came to visit several of the city’s treasured cultural centers and became friends with amazing community stakeholders such as Soo Lon Moy, Dorothie Shah, and the late Stanley Balzekas Jr. As it so happens, that program evolved into the Chicago Cultural Alliance.

I love my work. I am honored to be invited into the museum collections spaces our Core Members call home. It is a privilege to work hand in hand with these visionaries I now call friends to help to care for their collections.

Though it has many iterations, my Grandmother’s particular recipe for haluski derives from an old Slovak mountain dish comprised of potato dumplings and fried cabbage. My great-grandparents brought it with them from the village of Klenovec, Slovakia to the United States when they immigrated in 1912. Simple, hearty, and cost-effective, it fed five children on the family farm in northern Wisconsin during the Great Depression. I grew up loving Grandma’s haluski and spent many happy moments helping her to prepare it—consequently learning how to replicate the recipe myself. As with many old recipes, it is the product of experience, taste, touch, and smell rather than any proper written instructions. A dash of this and a scoop of that—this recipe is very forgiving and can be easily adjusted. Today, I continue to use my great-grandmother’s heirloom cutting board whenever I prepare haluksi, and the smell of frying cabbage evokes memories of my grandmother’s kitchen and her stories of a Slovak-American upbringing.  This is a tradition I look forward to share with my own son.

The recipe is in the link. A donation is not required to view the recipe. Any donations made will support the Chicago Cultural Alliance’s mission to promote, support, and connect museums and centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive and equitable Chicago.

#SupportChicagoArts

#SupportChicagoArts


We’re partnering with @SupportChicagoArts to #SupportChicagoArts!

As you know, COVID-19 has created a unique threat to the Chicago arts community. We were among the first to close, and without audiences we face unprecedented financial stresses for the immediate future.

That’s why we are proud to announce our partnership with #SupportChicagoArts. When you buy a lawn sign or medallion , Chicago Cultural Alliance receives 100% of the profits from your tax deductible donation – and you get to share your support of the arts with your friends and neighbors!

Chicago is known for our vibrant arts and culture community. The arts help us understand the world, relate to one another, and entertain us. With the support of patrons like you, we know that we can emerge from this crisis. Your support will help keep our staff paid so that Chicago Cultural Alliance can continue to connect, promote, and support centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive Chicago. Our vision is a city where all communities have a voice, and cross-cultural dialogue and collaboration are an integral part of Chicago’s civic fabric. The Alliance supports Chicago’s most precious and essential museums and cultural centers.  Your support will help us to help them.

Purchase Yours Today

Window Card, Lawn Signs, and Display Medallions are all available, thanks to the generous support of Direction Tour Marketing.

Vanessa’s Birthday Punch (Lola’s Recipe)

Vanessa’s Birthday Punch (Lola’s Recipe)

Vanessa Vergara, Board President, Chicago Cultural Alliance

Taste from Home is a collection of recipes and stories inspired by the food that defines who we are and where we come from. As we are all home exploring new recipes and cuisines, we encourage you to share a recipe and story with us that connects you to your family and cultural heritage.

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation today, if you are able. If you are unable to donate, you can still participate by sharing a recipe by using hashtags #tastefromhome, #tastefromhomerecipe, & #chicagocultural on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.


Why I serve as Board President of the Chicago Cultural Alliance:

I believe that cultural heritage matters and should be valued, shared, celebrated, and preserved.  If you do not know where you come from, you will never know where you are headed.  My cultural heritage is my personal compass.  My parents and grandparents emigrated from the Philippines so our family could pursue the American dream. 

I am proud to serve as the Board President of the Chicago Cultural Alliance because our work connecting, promoting, and supporting centers of heritage is so critical.  Being in the middle of a global pandemic reminds us all to get back to the basics.  What do we need to survive and thrive?  Working on this essay about my Lola’s punch transported me out of this pandemic and back into my childhood.  My childhood was greatly influenced by my heritage as a Filipino American raised in a family of recent immigrants.  I also learned something new about my own understanding of my personal history as you will soon learn! 

Who taught you this recipe & how did you learn it?         

I learned this recipe by watching my Lola (grandmother in Tagalog) and Mom make it ever since I was a kid.  I experienced this recipe by taste, enjoying many wonderful servings of Lola’s birthday punch. 

What culture/country is this dish from?

This recipe is a product of the Filipino-American culture.  My Lola invented it!

In the process of working on my Taste From Home essay, I learned that this punch is not actually a recipe from the Philippines as I had originally thought.  I found out from my Mom that my Lola had invented this recipe for me!  My Lola wanted to come up with something special for my first birthday and created this masterful birthday refreshment.  Her punch was such a hit that our punch bowl had to be refilled twice during my first birthday party.

When do you normally eat this dish? Is it for a holiday or a celebration?

You would typically serve this punch at a birthday party.  This recipe is also associated with any large family celebration, such as Christmas or New Year’s.  Anytime we have a large family gathering, you can guarantee, Lola’s punch will be served.

