Cass Cwik & Band, Belladonna, Head, Luke Henry & Hunnybear
Co-Prosperity Sphere's Saturday Showcase series kicks off on Saturday, November 18.
Local rockers Cass Cwik and Band, jam band Belladonna will be joined by Head, and Luke Henry + Hunnybear for a night of roots rock and psychedelia. Doors open at 7, this event helps to benefit Lumpen radio.
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Saturday, November 18
$5 • Doors @7PM, Muisc @8PM
Luke Henry & Hunnybear
HEAD
Belladonna
Cass Cwik & Band
Gumbo Battle Benefit
Friday, November 17 • 7PM-10PM
$30; all ages
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The Gumbo Battle Benefit rolls into Co-Prosperity Sphere November 17th. This event, presented by Chef Aninn Stewart to benefit non-profit My Block, My Hood, My City, will help give local children from underserved neighborhoods chances to explore the world. The Gumbo Battle is a ticketed event and is sponsored by Kimski, Marz Community Brewing, Whiner Beer Company and Lumpen Radio.
Local Chicago chefs will compete to make the best pot of gumbo. Ticket sale includes unlimted gumbo (while it lasts), complimentary alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, chance to win a raffle prize, music, and more!
My Block, My Hood, My City is an organization committed to boosting educational attainment and opening opportunities that make a difference in the lives of teens in under resourced communities.
Purchase your tickets early to ensure your taste buds get a chance to witness this epic battle!
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/gumbo-battle-tickets-39092335227
Landlady, Ian Chang, Metal Tongues
Co-Prosperity Sphere welcomes Metal Tongues, Ian Chang, and Landlady on Sunday, October 29 as part of their "The World Is A Loud Place" album release tour!
You have the rest of your lives to listen to their new album, “The World Is A Loud Place,” but who knows how many more chances you’ll get to see them perform live.
Here are some events that might occur that would make this Landlady's last tour ever:
-mudslide
-landslide
-electric slide
-inter-band romances begin and then crumble
-music industry grows vibrant and we all embark on successful solo projects
-music industry continues decline and we eat each other in order of height
-bad shrimp
-van slips on banana peel thrown by car in front of us
-plague(s)
-trapped under fallen stack of CD singles of "Landslide"
-anything else that ever happened to Fleetwood Mac
-old age
-new age
-low ticket sales**
see you out there,
love,
Adam Schatz
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$10
8PM-11PM
Metal Tongues
Ian Chang
Landlady
Boo HaHa: Neon Nights
It's back and better than ever! We are pairing the city's besr brewers alongside homebrewers who are on the brink of turning "pro." THIS IS THE ORIGINAL BREW HAHA -THE OG UNDERGROUND BEER JAMS with music, ridiculousness and dancing.
We will have black lights, neon lights and encourage the best costumes long with surprise prizes, brewers, AMAZING DJ's per usual. A great way to let your Halloween hair down and party till your costume falls off.
We will post updates on participating brewers and shennanigans.
YOU CAN PAY AT THE DOOR, for you flakey "maybe" mahfuckas.
Pay in advance to secure your spot HERE: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/boo-haha-neon-nights-tickets-38416596073
brewers:
Saint errant
Goose island
Marz
Kimbell
Aleman
C.H.A.O.S.
S&S
Soma Ale Werks
Twisted hippo
Middle Brow
Six biz brewing
Virtue
18th street
Nski brewing
Revolution brewery
Nevins brewery
Plus more!!
DJ
Scuba Steve
Michael Tupak
DJ Logan Bay
Jake Pickeli
Live bands!!!
Snake boobs
Jackets Required (aka Party Night at Joe's)
Co-Prosperity Sphere presents
Jackets Required (aka Party Night at Joe's)
Curated by Joe Bryl
Opening Reception - Friday, September 15 @ 6 PM
3219-21 S. Morgan, Chicago, IL 60607
"For a collector," writes critic Walter Benjamin* in "Unpacking My Library," ownership is the most intimate relationship that one can have to things." Collectors need collections. That seems obvious; but how and when does the presence of random objects coalesce into a collection? When are collections personal and private obsessions lining one's walls and when are they part of a national identity? At what point does mere possession develop into that more "intimate relationship" of ownership, when the sheer number of things - things that are at once the same yet different; discrete yet part of a series, reproducible yet unique - become a collection, visible, with a life of its own? When are you transformed from someone just looking to one who must have, who becomes what is known in the collecting world as a "completest", one who knows it all?"
