8 X 3: Art + Architecture Overton a Closed School Re-purposed 2018

Whose Art Is It Anyway's Alpha Bruton in a  Conversation with Sandra Steinbrecher Photojournalist, 2018 


CREATIVE GROUNDS @ ANTHONY OVERTON
How might art, design, and architecture support, accelerate or amplify the repurposing of closed public schools? This project aims to produce art and design installations by collaborative teams of architects and artists that can respond primarily to the primary prompt of Creative Grounds about the future of social infrastructure and/or are inspired by the architecture of this building or the legacy of Anthony Overton.


Creative Grounds facilitates the organization of this platform and supports collaborative projects among Bronzeville and city-wide artists, architects, students, and residents - the idea is to create 24 rooms (8 classrooms per floor x 3 floors) that have original site-specific projects that explore the intersections between art, design, and architecture.


During the summer of 2018, Creative Grounds presents 8x3: Art + Architecture in collaboration with the Washington Park Development Group.


Advisory Team conversating.

Creative Grounds facilitates the organization of this platform and supports collaborative projects among Bronzeville and city-wide artists, architects, students, and residents - the idea is to create 24 rooms (8 classrooms per floor x 3 floors) that have original site-specific projects that explore the intersections between art, design, and architecture.

The open house and workshop days were on Saturdays (June 30, July 28 & August 18); hands-on, collaborative experience with these teams of artists, architects, students, and neighbors happened during this time. 


Would you like to collaborate with us? Contact us at https://www.creativegrounds.org/contact.


Would you like to volunteer with us? 


Send us a message: https://www.creativegrounds.org/contact. We are looking for volunteers to support the participant teams in different activities, including creative/design work, fabrication, team organization, and community programming.



Paola Aguirre - 

About Creative Grounds

CREATIVE GROUNDS is a collective initiative led by BORDERLESS STUDIO to explore the community and urban role of school grounds after the largest Public Schools Closure in Chicago's history. In collaboration with community organizations, artists, educators, architects, urban designers, planners, administrators, journalists, activists, and social innovators, this research and creative platform assembles ideas and documents processes of schools' repurposing focused on leveraging the legacy of their past, identifying present opportunities, and exploring the future potential of these community assets. 


About Anthony Overton Business & Technology Incubator (former Elementary School)


Anthony Overton Elementary School closed in 2013 and was purchased by the Washington Park Development Group in 2015. Designed and built by prominent local architects Perkins & Will in 1963, Overton represented a modern and progressive approach to education reform and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.


Overton is in the process of being transformed into a business and technology incubation center. It will offer entrepreneurs training, amenities, and connections to other motivated individuals. The architecturally significant mid-century modern building is an anchor in the community and readily adapted to support new uses like offices, labs, a catering kitchen, a gymnasium, an event room, and a performance stage.



About Anthony Overton 
@ Alpha Bruton, Echo's of Our Journey 2016, collage on wood

Anthony Overton (March 21, 1865 – July 2, 1946), a banker and pioneer manufacturer, was the first African American to lead a major business conglomerate. Overton established Hygienic in 1898 and produced baking powder, extracts, and toilet preparations. After moving the firm from Kansas to Chicago, he began to manufacture a full line of cosmetics and perfumes under the High-Brown Products label. He parlayed his early success with Hygienic into a highly diversified conglomerate, including The Great Northern Realty Company, The Chicago Bee, and the Victory Life Insurance Company. This was the first significant conglomerate led by an African-American.