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Articles

  • 1 day ago | chicagoreader.com | Joshua Eferighe

    City of Win is a series curated by Isiah “ThoughtPoet” Veney and written by Joshua Eferighe that uses prose and photography to create portraits of Chicago musicians and cultural innovators working to create positive change in their communities. When I played my friend “Match?” and “Slow Dancing to Liv.e,” the newest singles from Chicago rapper Kaicrewsade, she immediately knew she was hearing something special.

  • 3 days ago | chicagoreader.com | Micco Caporale

    If you’ve ever shopped the flippantly playful clothing line Fashion Brand Company, you’ll probably recognize Mimi Doe. She’s one of the company’s most frequently featured models—the redhead with the Crass tattoo—and she’s also the front person for Los Angeles punk band Niis.

  • 3 days ago | chicagoreader.com | Bill Meyer

    When you visit Arnold Dreyblatt’s website, you’re confronted with a choice—artist or composer. Whichever you choose, you’ll be drawn into a world that challenges your senses. The American-born polymath, based in Berlin since 1984, has created visual works such as Memory Lost, Last Europeans?, and Inmates whose images and text manifest hidden stories or tantalize the viewer with layered texts that transcends what they could do on their own.

  • 6 days ago | chicagoreader.com | Jamie Ludwig

    Black Ends are a Seattle punk trio of vocalist-guitarist Nicolle Swims, bassist Ben Swanson, and drummer Billie Jessica Paine. In order to describe their idiosyncratic combination of scruffy bubblegum hooks, raw guitar wizardry, and unapologetic indie-rock weirdness, they coined the term “gunk pop,” which inclines plenty of folks (whether the band like it or not) to see them as heirs to the city’s famous indie-rock legacy, from the grunge days onward.

  • 1 week ago | chicagoreader.com | Lori Waxman

    In the project 60 wrd/min art critic, writer Lori Waxman explores how art writing can serve an expanded field of artists—including those incarcerated, trying to gain visas, working to establish themselves professionally, or just wanting feedback for a secret hobby. For this iteration, Waxman reviewed work made by Xiaohan Jiang. Xiaohan JiangDoes Xiaohan Jiang dream of horses? Her paintings surely do.

Chicago Reader journalists