Summer 2017 Intern
Mollye Shacklette is a graduate student at the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago studying international policy and development. She graduated from the University of Notre Dame with a degree in Political Science and Italian.
Graham School Methods + Policy Interns
Isobel Arujo is a rising senior in the Frederick Douglass Distinguished Scholars program at American University, majoring in Environmental Studies and double-minoring in Communications and Spanish. She is passionate about sustainable, equitable urban development and intends to pursue a graduate degree in urban planning.
Gerald Lee just finished his first year pursuing his BSc in Urban Planning, Design and Management at the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London. He explores how urbanization has a role in achieving sustainable development, improving social welfare, and generating economic growth.
Sarah Marx is studying History and Political Science at the Sorbonne in Paris. She hopes to work in the Middle East and is particularly interested in autonomous, resilient communities that are promoting new forms of urban governance by including feminist and ecological values.
Sharlene Yulita is studying architecture at the School of the Arts Institute Chicago. She hopes to go beyond her artistic background and further increase her knowledge on urban studies, which she believes will strengthen her ambition to not only become an architect and urban designer, but to also be active in writing about social issues and urban theories.
Theaster Gates creates platforms. In Chicago, Gates’ leadership of artist-led spaces has catalysed an evolution in perceptions of some of the most underserved parts of the city. Beginning with interventions in small-scale residences, now known as Dorchester Projects, Gates’ houses in Greater Grand Crossing became a nexus for globally engaged experiments in structures of individual and collective living, working, and art-making. Launched into the international art world as 12 Ballads for Huguenot House at dOCUMENTA13, the houses embodied a new system of values not only in the austere-yet-inviting atmosphere that incorporates once-discarded materials as design elements, but in the ongoing, flexible use of the spaces and the creation of new relationships and opportunities among artists, visitors, and students.
As evident in the synergistic design process of his mindful building practices and persistent challenging of organizational structures, Gates’ development projects function as an extension of his studio work. Gates takes on the problem of Black space as a formal exercise, reminiscent of Joseph Beuys' concept of social sculpture. The latest example of this work is the Stony Island Arts Bank, owned and envisioned by Gates, and opened in conjunction with the inaugural Chicago Architecture Biennial in October 2015.
At the University of Chicago, Gates is a Professor in the Department of Visual Arts and the College, and Director of Arts + Public Life, which is housed at the Arts Incubator in Washington Park. He also leads an urban research initiative known as Place Lab—a team of social scientists, architects, creative professionals, and business leaders. With support from the Knight Foundation, Gates and his team will create frameworks for reimagining the role that culture plays in the redevelopment of transforming African American communities over the next three years. Gates is helping to define the future of artistic place-based efforts, in research and practice.
Gates is also the founder and Artistic Director of Rebuild Foundation, a not-for-profit organization that endeavours to rebuild the cultural foundations of neighbourhoods and incite movements of community revitalization that are culture based, artist led, and neighbourhood driven.