In 1968, Chicago made headlines for the ferocity of its police response to protesters at the Democratic National Convention, prompting outrage in the art world. Some artists pulled their shows from the city and called for a boycott until the mayor left office. But others responded artistically, creating new works and even full exhibitions in reaction to the political and social issues raised by the summer’s events...
Despite the city’s sometimes notorious political and social history, art
practices that challenge authority have thrived in Chicago. Art Against the Law
examines the creative tactics of the city’s activist artists and their
ways of addressing the broad definitions of the law—from responses to
excessive policing to inequities in public policy. These include
creative forms of protest, rebellion against the law through illegal art
practices, and using the political system itself as an art medium to
alter existing laws. The essays and conversations in this volume also
address the boundaries between art and creative activism and question
whether lines should be drawn at all. Through these texts and
interviews, Art Against the Law proves that creative imagination can be formidable in challenging the status quo.
Art Against the Law
is part of the new Chicago Social Practice History series, edited by
Mary Jane Jacob and Kate Zeller in the Department of Exhibitions and
Exhibition Studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC).