Tag: neiu

  • First-Ever One Man Show “Evolution of a Sonero” by Flaco Navaja Salsas with Vitality and Vocals

    First-Ever One Man Show “Evolution of a Sonero” by Flaco Navaja Salsas with Vitality and Vocals

    With the flair of a linguistic troubadour, Flaco Navaja seemed born to be on-stage as he presented his one-man show titled “Evolution of a Sonero.” Navaja both wrote and performs in the show – but much more, he sings in it. He took the audience on a thrilling ride from his parents first date, through his own life as a troubled teenager all the way through becoming a father himself, all while making comparisons of his life to the composition of salsa. His pride in his Puerto Rican heritage, and being raised as the youngest in a family of five (his parents are still married 59 years later, he announced to thunderous applause) was evident through-out the performance which skillfully blended Puerto Rican culture with living in the Bronx in New York.

    He adeptly takes the audience through the ups and downs of everyday life. Some moments hilarious, and others, intense, like the day he ruined his mother’s birthday by being caught smoking weed on his high school campus. He describes her as he sings,”5 feet tall, 80 pounds, all gangster.” Through his performance, the audience shares his fear of his diminutive firebrand of a mother, and empathizes with him as his Puerto-Rican proud, hard-working father’s blow provides a fitting crescendo to the dramatic scene.

    Directed by Miranda Gonzalez, the show has a libretto arranged by Carlos Cuevas. It was produced in the NEIU Auditorium at 3701 W. Bryn Mawr by the Urban Theatre Company in conjunction with the National Puerto Rican Museum and was backed up by a powerful band called “The Razor Blades” that never missed a beat. The band was totally in sync with the performer as the pianist directed from his place on-stage. To find out more about Navaja and his work, go to the National Puerto Rican Museum’s website.

  • Andrea Changes Everything at the Guild Literary Complex

    Andrea Changes Everything at the Guild Literary Complex

    • https://chicagoliteraryhof.org/images/uploads/pdfs/2024_CLHOF_Induction_Ceremony.pdf

    As the cork popped out of the bottle, a diverse group of happy humans gathered at the Honeycomb Network on April 11, 2024, and cheered with jubilation. The successful launch of Nikki Patin’s new book Working on Me is a testament to the visionary and transformational leadership that The Guild Literary Complex is experiencing through the one and only Andrea Change.

    Executive Director Andrea Change brought a group representing the Guild’s diverse arts community out of the country to Bogota and Quibdó  in Colombia with financial support from The Poetry Foundation. In order to do this, Change initially worked with Christian Vasquez, a graduate student from Northwestern University, and cultivated a relationship with Velia Vidal an artist in El Chocó, Columbia.

    According to Founding Executive Director Michael Warr, (whose archives provided documentation), in 1993-1994, the Guild Literary Complex did an international exchange program with artists from the Goethe Institute in Berlin, Germany. According to Change, a group of poets representing the Guild Literary Complex also traveled to Norway when the Guild had former Executive Director John Rich at the helm. Nonetheless, through her work, Change is creating a legacy that sets the foundation for other black women in leadership roles, because never before has the Guild Literary Complex gone out of the country to work with people who have had such similar ancestral roots as they do in Quibdó, a city which is located in an isolated region of Columbia known as El Chocó. Change spoke in a March 9, 2024 interview with WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM;

    One of the reasons we were asked to come down there was because Quibdó is an underrepresented community. It’s mostly Afro-Latin, so instead of mostly white-facing Latin folks, this is the black-facing or people of color of Latin descent in that community. They really wanted us to bring folks who look like them to this community. So, all of the writers who are going are of Latin descent. They have brown skin, they have curly hair like me. It will extend the Guild’s mission to another part of the world, but it is still the Guild’s mission to be with underrepresented marginalized groups, and so, this is a city, but it is a small city, and it is a small community. But to be there, and be representing Spanish culture to people who look like us, or who look like me, is a privilege.”

    Born and raised in Chicago, Change has been active in the Chicago literary scene, specifically the poetry scene for over 30 years. She knows the sacrifice involved with being a single mother, and the hardships of being the lone head of household in the city. Change described her process to becoming executive director of the Guild Literary Complex where she began as a poet and audience member, then was a volunteer, and eventually, served as an officer on the board of the Guild Literary Complex. The Guild Complex initially began as a brick-and-mortar bookstore under the leadership of Founding Executive Director Michael Warr.