* Associated with the Frankfurt School, Benjamin was a noted eclectic thinker, combining elements of German idealism, Romanticism, Western Marxism, and Jewish mysticism. Benjamin is today best known for his posthumously published "Arcades Project", considered one of the 20th century's seminal texts of cultural criticism.
"American Pulp: How Paperbacks Brought Modernism to Main Street" (Princeton University Press, 2014)
- Paula Rabinowitz
"This is the dialectic - there is a very short distance between high art and trash, and trash that contains an element of craziness is by this very quality nearer to art."
-Douglas Sirk, noted director
These insightful and perceptive observations into the ways in which collecting and the forms and directions in which it may take exposes the "why" and "how" collectors pursue their passions. Centered around a genuine and deeply felt interest of the items themselves, the collectors obsession can be purely aesthetic, emotional or intellectual (or in many cases a combination of all three).
As opposed to hoarders who amass miscellaneous objects such as tchotchkes, trash, newspapers, household supplies and even food compulsively regardless of value or aesthetic concerns, collectors seek out their acquisitions in a more systematic and passionate manner. Collections are based normally around a theme, whether it be toward the more commonplace practice of organizing, displaying and cataloging objects such as stamps, coins, baseball cards, books, antiques, toys and historical memorabilia or for those wealthy enough rare artworks, properties and jewelry.
Beginning in the 16th century, many European notables amassed collections that were dubbed a "cabinet of curiosities" which included natural history objects (often faked), religious relics, antiquities and early mechanical wonders. Similar later day collections as Barnum's American Museum during the Antebellum Era included a zoo, lecture hall, wax museum, dioramas, theater and freak show. Our current manifestation of this type of Americana showplace of wonders is the House on the Rock in Spring Green, WI with its seemingly never ending complex of a surrealistic landscape overrun with carousel animals, mechanical music machines, preserved animals and flying mannequin angels all illuminated eerily with thousands of lights.
These showman's attractions, and many others, became the illegitimate forefathers to the modern museum or art patron's collection. One such devotee was chemist Albert C. Barnes who traveled to Paris beginning in 1911 and was able to acquire with a connoisseur's eye paintings by some of Europe's up-and-coming modernists such as Matisse, Picasso, Renoir, Cezanne and Soutine. Later, in the 1960's, husband and wife Herbert and Dorothy Vogel were able to amass within their rather limited civil servant salaries one of the most important collections of minimalist and conceptual art which they generously bequeathed to the National Gallery of Art.
To take a more systematic and unconventional look into the art of personal collecting and its attachment to a group of objects that resonate to an individual's personal obsessions, the Co-Prosperity Sphere (3219-21 S. Morgan) is showcasing "Jackets Required (aka Party Night at Joe's)" with an opening on Friday, September 15 @ 6 PM. Curated by Joe Bryl, noted DJ and previous co-owner and musical director of the famed Chicago nightclub Sonotheque, "Jackets Required" will exhibit his off-kilter and off-beat collection of bizarre record cover art, Post WWII pulp paperbacks, 70's raunchy and risque Sexploitation posters and other unorthodox and eclectic ephemeral objects made to shock and amuse even the most jaded viewer.
The initial yet still resonating interest in bizarre record cover art and its often overlooked peculiar music found its genesis with the RE/Search publication of "Incredibly Strange Music" in 1993 by V. Vale and Andrea Juno, San Francisco-based underground publishers noted for their hugely influential punk rock fanzine "Search & Destroy" (1977-1979). As they note in Volume 2 of Incredibly Strange Music . . .
. . . there are thousands of undocumented recordings which have yet to be unearthed and appreciated - many of which were produced and distributed locally. A record may be worth owning if it has just one outstanding track, or perhaps just beautiful, provocative cover artwork (especially if it's cheap). A universe of unusual 45s awaits an encyclopedic overview, not to mention countless vinyl records from other countries. Readers (and travelers) are encouraged to have fun inventing their own categorizations and collecting specialties as they uncover an "incredibly strange" sonic past they never knew existed, and which yet awaits rediscovery in the garages and storerooms of the world.
Since its publication, there doesn't seem a genre of music and specialized artistic theme that has not found its adherents, admirers and social historians. "Incredibly Strange Music" was quickly followed by a rather diverse and often specialized books on the wide thematic changes in record cover art including "In the Groove: Vintage Record Graphics 1940-1960", "Naked Vinyl: Bachelor Album Cover Art", "The Album Cover Art of Soundtracks", "Album Covers from the Vinyl Junkyard", "Radical Album Cover Art", "Stir It Up: Reggae Album Cover Art", "Vinyl Vixens: The Alluring Ladies of Vintage Album Covers" and Taschen's huge "Jazz Covers" and its equally massive "1000 Record Covers". With no end in sight, publishers will keep unearthing the alluring artwork of original and unique record cover art to a unquenchable fan base.
The similar interest both in popular culture and historical research in out of the ordinary record cover art saw a similar attentive attraction to the art work that was used to sell pulp paperbacks to a ready and eager public and film posters that beckoned their audience into the theaters for a mixture of comfort (air-conditioning), thrills, escape and of course entertainment.
Pocketbooks, with their arresting artwork and modernistic design motifs became a part of the nomenclature during WW11 with their accessibility (a soldier in combat could put it easily in his pocket, hence its name, at the same time that he landed onshore at Normandy) and they made themselves more appealing with their inexpensive pricing (usually around 25 cents) and accessibility. Its mixture of upper-toned literary content (George Orwell, Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Emile Zola) and salacious subjects like lesbianism, Satanism, juvenile delinquency, murder, crime and sexual infidelity (to name a few) saw intrepid publishes making a killing selling paperbacks in runs of 200,000 when the average printing of a hardbound best seller would be in the thousands.
As Paula Rabinowitz elaborates further in "American Pulp: How Paperbacks Brought Modernism to Main Street" . . .
"The paperback revolution sparked a certain form of reading - what I call demotic reading - as it lured readers with provocative covers at an affordable price into a new relationship with the private lives of books and so with themselves."
"A lowly yet somehow revered object, the paperback book exemplifies a modernist form of multimedia in which text, image, and material come together as spectacle to attract and enthrall a recipient, its audience, its reader. This medium was designed for maximum portability and could move seamlessly from private to public spaces."
The same sales pitch made by the pulp paperback phenomena was unfailingly and vigorously used by film companies from its earliest inception in the 1900's by movie hucksters, promotional agents and exploiters to lure a widely democratized yet varied audience arresting images in posters and other film paraphernalia to tempt and literally drag them into the theaters daily. This sensationalistic sales pitch did not differ greatly if one was selling an "A" product like DW Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" (1915), Robert Aldrich's "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" (1962) or Joseph P. Mawra's camp sadism-laden quickie "Olga's House of Shame" (1964).
"Jacket's Required" brings to light for the first time Joe Bryl's massive collection of weird record covers, pulp paperbacks from the 40's through the 70's, European and American Sexploitation and Sleaze movie posters and other visual oddities. It is our hope that "Jackets Required" can both document how these different yet intertwined art forms worked their magic skillfully and artistically to enchant, seduce and sometimes even repulse its audience.
It is only fitting that we quote Paula Rabinowitz once more . . .
"The (objects) acquire value a secret value, not for "their usefulness" as Benjamin notes, but "as the scene, the stage, of their fate," which is to evaporate. A collection is always disappearing, even as it grows. It recedes into its owners past, and foretells her passing."
The show continues through October 1.
Comedy Butcher
The South Side’s best stand-up show returns to the Co-Pro every second Monday of the month for two hours of laughs.
$10 cover
Lumpen Labor Day Bash
- Celebrate the American worker from 12-7 with Lumpen Radio. DJ sets from Logan Bay and special guests; a live set from Liverpartydrumming.com; and a full day of radio programming with special shows from Mario Smith (News from the Service Entrance) The Klonsky Brothers (Hitting Left) and the crew of Radio Free Bridgeport.
BBQ by Chef Tony B of Kimski.
$15 cover includes all-you-can eat food; all proceeds benefit Lumpen radio.
Jazz Fest Sideshow with Makaya McCraven, Tomeka Reid and special guests TBA
An official after-party for the Chicago Jazz Fest kicks off at 7PM with performances from Makaya McCraven, Tomeka Reid and many special guests.
DJ sets from King Hippo,
$10 cover. 8-12
Lumpen Magazine Release Party
August 25 • 7pm - 10PM
Come by and help us celebrate the release of issue 130. We are super excited about this issue as we discuss how to Build a Municipal movement ! Come by and pick some up to share with your colleagues and comrades all over the city.
We will provide some beverages and snacks and display some of the works feared in the mag on the walls of our gallery.
