New Frontiers in Digitization: Amplifying Stories

New Frontiers in Digitization: Amplifying Stories

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Anthonie Tumpag, BSW, MA, Filipino American Historical Society of Chicago

Panelists: Kate Flynn, Jorge Felix, Halyna Sarancha

Over the past two decades museum and archives professionals have been inundated with rallying cries to digitize, digitize, digitize. But digitized collections do not constitute an end, in and of themselves. Participants in this session will learn how to activate their digital collections through the Chicago Collections Consortium’s EXPLORE Portal. Panelists share their experience with digitizing collections, generating metadata, and sharing digital collections with the public utilizing EXPLORE. Discover novel methods of leveraging digital collections in your effort to amplify your stories in public and educational forums through this session. Thanks to Illinois Humanities for their generous support of the Stories of Im/Migration: Chicago collaboration with the Chicago Collections Consortium.

Introduction to Digital Outreach & Hybridization

Introduction to Digital Outreach & Hybridization

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Presented by: Jeremy Bucher and Cairo Dye, National Hellenic Museum

National Hellenic Museum staff discusses the various means of digital outreach they have employed during the pandemic to encourage continued engagement and expand audiences. They discuss the benefits of generating online content as a means to engage with wider and more diverse audiences by removing barriers of geographic and financial accessibility. They also discuss several low-cost tools institutions may use to further digital outreach and hybridize their audience experience.

Fostering Inclusive and Anti-Racist Work Spaces

Fostering Inclusive and Anti-Racist Work Spaces

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Presenter: Chelsey M. Thomas, Chicago Cultural Alliance

The curation of inclusivity and anti-racist workplaces is an ongoing practice of unlearning and rebuilding. Chelsey M. Thomas, writer and educator on transformative justice, anti-racism and accountability, will be defining diversity, inclusion, equality and equity, educating on the ways in which these concepts manifest themselves in our work spaces, and providing practical ways in which we can curate inclusive and safe work environments for all people.

Justice-Minded Movements in Funding

Justice-Minded Movements in Funding

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Ellen Placey, Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation

Panelists: Meg Leary, Marcia Festen, Susan Dickson

Charitable organizations and arts foundations have been impacted by the global pandemic and have sought to modify their funding strategies in order to provide much needed support and relief. Learn how the global pandemic and racial justice movements over the past year have impacted their funding strategies and what grant options might be available for your organization.

Transforming Fundraisers

Transforming Fundraisers

Welcome to Activating Heritage 2021!

Moderator: Suzy Kahn Weinberg & Adam Yoffe (Big Shoulders Stories)

Panelists: Josey Nieto, Nitha Nagubadi

Aspirations to reopen our cultural centers are on everyone’s minds. Yet, many of the creative virtual tools developed and harnessed over the past year to amplify our stories and make our collections accessible to wider audiences have become key to our work and are likely here to stay. The ability to develop creative techniques for revenue generation including online fundraising, virtual galas, attracting corporate rentals, and apps that attract new audiences will be key to financial sustainability in this new age of in-person and virtual engagement.

Plenary Session 2021

Plenary Session 2021

In this first session, we receive a welcome from our Board President, Vanessa Vergara, hear from the Alliance Executive Director, Peter Vega and our Director of Cultural Programs and Museum Practice, Andrew Leith.

This first session features our Keynote speaker, storyteller and activist Ada Cheng, as she performs her work “Visions of Peace: A Letter to My Younger Self” as well as a creative native land acknowledgement from Indigenous Futurist Artist Santiago X.

The event also features words from the 35th president of the Cook County Board of Commissioners, Toni Preckwinkle.

Proposed Zoning Ordinance Restricts Cultural Activities

Proposed Zoning Ordinance Restricts Cultural Activities

Dear Chairman Tunney and Members of the Committee,

Recently, Landmarks Illinois and the Alphawood Foundation informed the Chicago Cultural Alliance about a proposed zoning amendment that would restrict establishing cultural exhibits and the housing of museums in “R” zoning districts and require special use permits. This proposal is in stark contrast to the mission of the Chicago Cultural Alliance. The Alliance is an arts advocacy organization that provides professional services to 42 ethnic museums, historical societies, and community centers, which we call our Core Members. Our members operating in “R” districts are active and central meeting places that contribute to stabilizing and improving their blocks and neighborhoods.

The Alliance was founded by and for Chicago’s neighborhood-based cultural institutions. Our mission is to promote, support, and connect centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive and equitable Chicago. Our members represent 30 different cultures around the world and are all based in 30 of the 77 Chicago neighborhoods and 10 suburbs.

These institutions protect and highlight Chicago’s history, foster economic stability through partnerships with local businesses and family-owned restaurants, and address residents’ needs in your wards and throughout the city. The Chicago Cultural Alliance strongly opposes this proposed zoning amendment. It will harm neighborhoods and create more uncertainty for these vital community institutions who are already a vulnerable class of small businesses because of the pandemic. It would also curtail other organizations who are planning to establish new museums and cultural exhibits, including the former home of Muddy Waters and a museum dedicated to Emmett Till.

The Alliance and our members provide cultural activities, education opportunities for teachers and students, and stimulate local business in neighborhoods. We also actively connect and partner with Alderman and Chambers of Commerce to emphasize how these institutions strengthen and rebuild our city. If members of the zoning committee want to learn more about our work, we invite you to join our monthly virtual town halls on the first Fridays of each month. If the Zoning Committee chooses to participate, please contact me at [email protected].

We urge you to vote against any change in the zoning code that will disallow and discourage our members’ operations. The proposal will seriously jeopardize the stability of neighborhood institutions that tell inclusive, equitable, and honest stories about this city and its people.

 

Monique Brinkman-Hill – Executive Director of the South Side Community Art Center

Monique Brinkman-Hill – Executive Director of the South Side Community Art Center

Have you met Monique?

If not, let us do the honor of introducing you to Monique Brinkman-Hill, who was appointed as South Side Community Art Center’s Executive Director in December 2019. Having to take over just before the start of 2020 and all the twists and turns it had in store, Monique and her team have worked hard to support their organization in its 80th year.

Do you want to hear about what it’s like to serve as a relatively new executive director during a pandemic and learn more about the South Side Community Art Center?

Listen (and/or watch) Monique’s interview with the Alliance’s own new executive director, Peter Vega, in this episode of Cultural Connections!

MOSAIC 2020 Outstanding Cultural Leader – Kathleen McDonald

MOSAIC 2020 Outstanding Cultural Leader – Kathleen McDonald

If you find yourself wondering how people end up working in their field or what it is like to work at a museum, this episode of Cultural Connections is perfect for you! 

Join Executive Director Peter Vega and Kathleen McDonald as they discuss their experiences in the arts/humanities. Kathleen has been active in the world of arts and humanities since her college years (even though it wasn’t her original plan!) and worked her way up the ranks in museums.

Maybe this episode will inspire you or someone you know to get involved at a local museum or heritage center!

We are a month into our Cultural Connections Campaign and we want to thank you for tuning in every week to listen to our members and supporters discuss topics on cultural diversity, inclusion, and equity. So far we have raised a total of $15,000 towards our goal of $50,000. We know we can hit that goal, but we need your help.

Thank you for your ongoing commitment to connect, promote, and support centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive Chicago.

We simply could not do this without you.

Presenting our “Stories of Arts Resilience”

Presenting our “Stories of Arts Resilience”

Stories of Arts Resilience:

Oral Histories of arts and museum professionals during the time of COVID-19.

Generously funded by Illinois Humanities

We at the Alliance are delighted to celebrate the release of the Stories of Arts Resilience project!

Thanks to generous support from Illinois Humanities through their Community Resilience Grant, the Stories of Arts Resilience (SOAR) project was created as a response to the shared struggles and spirit of perseverance throughout the arts and culture industry during this unprecedented moment in history. The Alliance worked with our Members to collect oral histories of their efforts during this crisis.

This project granted us the opportunity  to work with new tools and materials generated by our friends at StoryCorps Chicago, and to engage our Members in order to create an oral history archive that collects, documents, and shares museum and arts professionals’ first-hand responses to the COVID-19 crisis. 

All of the oral histories collected are now forever archived in the Story Corps Archive and in the Library of Congress!

Meet our participants.

