Immigrants Land In Chicago  -  RED EYE NEWPAPER ARTICLE
By: Kyle Coward, Hyde Park reporter · Friday, July 1, 2011 10:00 a.m.  
    When Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford wanted to use the “forever open, clear, and free” lakefront to stage his project, “Give Me a Place to Stand and I Will Move the World,” he discovered the last part of that famous vision for Chicago beaches didn’t quite apply in economic terms.
“They made me get an insurance quote for a million dollars worth of liability,” said the 28-year-old Hulsebos-Spofford of the park district’s less-than-enthusiastic response to his work, in which he and a crew were to tug wood-sculpted rafts onto Windy City waters to be sailed ashore, all part of an artistic demonstration on America’s immigration experience.
That million-dollar figure wasn’t for the whole beach, actually, just the sand. The lake altogether was out of the question.
“They said ‘no’ pretty definitively,” he said. And so the trek was to Miller Beach in Indiana for the June launch of “Give Me a Place,” created during his spring artist-in-residency stint at the Hyde Park Alliance for Arts & Culture (HyPa).
Utilizing assistance from students at the Chicago High School for the Arts, where he’s an instructor, Hulsebos-Spofford spent two-and-a-half months building the wooden rafts at HyPa’s space at 52nd Street and Harper Avenue.
“I live in Hyde Park, and I know that lots of construction projects are happening all the time,” he said. “I pretty specifically targeted some Dumpsters, and got yelled at.”
With some interceding from HyPa, Hulsebos-Spofford was able to secure donated materials from the university to build “Give Me a Place,” a reflection of the Vermont native’s longtime interest in maritime-themed art.
It’s a field that has fascinated him since his first foray into art while at Bard College in New York and which he developed further during his graduate studies at UIC, where he started making floating sculptures he describes as works “looking at maritime histories and myths of water.”
It was while spending last summer in Sicily on a Fulbright grant that the idea for “Give Me a Place” first took shape.
“I was teaching art classes to primarily North African immigrant kids,” he said, adding that he also managed a project reenacting the Greek fable of Ulysses’ battling the Cyclops. “I had the kids do drawings of what Ulysses’ ship would look like and what he escaped the Cyclops on. And so when I built my sculpture, I was looking at lot of the drawings the kids were doing.”
His Fulbright work, along with the discrimination he witnessed towards non-Sicilian residents, got Hulsebos-Spofford to thinking about the negative connotations many here can’t easily shake regarding immigration, particularly Latin American immigration.
“I just didn’t like my image banks seeing the Cuban rafts,” he says pertaining to the oft-unflattering televised images, from the 1980s onward, of Cubans and others from Caribbean islands arriving onto American shores. “I feel like it’s this really charged image that a lot of Americans carry.”
With his multiethnic student crew consisting of many first-generation Americans, Hulsebos-Spofford went about making “Give Me A Place” at the HyPa space, which was open to the public during construction.
And after a pre-launch reception for the project on June 4, Hulsebos-Spofford and company ventured to Miller Beach in Indiana for the big event, where the students played the role of immigrants.
“They have a canal to launch boats, so we paddled out through that canal,” he said about the launch, which got the attention of curious sunbathers nearby. “There were a lot of phone cameras out, and a lot of baffled beach-goers.”
Check out Hulsebos-Spofford’s blog
“Just in terms of a little gem in the city,” he said, “it’s going places.”
 
 

 

Immigrants Land In Chicago  RED EYE NEWPAPER ARTICLE

By: Kyle Coward, Hyde Park reporter · Friday, July 1, 2011 10:00 a.m.  

    When Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford wanted to use the “forever open, clear, and free” lakefront to stage his project, “Give Me a Place to Stand and I Will Move the World,” he discovered the last part of that famous vision for Chicago beaches didn’t quite apply in economic terms.

“They made me get an insurance quote for a million dollars worth of liability,” said the 28-year-old Hulsebos-Spofford of the park district’s less-than-enthusiastic response to his work, in which he and a crew were to tug wood-sculpted rafts onto Windy City waters to be sailed ashore, all part of an artistic demonstration on America’s immigration experience.

That million-dollar figure wasn’t for the whole beach, actually, just the sand. The lake altogether was out of the question.

“They said ‘no’ pretty definitively,” he said. And so the trek was to Miller Beach in Indiana for the June launch of “Give Me a Place,” created during his spring artist-in-residency stint at the Hyde Park Alliance for Arts & Culture (HyPa).

Utilizing assistance from students at the Chicago High School for the Arts, where he’s an instructor, Hulsebos-Spofford spent two-and-a-half months building the wooden rafts at HyPa’s space at 52nd Street and Harper Avenue.

“I live in Hyde Park, and I know that lots of construction projects are happening all the time,” he said. “I pretty specifically targeted some Dumpsters, and got yelled at.”

With some interceding from HyPa, Hulsebos-Spofford was able to secure donated materials from the university to build “Give Me a Place,” a reflection of the Vermont native’s longtime interest in maritime-themed art.

It’s a field that has fascinated him since his first foray into art while at Bard College in New York and which he developed further during his graduate studies at UIC, where he started making floating sculptures he describes as works “looking at maritime histories and myths of water.”

It was while spending last summer in Sicily on a Fulbright grant that the idea for “Give Me a Place” first took shape.

“I was teaching art classes to primarily North African immigrant kids,” he said, adding that he also managed a project reenacting the Greek fable of Ulysses’ battling the Cyclops. “I had the kids do drawings of what Ulysses’ ship would look like and what he escaped the Cyclops on. And so when I built my sculpture, I was looking at lot of the drawings the kids were doing.”

