Art & Design
Art Institute of Chicago
2/23–5/11 Christopher Wool. The painter, born and raised in Chicago, whose stencil paintings of slogans like “Sell the House Sell the Car Sell the Kids” made him famous in the ’80s NYC art scene, gets an overdue career retrospective.
Through 4/20 Amar Kanwar, from New Delhi, shows her 2007 film The Lightning Testimonies, which gives personal accounts of rape in India.
Through 5/18 Christopher Williams: The Production Line of Happiness. Revitalizing the tradition of pop art, Williams parodies consumer culture by photographing realistic fakes of advertising, fashion, and photojournalistic imagery.
111 S Michigan. artic.edu
Arts Club of Chicago
2/27–5/17 Émilie Charmy. Who was Émilie Charmy? She had a successful art career during her lifetime but never became a household name in the United States. This retrospective brings to light the modern artist who painted portraits, nudes, and still lifes in Paris alongside some of her generation’s best, including Matisse. 201 E Ontario. artsclubchicago.org
Chicago Cultural Center
2/1–4/27 Jan Tichy: aroundcenter. Tech artist Jan Tichy distributes nine multimedia artworks, including videos and projections, throughout the landmark architecture of the Cultural Center as a way to comment on its history and current uses.
2/15–5/11 Mecca Flat Blues. A microcosm of Chicago’s class struggles, the storied preservation battle around a massive apartment building (called Mecca Apartments) gets an exhibition.
2/22–5/4 Thirty-Five Years of Public Art. This display celebrates the gains of the Percent-for-Art Ordinance, which funds new public art for every new public building.
78 E Washington. cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/dca.html
DePaul Art Museum
Through 3/30 The Sochi Project: An Atlas of War and Tourism in the Caucasus. New photos and films document the traumatic memories of Soviet communism and genocide—very different from the Russian beach town’s holiday veneer. 935 W Fullerton. museums.depaul.edu
Logan Center for the Arts
2/28–3/30 Yang Fudong: Fifth Night. Chinese video artist Yang Fudong returns to Chicago (he had a solo show here in 2004) with Fifth Night, a new large-scale video installation about a group of Chinese refugees. U of C, 915 E 60th. arts.uchicago.edu/content/reva-and-david-logan-center-arts
Loyola University Museum of Art
2/15–6/15 Elegant Enigmas: The Art of Edward Gorey. A nationally touring exhibition of artwork by everyone’s favorite gothic grandpa makes a stop in Chicago (where he was born and raised). The exhibition includes artifacts from Gorey’s notoriously hermetic life alongside drawings and printed ephemera from his long career illustrating children’s books. 820 N Michigan. luc.edu/luma
Museum of Contemporary Art
Through 3/9 The Way of the Shovel: Art as Archaeology. This exhibition looks at art through an anthropological lens, with politically provocative work influenced by the 20th-century artist Robert Smithson.
Through 5/18 William J. O’Brien. Organized like a poem, the multimedia artist’s first survey exhibition demonstrates his prodigious output in both drawing and ceramics.
Open Tue 10–8, Wed–Sun 10–5. Free (kids under 13) to $12; free Tue for Ill residents. 220 E Chicago. mcachicago.org
Museum of Contemporary Photography
Through 4/6 Archive State. Six artists display their collections of images, each with an unusual or thoughtful theme, such as Arab video selfies, the East German secret service, and American soldiers in Iraq. 600 S Michigan. mocp.org
Renaissance Society
Through 2/23 Nora Schultz. The museum’s new director, Solveig Øvstebø, curates her first Chicago show, featuring the sculptural installations of Berlin artist Nora Schultz. 5811 S Ellis. renaissancesociety.org
History & Culture
Chicago History Museum
Through 3/2 Siam: The Queen and the White City. Photographs, costumes, and other artifacts from the Siamese queen Savang Vadanafor’s collection. Mon–Sat 9:30–4:30, Sun 12–5. $14. $12 students, seniors. 1601 N Clark. chicagohs.org
DuSable Museum Of African American History
Through 3/30 The Endangered Species: A Visual Response to the Vanishing Black Man. Artist Raub Welch examines the iconography around the African American male.
Through 4/1 Beyond the Swastika and Jim Crow: Jewish Refugee Scholars at Black Colleges. This exhibit explores the surprising relationship between two oft-marginalized groups.
Tue–Sat 10–5, Sun 12–5. Free–$10. 740 E 56th Pl. dusablemuseum.org
Field Museum
Through 9/7 Opening the Vaults: Wonders of the 1893 World’s Fair. The museum reveals rare artifacts from the famous fair.
Through 9/30 Before the Dinosaurs: Tracking the Reptiles of Pangaea. Learn how to read fossils for clues about the animals that roamed the earth long before humans came along.
Open daily 9–5. General admission free (kids 3–11) to $20; all-access passes $21–$30. 1400 S Lake Shore. fieldmuseum.org
Science, Nature, Kids
Adler Planetarium
Through 4/1 Cosmic Wonder. The latest show in the spacious Grainger Sky Theater lets visitors gawk at jaw-dropping shots of the Crab Nebula and Orion. Mon–Fri 9:30–4, Sat–Sun 9:30–4:30. General admission $8–$12. Packages $18–$28. 1300 S Lake Shore. adlerplanetarium.org
Museum of Science and Industry
Through 5/4 Treasures of the Walt Disney Archives. Look through more than 300 drawings, scripts, and costumes from the icon’s films. Timed-entry tickets required, $7–$9, not including general admission. Open daily 9:30–4. General admission free (kids under 3) to $27. 5700 S Lake Shore. msichicago.org