Surinder Martignetti and Zachary Whittenburg

Surinder Martignetti (45) and her friend and colleague, Zachary Whittenburg (40), talk about where they grew up, places they’ve lived, their dance education, and their work today for Chicago arts organizations during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Jason Matsumoto and Mary Doi

Mary Doi (67) interviews her friend Jason Matsumoto (37) about Japanese Taiko drumming and his film career. He talks about how he has adapted the ensemble in 2020 to COVID-19 and to pay tribute to Black Lives Matter by performing for inmates outside the Cook County jail.

Lisa Doi and Mary Doi

Mary Doi [no age given] interviews her daughter Lisa Doi (29) about her work as an organizer at Tsuru for Solidarity advocating for the Japanese American community, the history of the paper crane, the evolution of folk art in the Japanese diaspora, the rise of hate crimes in Asian American communities during the pandemic, and the value of the arts as a tool for social awareness and change.

Anthony Hirschel and Amita Banerji

Amita Banerji (65) speaks to her colleague Anthony “Tony” Hirschel (63) about how the pandemic has transformed the arts, the digital expansion of audiences for the National Indo-American Museum (NIAM), the importance of creating and maintaining strong connections with community members and businesses, and the economic challenges for nonprofit organizations.

Eva Nye and Karin Abercrombie

Karin Moen Abercrombie (62) interviews her colleague Eva Nye (49) about her immigration journey from Sweden, navigating breast cancer and family life during the pandemic, and her work as an educator, artist and member of the Chicago Art Girls.

Soo Lon Moy and Ben Lau

Soo Lon Moy (70) speaks with her friend and colleague Ben Lau (62) about how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the Chinese American Museum of Chicago, their lives, and the Chinese community in Chicago.

Tatsuyuki Aoki and Michael Takada

Michael Takata (64) has a conversation with friend and colleague Tatsuyuki “Tatsu” Aoki (62) about how the performing arts have adjusted to their audiences during the pandemic, lessons from the younger generation, and the importance of recognizing the legacy of the performing arts in the city.

Mary Doi and Cori Nakamura Lin

Mary Doi (67) interviews new friend Cori Nakamura Lin (28) about Cori’s work as an artist and community activist.

Nathan Ellstrand and Emiliano Aguilar

Friends and fellow PhD candidates, Nathan Ellstrand (33) and Emiliano Aguilar (28), talk about their interest in history, what they love about their fields of study, their research, and how their lives and their work has been impacted by the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Cairo Dye and Henry Godinez

Cairo Dye (23) interviews her former professor Henry Godinez (62) about teaching theatre during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sara Chapman and Chelsey Thomas

Sara Chapman (38) has a conversation with her colleague Chelsey Thomas (24) about her work at Media Burn Archive, her experience learning from the community of filmmakers and audiences in Russia, how connectivity with global networks has changed during the pandemic, and their vision of film.

Our #GivingTuesday Roundtable is officially LIVE!

Our #GivingTuesday Roundtable is officially LIVE!

Our Giving Tuesday Roundtable is now LIVE! Featuring 

Moderated by WBEZ’s Steve Bynum!

Check out the video above to watch our members discuss the hardships cultural heritage centers have faced in this challenging year and how they are working to keep their organization afloat. 

Don’t forget we need your help as we raise $5,000 to get us towards our goal of $50,000. All donations help fund our unique cross-cultural collaborations such as this Roundtable, and capacity building programs like our Activating Heritage Conference. Giving Tuesday is the year’s biggest donation celebration, and it starts right now! 

Rather listen? Check us out on SpotifyStitcher or anywhere you get your podcasts!

The Chicago Cultural Alliance’s Board of Directors pledged to match dollar for dollar donations up to $5,000 until Giving Tuesday on December 1st. Your gift makes double the impact when you support the Chicago Cultural Alliance today.

Former Cultural Champion Janet Carl Smith – Cultural Connections Ep. 3

Former Cultural Champion Janet Carl Smith – Cultural Connections Ep. 3

“I wanted to be in the places, where I would be the one who could speak up and say  ‘Have you thought about the arts? ‘ “

Janet Carl Smith is an ardent supporter of the Chicago Cultural Alliance, recipient of the Alliance’s Cultural Champion Award in 2014, and has been an ally for the arts and culture community in Chicago for many years. You can learn about how she used her positions over the years to advocate for the arts in the spaces that not everyone can access and why you should do the same!

