Logan Square Chicago: Neighborhood Arts & Culture & Politics
A Blog about and with links to news about the arts scene in one Chicago neighborhood, Logan Square, with a focus on independent and DIY arts and enterprises.
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Friday, October 7, 2016
Figure Drawing Drop In Session in Logan Square Chicago
Figurative painters, graphic novel artists, illustrators and animators all rely on conveying the human form in their work. To keep their drawing and rendering skills sharp, they can attend figure drawing drop in sessions where a model (sometimes two) pose usually nude (sometimes in clothes and/or costume).

Usually an art school provides figure drawing sessions for its students, and they are also held in artist studios and other public spaces. For a time in Logan Square, Chicago there were weekly Tuesday night sessions held at the studio space of AnySquared, but as a result of scheduling issues, they ceased.
Now these sessions will resume in a space a few doors north up the block in Cole's bar again on Tuesday nights. A few changes are in store as a result of the move. First, models will wear some, at least, minimal articles of clothing, because they are in a public space. This will be the performance space in a separate room in back of the main, bar room. Second, visiting artists will be able to get a drink at the nearby bar before, during and after drawing.
Finally, a new and professional theatrical lighting system will be installed and set up in Cole's performance space. So, for the moment, the figure drawing sessions are on hold for several weeks until this system is ready to go.
Stay posted for the resumption of figure drawing sessions. For now, more information about how AnySquared conducts its sessions can be found here: http://logansquarist.com/2016/01/22/drawing-in-logan-square/

Usually an art school provides figure drawing sessions for its students, and they are also held in artist studios and other public spaces. For a time in Logan Square, Chicago there were weekly Tuesday night sessions held at the studio space of AnySquared, but as a result of scheduling issues, they ceased.
Now these sessions will resume in a space a few doors north up the block in Cole's bar again on Tuesday nights. A few changes are in store as a result of the move. First, models will wear some, at least, minimal articles of clothing, because they are in a public space. This will be the performance space in a separate room in back of the main, bar room. Second, visiting artists will be able to get a drink at the nearby bar before, during and after drawing.
Finally, a new and professional theatrical lighting system will be installed and set up in Cole's performance space. So, for the moment, the figure drawing sessions are on hold for several weeks until this system is ready to go.
Stay posted for the resumption of figure drawing sessions. For now, more information about how AnySquared conducts its sessions can be found here: http://logansquarist.com/2016/01/22/drawing-in-logan-square/
Thursday, October 6, 2016
AnySquared in Logan Square, Chicago
Finding and building an artist community, connecting and networking with other artists -- this is what joining AnySquared in Logan Square, Chicago has allowed me to do. At the center of the collaborative network of artists stands Tracy Kostenbader, whose studio space serves as a local artists meeting and work space where collaborative and community art projects such as a large scale neighborhood dog park mural were organized and planned.
Over the unusually warm summer of 2016 an enormous mural facing the Logan Square dog park that was 300 feet long and from 17 to 22 feet high was painted by artists from AnySquared and two other artist groups. This was my first long term participation in such a project. Likely I spent around 13 or 14 near full days that stretched into the long summer evenings working and helping out on this project.

It was a chance for me to enjoy a new experience in participating in a large scale, outdoor, collaborative art project. For me it represented at times an ideal experience -- working together and meeting other artists, enjoying (or sometimes suffering) the summer sun, and taking in appreciative comments from passerbys, many of whom were walking their dogs to and from the nearby dog park which the mural faces. This is quite a different experience most artists have of working alone in their studio space, which can help one concentrate, but can also prove stifling and confining.
My first feature news article that I wrote for the LoganSquarist, an online news source for the Logan Square neighborhood in Chicago was devoted to this group that I joined about a year or two before that. There more can be learned about AnySquared -- its origin and activities.

http://logansquarist.com/2016/01/08/anysquared-make-art-logan-square/
Over the unusually warm summer of 2016 an enormous mural facing the Logan Square dog park that was 300 feet long and from 17 to 22 feet high was painted by artists from AnySquared and two other artist groups. This was my first long term participation in such a project. Likely I spent around 13 or 14 near full days that stretched into the long summer evenings working and helping out on this project.

It was a chance for me to enjoy a new experience in participating in a large scale, outdoor, collaborative art project. For me it represented at times an ideal experience -- working together and meeting other artists, enjoying (or sometimes suffering) the summer sun, and taking in appreciative comments from passerbys, many of whom were walking their dogs to and from the nearby dog park which the mural faces. This is quite a different experience most artists have of working alone in their studio space, which can help one concentrate, but can also prove stifling and confining.
My first feature news article that I wrote for the LoganSquarist, an online news source for the Logan Square neighborhood in Chicago was devoted to this group that I joined about a year or two before that. There more can be learned about AnySquared -- its origin and activities.

http://logansquarist.com/2016/01/08/anysquared-make-art-logan-square/
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