Every house has a door performs a new work *at The Arts Club*
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Performance
There are two performances of this piece, one at The Arts Club of Chicago on May 9, and one at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum on May 16. Click here to register for the performance at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum on May 16.
In conjunction with the exhibition Mina Loy: Strangeness Is Inevitable, The Arts Club of Chicago has invited Every house has a door to develop a new work in response to Loy’s expansive creative practice. Anchored by a reading of Loy’s prose ballet “Crystal Pantomime,” whose language projects fantastic tableaus in the imaginations of the audience as a collective dream, Every house builds a world around an oversized lamp-shade sculpture by artist Diane Simpson with wardrobe and objects by Max Guy, and enlists a company of intergenerational specialists to evoke a theater of the mind. Readers Leila Ashrafi, Daniel Borzutzky, Nakiyah T.M. Jordan, and Jenny Polus are joined in performance by Elise Cowin and Matthew Goulish.
Presented only twice, first at the The Arts Club of Chicago reprised one week later at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, each performance is site-responsive honoring the lineage of Chicago’s rich history of experimental performance.
“Crystal Pantomime,” used with permission of Roger Conover and the Beinecke Library at Yale; published in Stories and Essays of Mina Loy, Sara Crangle [Dalkey Archive, 2011]. This performance is commissioned by The Arts Club of Chicago and co-produced with Every house has a door and The Jane Addams Hull-House Museum. Every house would like to thank their individual donors for the generous support of this project.
$10 per person
If you would like to attend and don’t find yourself in a position to purchase a ticket, please email jlyle@artsclubchicago.org for a discount offer.
Image caption:
Stephen Haweis
Mina Loy
ca. 1905
Gelatin silver print
5 7/16 in. x 3 1/8 in. (13.8 cm x 8 cm)
Collection of Roger Conover
Graphic Design: Lucas Reif