Check out this episode of Cultural Connections featuring Janet Carl Smith and as always, Chicago Cultural Alliance executive director Peter Vega on our YouTube Channel or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

The Chicago Cultural Alliance’s Board of Directors pledged to match dollar for dollar donations up to $5,000 until Giving Tuesday on December 1st. Your gift of makes double the impact when you support the Chicago Cultural Alliance today.

#Giving Tuesday Member Roundtable

#Giving Tuesday Member Roundtable

Don’t miss the Alliance’s #GivingTuesday Roundtable

Tuesday, December 1st, 2020 at 12 pm on YouTube

 

On December 1, 2020, people all around the world are coming together to tap into the power of human connection and strengthen communities and change our world. Will you be one of them?

The Chicago Cultural Alliance will be participating in #GivingTuesday by hosting a Member Storytelling Roundtable. We want to give Members the opportunity to tell you about the struggles they have had this year and how the Alliance has helped them. The Roundtable will premiere on our YouTube Channel and an extended audio – only version will premiere as a part of the Cultural Connections Podcast on all podcast streaming platforms.

By joining us for this event, you’re proving that in times of uncertainty, generosity can bring the whole world together.

Here is how you can participate:

1. Mark your calendar by RSVPing to this event here.

2. Give. On December 1, go to https://bit.ly/31bgbAP and donate. You can also support our organization in other ways by visiting our Support Page.

3. Spread the word. Encourage your friends and family to join you in creating real impact on December 1 by sharing what our mission means to you and why you support our organization. Make sure to use hashtag #GivingTuesday and tag us so we can share!

Let’s rally together to create a more inclusive Chicago.

Cultural Connections Episode 2 w/ Soo Lon Moy!

Cultural Connections Episode 2 w/ Soo Lon Moy!

During the COVID-19 pandemic, racism towards the Asian American Community  has only increased. Now more than ever, it is crucial that we come together to stand up against social injustices such as this and show our support for these communities. 

Learn more about the history of the Chinese American Museum of Chicago through our interview with Soo Lon Moy, this year’s Outstanding Community Leader

As COVID-19 cases continue to rise, 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 staying home. 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.

Cultural Connections replaces our annual MOSAIC Gala and Fundraiser. Help us to create a more inclusive Chicago as we work towards a goal of $50,000 by making a donation today.

Cultural Connections is now LIVE!

Cultural Connections is now LIVE!

Welcome to Cultural Connections: Stories of Resilience!

Our first guest is Angel Ysaguiree, our 2020 Cultural Champion Awardee. Angel moved to the US from Belize when he was 12 years old and has been an exceptional cultural leader in Chicago for 24 years. Although we were unable to celebrate him in May, we invited him to participate in our Cultural Connections podcast to share thoughts on the future of the Arts & Culture Sector. 

The future is bright. 

The breadth and depth in conversation

 on equity in the arts happening right now

 is one that has not been heard before. 

Your support of the Alliance and our mission has never been more vital. At the Alliance, our members stand together as a positive force – building cultural understanding and solidarity, protecting and promoting the diverse immigrant and native cultural institutions that make Chicago unique.

Experience Chicago culture virtually!

Experience Chicago culture virtually!

Now has never been a better time for innovation and creativity and our members have proven to be just that! With the our world experiencing a more digital lifestyle, you can now explore Chicago’s remarkable cultural centers, museums, and organizations… virtually!

If you’re running out of ideas for things to do during the pandemic, this is the perfect option! Grab your friends and family and check out everything from online art collections to virtual video tours. These organizations have created a path for us to see Chicago in a new way, all from the comfort of our own homes. Check out the list below for participating cultural organizations and explore all that Chicago culture has to offer! 

Announcing Cultural Connections: A Visual Podcast

Announcing Cultural Connections: A Visual Podcast

Cultural Connections: A Visual Podcast

Hosted by Alliance Executive Director, Peter Vega

 

Premiere Date: Tuesday, November 10th at 12 PM CT

With Covid-19 re-engineering our world, the Alliance recognizes the importance of sticking to our roots, with our primary focus being to uphold our mission: To connect, promote, and support centers of cultural heritage for a more inclusive Chicago. To do that, we’ve brought back our original name, Cultural Connections, and are using it to curate a platform designed to raise the voices of Chicago’s minority communities.