    According to Warr, the Guild Complex began as a bookstore, and had a reputation for being a gathering place for artistic souls that long encouraged cross-cultural collaboration. Warr is a former BBC reporter, published poet of WE ARE ALL THE BLACK BOY (1991 ), and Armageddon of Funk (2011), and both published by Tia Chucha Press and edited Of Poetry & Protest: From Emmett Till to Trayvon Martin, published by W. W. Norton & Company in 2016. While Warr has experience running the Guild Literary Complex as an executive director, talent agent, performance artist and poet Naiya Davis (aka Clou9aiya), whose Ted Talk Ouch…Did You Really Mean That? drives home the impact of microaggressions, is like Change, a black woman in leadership. During a June 29, 2024, interview with WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM, Davis said:

    “When some people find out I am a leader, they look at me funny.”

    According to a recent Pew Research report, women are behind men in holding leadership positions. However, if Change has had this issue, it doesn’t show. As Mary Hawley, who was part of the Colombia expedition with the Guild Literary Complex and is also a Palabra Pura volunteer, stated “Andrea is humble.” Professor of English Literature at City Colleges of Chicago, Lynn Fitzgerald discussed Change’s leadership at the Guild Literary Complex during a July 6, 2024, WZRD interview:

    “Andrea Change has been an instrumental cornerstone in the city of Chicago…she is also a woman of color, she is again, a woman! Women have to make their way in this world of art… Andrea has been instrumental in getting people out in the public eye and getting it known that these people have a voice, which is excellent…She takes more of a behind-the-scenes role, but I don’t think the Guild would be the Guild without her! She is so necessary, she is intuitive, and understands people very very well.”

    Change’s acute understanding of marginalized people came through during a March 9, 2024, interview when Change was at WZRD, a week before her historic leadership role in taking the Guild Literary Complex and its representatives on their international odyssey. She described the Guild Literary Complex, which is historically a grassroots organization known for collaborating with other community groups on social and restorative justice issues in the city of Chicago in this way:

    The Guild Literary Complex’s Executive Director, Andrea Change, networking after Patricia Smith was honored with the Fuller Award from the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame at the Poetry Foundation on July 11, 2024.

    “Grassroots is a nice stamp, but this year we just celebrated our 35th anniversary…grassroots just refers to how we operate in the sense that we like to stay in touch with the community, which is challenging, I’ll say because Chicago is a really big city!”

    Now, with Change, who is a gifted poet in her own right, as the Executive Director and support from the Poetry Foundation, the Guild is boldly stepping outside of location-specific arts programming to embrace national and international partnerships. The Guild provides arts and advocacy programming for marginalized voices, specifically black and brown people, including persons with disabilities, those who are incarcerated, and those identifying as LBGTQIA+. Terry Lonaric, poet, author, and journalist said,

    “I like the way the Guild partners with community organizations to raise issues of social justice. When the arts become a part of community life, they reach their true potential.”

    As Executive Director of the Guild Literary Complex, Andrea Change is helping diverse people reach their potential while creating pioneering and innovative forms of art. Historically, the Guild Literary Complex initiated the National Poetry Video Festival. It also was recognized by the 2022 New City “Lit 50” Awards under the leadership of Andrea Change. It has sponsored poets like Aviya Kushner, author of Wolf Lamb Bomb whose work was hailed as “noteworthy” by the New York Times in 2021. Change had been a long-time supporter of the Guild Literary Complex when she suddenly found herself cast into the role of volunteer at an event, according to Warr (who now lives in San Francisco) as he recalled in a podcast created from a virtual radio broadcast on May 5, 2024 with WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM.

    Founding Executive Director of the Guild Literary Complex, Michael Warr discussed the history of the Guild Literary Complex and how Andrea Change first became involved with the 501-3C not-for-profit organization founded in 1989.

    Susana Sandoval remembers when Andrea Change took the first step in her evolution from poet and audience member to volunteer. Susana, who, for the last seven years has been a human rights commissioner within the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, is a journalist by training and was employed by the Guild Literary Complex as one of its two staff members, (along with Jen Abrams) under the leadership of Michael Warr in the mid-nineties.

    In a virtual interview on July 6, 2024 from Ecuador, she explained that the Guild Literary Complex was a meeting place not only for academics, but for young lovers. She pointed out how she met Kahil El’Zabar, her former husband, and the father of her children at Guild Literary Complex. She also noted that the Lansanas, (Quraysh Ali Lansana and his wife, the poet and community builder Emily Hooper Lansana) met at the Guild as well. The Guild Literary Complex by all accounts was a safe place where artists and academics of any cultural background could go and feel accepted. Andrea Change, a single mother of Phillip, (who is now grown and living with his fiancé in St. Louis) was among them.