With Contributions by: Alan W. Moore, Brian Mier, Christina Sanchez Juarez, Jerry Boyle, Jim Newberry, Robby Herbst, Barcelona En Comú, Betty Marin, Heather M. O'Brien, John Duda, John McKim, Keefer Dunn, and Marianela D'Aprile
and Comics by:
Andy Burkholder,Ben Marcus, George Porteus, Grant Reynolds, Jessica Campbell, Johnny Sampson, Kriss Stress, Danielle Chenette, Nate Beaty, Rylan Thompson, Sarah Leitten
Ramones - what is this PUNK rock ? - Spectactular PHOTO SHOW
In 1980 the RAMONES were new on the PUNK scene, a couple records, out on tour playing college dates, on May 9th they played a show at the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn Illinois. I shot some photos and ate off their deli tray. My photos capture the essence of the band, literally babies in the rock world and making an unspoken statement on what PUNK rock should be and on what PUNK rock became after they left their mark. Just don't tell them they're punk rock. Come and see the show!
Nature Go Home
Nature Go Home : Exhibition by MOTOR
OPENING EVENT March 10, 6-9 PM
Co-Prosperity Sphere
3219 S. Morgan St.
An exhibition comprised of arranged encounters between domestic robots and raw nature.
Wipebot.
Vacuumbot.
Grillbot.
Windowbot.
Leaves.
Log.
Grass.
Water.
What happens when robots and nature meet? Will there be too much for the robots to handle? Will nature be put into order?
MOTOR is: Margrét Agnes Iversen (Iceland/Denmark), Malte Klagenberg (Denmark), and Laurits Nymand Svendsen (Denmark).
In our exhibition we want to explore how the ways in which we think about nature can be riddled with ambiguity. For example, when autumn leaves fall and decompose in the forest we can admire nature’s cyclic beauty, but when similar organic processes occur closer to home, when molds start growing in the fridge, it feels like a nuisance. It is as if our ideas of what nature should be only allow it to unfold in specific contexts. The domestic robots present in the exhibition represent our habit to make order in our surroundings. By juxtaposing the robots with “raw nature” (found objects such as leaves, logs and rocks) we want to explore how ideas of nature can equally exist as something romantic and trivial. These robots also serve another role in our exhibition. A condition that often seems to feed the division between nature and humans is the amount of control we are able to exert on the rest of the planet. Having this kind of power often means to assume a type of caretaker role – a role in which we can still very much maintain our distance to the rest of “nature” as we organize it according to our interests. But what happens when you try to pass on the caretaker role to another agent, in this case the robots? Could we build a scenario in which it’s possible to imagine our influence over nature being totally removed? Would this potentially make us feel closer to nature?
GALLERY HOURS
March 11-12 & 21-24 1-6 PM
More info:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1944894195744109/
FEEDING TIME
IT’S “FEEDING TIME” AT CO-PROSPERITY SPHERE
CHICAGO, IL – Feeding Time, a dynamic and daring group exhibition of figurative paintings will open on, Friday, January 27, 2017 at Co-Prosperity Sphere, 3219 S. Morgan St. Chicago, IL, from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m.
The exhibit features the work of 6 artists who explore human nature in relation to ego, destructive instincts, sexual energy and loss of self. In this work, being and reality are in question. Don’t get us wrong; these artists are after beauty. It shows in the material, how it’s been used, the exuberance, newness of color and design, the sheer joy of it, challenged by history, mixing it up. Figures and painting are relevant by proxy.
This exhibition tackles what’s important; people, what they do, how they treat each other, what they think about and what’s left over after they die.
ARTISTS
Jeffrey Beebe (New York)
Bradley Biancardi (New York)
Kevin Blake (Chicago)
Annie Hémond Hotte (New York)
Paul Nudd (Chicago)
Tom Torluemke (Indiana)
Feeding Time
Feeding time can be necessary, indulgent, violent or too seldom.
It can be sexual, boring, hot or cold, a turn off or a turn on.
It has a scent and can leave you with a bad taste.
Feeding time can be loving or unfortunately murderous,
Stand in as a symbol or a metaphor.
Feeding time is like art,
food for thought.
Exhibit Information:
Opening Reception: Friday, January 27, 2017 from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m.
Exhibit Dates: January 27– February 12, 2017
Location: Co-Prosperity Sphere 3219 S. Morgan St., Chicago, IL
Gallery Hours: Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, 11 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. and by appointment.
For additional information: Linda Dorman, unclefreddys@gmail.com or (219) 730-3032