Why is it important to you?

This recipe is important to me because it symbolizes joy, family, and love.  It will forever be the iconic taste of my childhood.  It transports me back to simpler times when the world seemed less complicated and more innocent.

Growing up in a large, boisterous Filipino American family, some of my fondest childhood memories revolved around birthday celebrations.  Now I find myself at a time when my family and I cannot gather for large celebrations (or any celebrations for that matter).  Instead, we are setting up hazy, family Zoom calls and FaceTime sessions which are a poor substitute for being together, in person, with those you love. 

I now realize how easily I took for granted the memories of being able to gather for large family celebrations around a huge bowl of Lola’s heavenly punch.  Those memories are my plane ticket out of this pandemic.  That is why heritage and personal history matters. Memory is a transformative gift that can take you anywhere, anytime.

Even during a global health crisis, you can leave it all behind, even if for just a short time, and learn something new about yourself and carry those memories with pride and share them with others.  I encourage you to take a journey, without hesitation, and find your own plane ticket out of the pandemic to a destination in your personal heritage and share it with others with joy and pride!

We Stand In Solidarity

We Stand In Solidarity

#blacklivesmatter

The Chicago Cultural Alliance stands in solidarity with the African American community and all those who have marched in the name of justice and equality here in Chicago and across the United States. We understand the outrage and desperation reverberating across our great nation.  We urge our leaders at all levels of government not only to hear the voices but also to invest in communities of color and give them the resources they need not just to survive but to thrive.

As an Alliance that represents Chicago’s incredible diversity, we join the collective calls to end systemic racism as well as for peace and equality. Let us come together and build better and stronger communities through cultural enrichment and mutual respect.  Let us strive together to seek equity and further inclusivity for all our communities by making the extra effort to consider and care for all of those around us.  

Stay safe and support each other, 

 

From the Chicago Cultural Alliance Staff & Board of Directors:

Peter Vega, Executive Director
Teresita Aviles Bailey, Membership and Development Associate
Andrew Leith, Conservation & Collections Program Manager
Ivonne Romo, Director of Finance & Operations

Digital Preservation

Digital Preservation Workshop Series

Every Tuesday, from June 16th – July 28th, 2020
3:00-4:00 PM

Free for Members of the Chicago Cultural Alliance
$10 for non-members

Register for each session individually: 
June 16th 
June 30th
July 14th
July 28th

This workshop series will cover the basics of digital preservation and how it applies to Chicago Cultural Alliance Core Member organizations. Digital preservation professionals from Northwestern University, University of Illinois, and University of Iowa have generously offered to be our instructors. We will focus on three main areas of digital preservation: storage, metadata, and capacity building. Attendees will develop an understanding of these elements to begin laying the groundwork for building a successful digital preservation program at their organizations. This workshop will take place over four one-hour virtual sessions. The topics covered will build on one another, so participants should expect to attend all four sessions to gain the greatest learning benefit.

Speakers:
Laura M. Alagna, Northwestern University

Tracey M. Popp, University of Illinois

Daniel Johnson, University of Iowa

The Chicago Cultural Alliance is a non-profit organization that promotes, supports, and connects museums and centers of cultural heritage.  We rely on donations from Cultural Supporters like you.  Please consider a donation to help us make a more inclusive and diverse Chicago.

Activating Heritage Webinar: Preparing to Reopen with Luci Creative

Preparing to Reopen:
What do museums need to consider about when and how to reopen their doors?

Wednesday, May 27th, 2020
2:00–3:30PM

Free for Members of the Chicago Cultural Alliance
$10 for non-members

And what changes should you keep in mind with regards to exhibits, occupancy, interactives, and communication with visitors? Luci Creative will share observations and ideas from the field, and make some recommendations, with a focus on small museums and low-cost solutions. They will encourage a rich conversation with members of the Chicago Cultural Alliance so that they’re team can also learn from you.

Luci Creative Webinar Attendees

Morgan Bury, Project Strategy Director

Sarah Anderson, Art Director

David Whitemyer, Director of Business Development

About Luci Creative:

Luci Creative is a full-service creative agency that develops, designs, and produces compelling exhibits and spaces for museums, cultural institutions, and corporations around the world. They are a team of experts who specialize in all aspects of creative strategy, environmental design, exhibition design, graphic design, interactive development, and implementation. Luci has worked on projects for the Museum of Science and Industry, the Chicago Children’s Museum, the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center, and the Field Museum. They believe that a successful experience must be informative, engaging, and exciting. By amplifying clients’ stories and translating them into three-dimensional experiences, they captivate, enlighten, and entertain audiences like never before.

The Chicago Cultural Alliance is a non-profit organization that promotes, supports, and connects museums and centers of cultural heritage.  We rely on donations from Cultural Supporters like you.  Please consider a donation to help us make a more inclusive and diverse Chicago.