    “But I don’t look my age!” laughs Change, “…This was one of those things where, and I tell this to people all of the time. ‘I am the executive director, but I like to say that I am sort of an accidental tourist. The work that I have done in the past was laying the foundation for the work that I do now.’”

    The Guild Literary Complex is perhaps most well known in the literary community for their annual Brooks Day event honoring renowned poet Gwendolyn Brooks. In 1950, Brooks became the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize. In a fitting example of symmetry, Change noted how poet Tyehimba Jess, still claims the Brooks prize in his biography, although like Brooks, he has gone on to win a Pulitzer Prize for his 2016 book Olio.

    According to Change, this year the Guild will break from their usual tradition of celebrating Gwendolyn Brooks on June 7th, which is her birthday, instead celebrating Brooksday in October, 2024. The literary tradition of Brooksday is well documented, for example in this article by the Visualist.

    Validating the Guild Literary Complex and their decision to present their annual Brooksday event in October, Professor Fitzgerald noted,

    “October is Artists’ Month, and I remember working on Chicago Calling with Dan Godston and number of other people, we would have artists who were Zoomed in – this was before Zoom became some hot topic word – and we were connected on a stream in a Cafe or a Bar from other parts pf the world. So all of October was dedicated to artists. Galleries were just breaking apart at the seams with events! I don’t know if the Guild will resurrect some of that – they probably can because they have such international interactions with people. It is quite possible that they will. October will be a good month for the Gwendolyn Brooks event.”

    The Guild Literary Complex embraces the non-binary community through its Press Room Transvengence series, hosted by trans artist Joss Barton. Barton explained during an interview with WZRD on April 30, 2024 how her disco-drag performance at a social justice fair hosted by Exhibit B led to her eventually being recruited by Change to host the series:

    “I did this piece…performing disco-drag numbers in between spoken word for the Social Justice Fair – so when Andrea, the Executive Director of the Guild Literary Complex – was in the audience and she saw me do that body of work, she really really enjoyed it! She introduced herself to me after the show, and kind of just pitched the idea of doing something for trans writers with the Guild, and wanted to see if I had any ideas. So, I said ‘Let me think about it.’ So I pitched her the idea of Transvengence.” Barton continued, “Our art can be vengeance. You can take away our rights, but you can’t take away our stories.”

    She flashed her dark eyes, flipped her hair, and stood strong in her identity as a trans woman, artist, and storyteller.

    Joss Barton prepares to leave WZRD after her interview in April. (Photo by C. Schandelmeier)
    Andrea Change introduces Transvengence featuring the work of Joss Barton, Jack, and Lynzo Heartthrob on June 18, 2024. (Photograph and videography by C. Schandelmeier)

    Stories are what make the Guild Literary Complex come alive, as shown in the event they co-created as a safe space held near the AWP (Association of Writers & Writing Programs) at their February 2024 conference in Kansas City titled “Poetry for the People” which was free and co-sponsored by the Black Archives of Mid-America (Kansas City), Cave Canem (New York) and Exhibit B: A Literary Variety Show. It featured some of the best black and brown writers in the country, for example Patricia Smith, and Quraysh Ali Lansana.

    Change worked with Lansana to promote his 2024 book, Killing the Negative: Poetic Interventions, which he created with artist Joel Daniel Phillips. She explained how Phillips reached out to Lansana after he had discovered the depression-era film negatives of people archived at the Library of Congress with a single hole punched in each that was a destructive act known as “killing the negative” which served as the inspiration for the book. Such innovation through the lens of diversity is not new to Change. In the same interview, Change commented:

    “Because of the nature of what we’ve done, we’ve had a strong connection to the poetry community, the African-American community, and other groups. Interestingly enough, we have always had a person of color either in a leadership role or on our board. We have always had someone who represented the LGBTQ community on our board, and someone of Latin descent on our board. It’s been a part of who we are. It is strange when I hear about people’s other boards…for me, it was always the norm to have a culturally diverse group of people who I have worked with.”

    Change brought transformation to the Guild Literary Complex through the Guild’s recent trip to Bogota and Quibdó, Colombia where they worked with MoTeTe. Change and other members of the Guild Literary Complex such as Mary Hawley (Palabra Pura volunteer and translator) and Hawley’s husband, poet Mike Puican (former board president for the Guild Literary Complex) traveled with a delegation of Spanish speaking black and brown writers (thanks to a grant provided by the Poetry Foundation) in order to interact with their South American artistic peers.

