Open Call: Chicago Torture Justice Monument
30 Sep 2011
The Chicago Torture Justice Memorials invite artists to submit speculative proposals for a monument to memorialize the Chicago Police torture cases. Their goal is to honor the survivors of torture, their family members and the African American communities affected by the torture. The monument will also recall and honor the nearly two-decades long struggle for justice waged by torture survivors and their families, attorneys, community organizers, and people from every neighborhood and walk of life in Chicago.
These memorial projects will serve as a public reckoning with police torture in Chicago and honor those who fought to stop it. They hope to make visible the social and political conditions that made torture possible, as well as the acts of courage that ended – or at least brought to light — the culture of impunity that thwarted justice for so long in this instance.
They welcome proposals that exhibit radical imagination – they may critically examine the usefulness and limitations of monuments themselves while exploring the issues of reparations, truth and reconciliation, and restorative justice. For example, one submission might consist of the blueprint for a compensation committee for torture survivors, another might be an annual walking tour of Area 2 Police Headquarters (where the majority of tortures occurred), while still another might be a large public sculpture set on a pedestal or in a public square. Other monument proposals might be public events, a school curriculum, a collective quilt, a song, a billboard, a zine, a light projection… These memorials should also be understood as a locus of public empathy, making concrete the profound suffering of people like Anthony Holmes, tortured and made to confess to a crime he did not commit.
All submitted proposals will be exhibited at one or more of the following venues in 2012: Chicago area art galleries, community centers, and a dedicated website. The proposals, exhibition, and what they hope to become some permanent monument(s) will honor the survivors of police torture, acknowledge the communities most affected by police criminality as well as inform the world about the history of the police torture in Chicago under former Commander Burge.
For more information visit: http://torturememorial.wordpress.com
or contact: justicememorials@gmail.com
Sponsor: Chicago Torture Justice Memorials project
Deadline: January 21, 2012
Venue: Sites throughout the Chicagoland area and a website
Curators: A panel of prominent area critics, artists, and community members will curate the submissions into roving exhibitions.
Eligibility: Submissions may be made by a person or persons of any age and nationality.
Criteria for proposals: A proposed monument may take any form – from architecture to haiku, from website to mural, from community organization to performance, from bronze plaque to large-scale memorial.
Submission process: the submission should be in the form of a PDF, PPT, webpage, or other accessible electronic format. Non-electronic submissions will also be accepted; please contact justicememorials@gmail.com to arrange delivery or mail to:
Chicago Torture Justice Memorial Project (CTJM Project)
c/o People’s Law Office
1180 N. Milwaukee
Chicago, Illinois 60642
For more information visit: http://torturememorial.wordpress.com
or contact: justicememorials@gmail.com
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