Statement on COVID-19

 The Power of Words & Supporting Chicago’s

Cultural Heritage Institutions

Dear Cultural Supporters,

In these uncertain times, COVID-19 is affecting all aspects of our society, including how, when, and where we live and work. Communities are being tested, as people are facing fear, illness, and even death. In times like these, language can be very powerful, this is why the Chicago Cultural Alliance condemns the use of terms like Chinese Virus, China coronavirus or Kung-Flu when referring to the COVID-19 virus. We urge the United States Government, our leaders, and community members, to be mindful of the power and influence of their words. Calling it a “Chinese Virus” only increases division, fear, and discrimination towards members of the Asian-American community.

To read more on the impact of these unfortunately powerful statements, read the New York Times article, “Spit On, Yelled At, Attacked: Chinese-Americans Fear for Their Safety”.

As the Alliance continues to monitor the impact of COVID-19, we must acknowledge the direct impact on Chicago’s over 40 cultural heritage centers, museums, and historical societies. The long term financial stability of these important community-based organizations is in question. Many are still providing resources to their communities such as elder care and food relief. Others are working diligently to engage their constituents who are home under the “shelter at place” ordinance. Continued engagement with their community is not only important to the stability of these organizations but now more than ever Chicagoans need to be uplifted by cultural enrichment and immersed in an ethos of mutual respect, especially during these divisive times. The Alliance is continuing to support our member organizations that are located in the 28 Chicago neighborhoods and 9 suburbs. 

At the moment, if you are looking at how you can help support these cultural communities, we ask that you contact your legislators to let them know what the museum field is facing and urge them to provide critical support for museums. We urge the U.S. Congress to include at least $4 billion for nonprofit museums in COVID-19 (coronavirus) economic relief legislation to provide emergency assistance through June.

Additionally, the Chicago Community Trust, the City of Chicago, and United Way of Metro Chicago have organized the Chicago Community COVID-19 Response Fund which is supporting local non-profit organizations serving our region’s most vulnerable neighbors.  Please consider a donation to help support their efforts. You may also contact the Alliance for other ways to help. 

Lastly, the Chicago Cultural Alliance’s MOSAIC Gala, which is a key community event for our members and is crucial to the Alliance’s financial survival, was scheduled for May 12th. We have postponed this event to October 13th, 2020 but continue to raise support until we can have a successful event later this year. To make donations directly to the Alliance, visit the Support Page of our website.

Stay Safe and Support Each Other,

From the Chicago Cultural Alliance Staff & Board of Directors:

Elspeth Revere, Interim Executive Director
Peter Vega, Acting Director/Director of Programs
Teresita Aviles Bailey, Membership and Development Associate
Andrew Leith, Conservation & Collections Program Manager
Ivonne Romo, Director of Finance & Operations 

Digital Marketing Intern (Unpaid)

Digital Marketing Intern

Reports to: Executive Director and Marketing Manager

Time Commitment: 24 hrs./week, some evening or weekend support may be needed for programming and special events. Exact schedule based on intern availability.

About Us: The Chicago Cultural Alliance’s mission is to connect, promote, and support centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive Chicago. We are an active consortium of 40 Chicago-area cultural heritage museums, centers and historical societies who span 28 neighborhoods and 7 suburbs in the Chicago area and represent over 30 different cultures from around the world.

About the Internship: The Digital Marketing Intern will gain valuable non-profit management experience through direct involvement in the planning and coordination of the Chicago Cultural Alliance’s programs and events at our various member sites in the neighborhoods of Chicago. The internship will provide the opportunity to work on a variety of projects including will event planning and coordination, member relations and collaborations, program management, and marketing.

What you will learn:

  • Support Marketing Manager with daily operations including member inquiries, meeting scheduling and preparation as well as clerical duties (filing, copying, mailing).
  • Attend staff and board meetings, and assist in public programs when necessary.
  • Assist in ensuring that pages on the company website are updated and accurate
  • Assist in the creation and execution of email marketing campaigns
  • Conduct best practice research to identify opportunities for email marketing campaigns
  • Identify, initiate, and execute promotional opportunities
  • Assist with social media management for Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram
  • Assist other members of the Administration team as assigned

Qualifications:

  • Currently enrolled in undergraduate or graduate program, with focus in marketing, communications, museum studies, sociology, anthropology, human and civil rights, or other social sciences preferred.
  • Experience with Adobe a plus
  • Highly detail oriented and organized with ability to work independently and creatively.
  • Outgoing personality with a willingness to learn.
  • Excellent communication skills (phone, email, and in person).
  • Strong work ethic with sensitivity to confidential information.

The Chicago Cultural Alliance values interns who are self-starters and share our vision of a making a Chicago a city where all communities have a voice, and cross cultural dialogue and collaboration are an integral part of Chicago’s civic fabric.

If interested, please send cover letter, resume and three (3) references to [email protected] with “Marketing Intern” as the subject. Only complete applications will be reviewed.