Each episode, you will hear from a different cultural perspective about a topic related to cultural diversity, inclusion and equity. The theme for our first series of episodes is RESILIENCE.

The Cultural Connections Podcast will be available in video form on the Chicago Cultural Alliance YouTube Channel, and in podcast form on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher and Podchaser every Tuesday from November 10th to December 22nd.  

SPONSORED BY

“Embracing diversity puts us all in good hands. Allstate is proud to sponsor the Chicago Cultural Alliance’s MOSAIC 2020.”

CULTURAL CONNECTIONS replaces our beloved yearly fundraiser, the MOSAIC Gala. Throughout the podcast, we will hear stories from our honored MOSIAC Awardees and Sponsors, past and present, as we march toward a fundraising goal of $50,000!

ABOUT THE HOST

Peter Vega

Peter Vega

The podcast is hosted by the Chicago Cultural Alliance’s Executive Director, Peter Vega (he / him). Before working at the Alliance, Peter worked in various roles within the museum industry, including at Museum Hack, The Guggenheim Museum, the Intrepid Museum, the Jewish Museum, and more. His experience extends to visitor services, marketing, and education. Peter holds a Bachelor of Arts in Social Studies Education from Manhattanville College and a Master of Arts in Museum Studies from New York University.

ABOUT OUR GUESTS

For this first series, our guests will be our honored MOSAIC awardees, past and present, and our Alliance sponsors! Unfortunately, due to Covid – 19, the Alliance did not get to hold our yearly MOSAIC Gala. So, in place of the gala, our first series, will highlight the voices of those honored Members, present them with their awards, and share our stories of resilience in the wake of the pandemic.

Soo Lon Moy

Outstanding Community Leader

mosaic 2020

Immediate Past Board President at the Chinese American Museum of Chicago

Kathleen Mcdonald

Outstanding Community Leader

mosaic 2020

 

former executive director at the mitchell Museum of the american indian

Angel Ysaguirre

cultural champion

mosaic 2020

Executive director at the Court theater

janet carl smith

former cultural champion mosaic 2014

monique brinkman-hill

executive director at the south side community arts center

david farren

Executive Director of the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation

ALLIANCE MEDIA CONTACT INFORMATION

CHELSEY THOMAS

( They / Them / Theirs )

Marketing Coordinator 

[email protected]

TERESITA AVILÉS BAILEY

( She / Her / Hers )

Member & Donor Engagement Manager

[email protected]

Peter vega

( He / Him / His )

Executive Director

[email protected]

The Alliance Supports Taking Out Racism

During the COVID-19 pandemic, racism towards the API communities (Asian Pacific Islanders) has only increased. Now more than ever, it is crucial that we come together to stand up against social injustices such as this and show our support for these communities.

This is why Chicago Cultural Alliance has partnered with RAAD, Random Acts of API Defiance, for Take Out Racism, a campaign they created in response to the rise of  animosity and xenophobia toward APIs in America from the beginning of COVID-19.

RAAD is a collective of queer API scholars, artists, and designers committed to combating racism through bold creative interventions. Their belief system is entirely built upon not only independent work but also in partnership with ally organizations—to advance equity for all people and amplify the collective voice of underrepresented communities. 

As described on their website: RAAD designed the Take Out Racism campaign as a call-to-action for APIs and their allies to root out discrimination in US politics and culture. Posters are the first in a series of tactical interventions designed to contest the racist identification of Covid-19 as a “Chinese virus,” while overturning the “model minority” myth of APIs more generally. Our campaign hijacks the common association of TAKE OUT with cheap, undifferentiated “Asian cuisine” to foreground the racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity of APIs in this country. It is both a celebration of API solidarity-in-difference and a call for APIs to TAKE OUT systemic racism alongside other BIPOC communities—defiantly and together. 

In partnership with RAAD’s Take Out Racism campaign, the Alliance will periodically share stories and content from members of the API communities as this relates to our shared mission of equity and cultural inclusion. The work of Chicago Cultural Alliance promotes, connects, and supports 40 cultural heritage centers throughout the city in pursuit of allowing all cultural voices to feel heard and we are proud to support taking out racism.