    Poet Elizabeth Marino, author of Debris and poet Shontay Luna author of Reflections of a Project Girl, both participated in the One Poet: One Poem event held July 17. 2024 by the Guild Literary Complex’s Palabra Pura series hosted by Gregorio Gomez at a Bruquena. 2726 W Division St, Chicago, IL. (Photo by C. Schandelmeier)

    The Guild Literary Complex representatives did this all while writing, learning, and exploring an environment which echoed their own diversity and linguistic roots. The group of American artists, led by Change, included Kianny N. Antigua and Luis Tubens among others. Followed by a documentary crew, this was the first international experience for The Guild Literary Complex. The release of the documentary based on this epic journey is slated for October, 2024.

    True to their mission of giving voice to the marginalized, Change returned from South America and immediately jumped into many other projects. Examples include Applied Words on April 7th, the April 11, 2024 release of Nikki Patin’s new book, Working on Meand an event in defense of Palestine with Exhibit B called Poets for Palestine featuring poets and heavy-hitting writers Linda Abdullah, IS Jones, Amina Kayani, Oliver Khan, Sahar Mustafah and Alex Wells Shapiro, and much more.

    Poet Mary Hawley is the translator and long-time volunteer of the Guild Literary Complex’s Palabra Pura series who joined the Guild Literary Complex on their epic adventure to Colombia. Hawley spoke to WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM in an April 27, 2024 interview about the once-in-a-lifetime experience after the journey. She explained how , Vásquez (originally from Colombia) became involved with The Guild Literary Complex, and then introduced Vidal to the organization when she participated in a virtual reading for Palabra Pura during the COVID-19 lockdown.

    Because of this professional association through the spoken word, the group went to an annual literary festival in a region of Colombia called El Choco’. The festival, which has officially been in existence for 7 years, is known as FLECHO (so-called because of its initials) and was created thanks to the leadership of Velia Vidal. As Hawley explained,

    “When they were organizing this year’s festival, Andrea Change, who is the Executive Director of the Guild Complex, was able to get grant money to send an international delegation of poets from Chicago and the US to this literary festival in El Choco’ with a particular focus on the African diaspora. So our group included Kianny Antigua, who is a poet, novelist, and translator from the Dominican Republic. She teaches at Dartmouth. Luis Tubens otherwise known as ‘Loco Lu’ from Puerto Rico who is here from Logan Square and a few other participants who went with us. We were there for a week.”

    James Stewart III, the President of the Board at The Guild spoke to WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM on July 20, 2024 about Exhibit B, the literary variety show he co-founded. He explained how they had reached out to Andrea Change for support through the Guild Literary Complex. Change welcomed Exhibit B and their innovative ideas (Exhibit B members came together as recent graduates of the Master of Fine Arts program at the School of the Art Institute). He noted that while the Guild pays a hundred dollars per gig at the most, it is more than the average because most people seem to think that artists can live off nothing. Change knows better than this.

    True to her name, Change is concerned about preparing the next generation of leadership to take over the Guild Literary Complex, which continues to develop deep meaningful connections within a historically marginalized community. The fact that Change has had health issues increases the urgency of this work. Change is at the cutting edge of creating a difference in the world for all people. If only the rest of the world could pivot into this type of change. To find out more about the Guild Literary Complex go to: GuildComplex.org.

    To connect with more like-minded people who support the role of literary women leaders like Andrea Change, visit the Facebook page:

    Literary Women Leaders

  • Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Charli Christine Marker and Criage Lynette Althage

    Two trans women with one big problem to solve while poet and filmmaker Charli Christine Marker’s approach is very different from Criage Lynette Althage’s, who is a university librarian. They both dream of the same result.

    Captivated by those who represented extremes Chicago-based poet and filmmaker Charli Christine Marker admitted one of her first sheroes was a plus-size model from  the 2000 Guinness World Book of Records, Teighlor, who weighed in at 718 pounds, made her the world’s heaviest supermodel. Now, Marker is a film director who is using her own size to create trans joy. This joy is a wonder to behold as a friendship blossomed between Criage Althage and Charli Marker during an interview at WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM where they unpacked the heavy topic of transphobia. Althage, a reference librarian for professorial research at the Ronald Williams Library at Northeastern Illinois University has a more serious perspective that supports her identity as a trans woman living in Englewood, one of the most violent and underfunded neighborhoods in Chicago.  

