
OUTSIDE CHANCE Relive Steve Krakow’s The Secret History of Chicago Music at the MCA; browse works by the outsider Ulysses Davis at Intuit—both free, both featuring self-portraits of the artists (above).
THE FIVE
Don’t-miss picks for Wed 05.05.10 through Tue 05.11.10:
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opera Frederica von Stade ALSO THIS WEEK: On the new-music front, the International Contemporary Ensemble tubist Dan Peck explores the history of humans and deep sounds May 7 at the Museum of Contemporary Photography. We’re not sure what this means exactly—burping Neanderthals? The evolution of speech? As of quite recently, Peck was still figuring it out himself—but we’re intrigued. |
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farrago Smucker’s Stars on Ice |
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farrago Great Bear Wilderness |
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farrago Fashion 2010 |
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theatre Incognito ALSO THIS WEEK: Tracey Scott Wilson’s play The Good Negro is a stark reminder of how the good old days were anything but: In the Jim Crow South, a mother and her four-year-old are arrested when the little girl uses a whites-only restroom. The play is in premieres now at the Goodman. |
FREEBIES OF THE WEEK
museums Steve Krakow
Better known to locals by his nom de plume, Plastic Crimewave, Krakow has been writing and drawing his info-meets-comic strip The Secret History of Chicago Musicfor the Chicago Reader since 2005. A cross between an historical archive of the local music scene and an ode to R. Crumb, the series gets a second life this month in the MCA’s 12 x 12 gallery, with past History subjects playing live every Tuesday night. First up is ONO, an experimental Chicago band that dates back to the 1980s, when it opened for punk headliners including Naked Raygun.
GO: ONO plays May 11 at 7. Admission is free for the Tuesday-night series, May 11-25; see website for full schedule. Krakow’s work hangs May 8-30, with a preview May 7 at the museum’s First Fridays; admission varies. Museum of Contemporary Art, 220 E Chicago. mcachicago.org
ALSO THIS WEEK: For another illustrative evening of great graphic art, head to Northwestern May 5, when Jeffrey Brown, Ivan Brunetti, Anders Nilsen, and Chris Ware host a free Q&A and book-signing. Read more about it in The 312.
galleries The Treasure of Ulysses Davis
Intuit, Chicago’s home base for outsider art, announced last week that it will start charging an admission fee of $5 in June. Since the gallery’s current show runs only through May 15, you can visit free now without a guilty conscience—and visit you should: Few have seen the art of Ulysses Davis (1914-90). The self-taught Savannah native not only made works well outside the mainstream, he was very reluctant to part with them: “They’re my treasure,” he said. “If I sold these, I’d be really poor.” The show offers a rare look at his astonishing oeuvre—including a series of carved wooden busts depicting every U.S. president from George Washington to George H. W. Bush.
GO: Through May 15. Intuit, 756 N Milwaukee. art.org
ALSO THIS WEEK: The show opening May 8 at Western Exhibitions is only the Chicagoan Rachel Niffenegger’s second solo gig, but her work has been popping up in all the right places. Her figurative paintings and sculptures, often of faces or disembodied limbs, teeter between the vibrancy of life and the rot of decay—and you can bet we’ll be seeing more of them.
Photography: (Krakow) Self-portrait of Steve Krakow. Courtesy of the artist. (Davis) Self‑Portrait, not dated, wood, 8 ¼ x 4 ¼ x 3 inches, King‑Tisdell Cottage Foundation, photo © Peter Harholdt