    While Althage is participating in outreach and marches with Stop Trans Genocide, Marker is making feature films that celebrate her individuality as a trans woman. Both acknowledge their privilege as white people who do not have to deal with the same racial bias and bigotry as their black sisters in the trans community , hence Althage’s advocacy for Brave Space Alliance.  According to a June 28, 2022 Pew Research Report, “Most Americans favor protecting trans people from discrimination, but fewer support policies related to medical care for gender transitions; many are uneasy with the pace of change on trans issues… Roughly eight-in-ten U.S. adults say there is at least some discrimination against transgender people in our society.”  This discrimination is rampant in places like Northwestern hospital where Marker sought medical treatment. 

    At the hospital, Marker was faced with bigotry and hatred when she expected compassionate care.  

    “My pain was so bad that it led to extreme autistic meltdowns, which caused cops to restrain me, threaten to arrest me, and joke about me being anally raped in prison. This is how intersectional violence works, where transphobia doesn’t reach a fever pitch until it mixes with ableism and fatphobia in me, or race and immigration status in the other.” 

    Marker was able to survive the episode, however, it left her with an indelible scar of distrust and fear of the police, whom she refers to as ACAB (as in All Cops Are Bas—-). 

    According to Criage Lynette Althage, the intersectionality of race, socioeconomic status, and gender identity impacts her experiences with transphobia because “It sadly causes divisions between communities of privilege and those who are marginalized with trust being a barrier for trans communities of color. I think we are constantly working towards merging our collective interests with those of Black and brown communities…”

    Yet, it is bullying that causes gender non-conforming youth to withdraw from school or even commit suicide. Notable cases such as those of Matthew Shepard and Fred Martinez, who were murdered for their gender identity, are the ultimate manifestation of a gender binary culture where there is literally no room (neither bathrooms or locker rooms, in Florida for example) for someone who presents differently. Martinez’s identity as a young Navajo who was beloved by their own community, but despised by those in mainstream culture was explored in the film Two Spirits by Lidya Nibley. Nibley aptly points out how integrated genders are sacred in cultures such as the Navajo. 

    The radical division of gender into a binary of male or female leads to hatred of those who present outside of the status quo, which causes fear and bullying. Native Americans like the Navajo believe in embracing those who have integrated gender identities. The Navajo have at least four words for various gender identities in their language with a legacy focused on honoring everyone’s individual spirit and humanity. 

    Meanwhile, Charli Christine Marker, and Criage Lynette Althage are working on creating their own legacies of standing up for the underdog. Althage does this through activism, and Marker does it through writing poetry and expressing herself in filmmaking. Marker’s next feature film is titled Racine Grace about filmmaker Khloe Gwen from Los Angeles. Racine Grace will premiere on June 10, 2024, at Sweet Void Cinema at 3036 W Chicago Ave 1W, Chicago IL 60622. The free event features free soft drinks, and is mask-mandatory. Find out more about her work by going to her all my links page at https://allmylinks.com/cookierill. Althage can be found working behind the counter at the Ronald Williams Library on the campus of Northeastern Illinois University on days when Northeastern Illinois University is in session.

    Here is a recent poem by Charli Christine Marker, used with permission of the author:

    On Feedist Dysmorphia

    I know a girl whose father wrote for The Simpsons. He wrote the best episode.

    The Best Episode of the Best Show.

    But when I got around to watching it, and observed Homer supposedly comically getting fatter for Disability, it felt like an insult to the beauty of all those I love.

    It made me want to die.

    Four days ago, the girl whose father wrote the episode posted a selfie, four years and over 200 pounds in the making. She was over 60 pounds more than Homer was when he was immobile in the episode, but she was standing upright and happy with a gallon of whole milk in her hand.It was the most beautiful image I’d ever seen in my life. But when I showed my aunt the picture, she was insulted by how it treated the beauty and brilliance and productivity of the niece she loved.

    It made me want to die.

    I am an autobiographical filmmaker, whose work aims to be somewhere between the Simpsons and that selfie. I’ve had friends tell me that they like my work more than The Simpsons even, but I am currently sitting in a 

    Padded Cell

    Because of how I wish I could be an artist like the Girl in the Picture.

    Pacing endlessly and worrying every step about the calories they are burning.

    Charli Christine Marker, 2024

    Charli Christine Marker is a poet and filmmaker with a new feature film titled “Racine Grace” about filmmaker Khloe Green which is being released on June 10, 2024.