His Fulbright work, along with the discrimination he witnessed towards non-Sicilian residents, got Hulsebos-Spofford to thinking about the negative connotations many here can’t easily shake regarding immigration, particularly Latin American immigration.

“I just didn’t like my image banks seeing the Cuban rafts,” he says pertaining to the oft-unflattering televised images, from the 1980s onward, of Cubans and others from Caribbean islands arriving onto American shores. “I feel like it’s this really charged image that a lot of Americans carry.”

With his multiethnic student crew consisting of many first-generation Americans, Hulsebos-Spofford went about making “Give Me A Place” at the HyPa space, which was open to the public during construction.

And after a pre-launch reception for the project on June 4, Hulsebos-Spofford and company ventured to Miller Beach in Indiana for the big event, where the students played the role of immigrants.

“They have a canal to launch boats, so we paddled out through that canal,” he said about the launch, which got the attention of curious sunbathers nearby. “There were a lot of phone cameras out, and a lot of baffled beach-goers.”

Check out Hulsebos-Spofford’s blog

“Just in terms of a little gem in the city,” he said, “it’s going places.”

 

 

 Our Sailing! The Most Important Part, of this project is now complete! We have sailed through both the waters of Lake Michigan in Gary Indiana and through the obstacles known as the Chicago Park District! Good job, and welcome to this country.

Immigrants who arrived on 6/4/11

Edkhart Villhelm Parmann, of Germany   —-   Adam Ali

Schwa Shekch, of Dutch Land   —-   John Gincrich

James MacMurphy, of Ireland   —-   Goldie Murray

Madana Shaquilla, of Jamaica   —-   Shaquita Reed

Jonee Reet, of Haiti   —-   Najee Wright

Juan Sin-Apeliedo, of Guatemala   —-   Miguel Ontiveros

We Made Another Newpaper! The Chicago Weekly! June 3rd 2011.

Raft #1 Completed. Raft #3 Being Built. Days 11 and 12.

#1 Leading Raft, Suits 1-2 Passengers (Foam Based)

#2 Center Raft, Suits 5-6 Passengers (Tire Based)

#3 Ending Raft, Suits 2-3 Passengers (Pipe Based)

New Raft; Raft Number 3 Being Built. Days 9 and 10.

#1 Leading Raft, Suits 1-2 Passengers (Foam Based)

#2 Center Raft, Suits 5-6 Passengers (Tire Based)

#3 Ending Raft, Suits 2-3 Passengers (Pipe Based)

Raft Number One, Statue, and Poncho Being Made. Days 7 and 8.

#1 Leading Raft, Suits 1-2 Passengers (Foam Based)

#2 Center Raft, Suits 5-6 Passengers (Tire Based)

The Pre-Launch Reception June 3rd

Join us on June 3rd, 2011. From 6:30 – 8:00 PM at the HyPa Space Center at 5226 S. Harper.
 
 
   HyPa invites you to join us and celebrate the work of  Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford and his high school students from ChiArts, the Chicago High School for the Arts,  for a ‘pre-launch’ reception on Friday, June 3 from 6:30 – 8pm in the HyPa Space at 5226 S. Harper.

    Give me a place to stand and I will move the world -  For the past two and half months HyPa’s artist in residence and his students have built sculptural rafts that the ChiArts students will use to stage an “immigrant landing” along the Chicago’s Lake Michigan shore line.  The Landing will be on Saturday, June 4 on a location to be announced soon.  Jeremiah hopes this work will stimulate thought and conversation regarding the U.S.’s current immigration policy and first contact experiences between cultures.   See the progress unfold on Jeremiah’s blog.

    Now through June 4, the public is invited to watch the rafts take shape.  Jeremiah works in the space after school and evenings and the high school students join him on weekends.  In addition, Jeremiah has utilized discarded construction materials from current construction projects on the University of Chicago campus.  Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford utilized a Fulbright Scholarship last summer to create another raft based project in Sicily, Italy.  He earned his Master’s in Fine Arts at the University of Illinois Chicago, and went on to teach there as well as at DePaul, the British Institute and he co-directed the Children’s Expressive Arts Project, that works around the world to effect change through the arts.  His work has been exhibited at the Hyde Park Art Center among other spaces.  He lives in Hyde Park with his wife and two young children.

Final Launch Site

The Final Launch Site has been decided. After being disgracefully rejected from every beach in Chicago, we shall still sail within lake Michigan. We shall sail our rafts in the Gary Indiana Region of the lake. We will launch in the Charter School of the Dune and we will land in to the backyard of Gary resident Becky Whyatt on June 4th 2011. We can’t be rejected when we’re on private property! Take that Chicago Park District!

Somewhat ironically, the Park District denied our event permit to land on  their  ourbeach. Apparently staged immigrant landings don’t fall under activities designated for public beaches.
They Said, “The Chicago Park District is unable to grant approval of your proposed event pursuant to the Chicago Park District Code, Chapter VII, Section B, 5e(8): “The proposed use or activity is prohibited by or inconsistent with the classifications and uses of the park”. 
Thanks alot, Chicago Park District! We’re looking into other launch sites…

Somewhat ironically, the Park District denied our event permit to land on  their  ourbeach. Apparently staged immigrant landings don’t fall under activities designated for public beaches.

They Said, “The Chicago Park District is unable to grant approval of your proposed event pursuant to the Chicago Park District Code, Chapter VII, Section B, 5e(8): “The proposed use or activity is prohibited by or inconsistent with the classifications and uses of the park”. 

Thanks alot, Chicago Park District! We’re looking into other launch sites…

More about us in the paper! The Hyde Park Harold, est. 1882, had published a story about our raft project in their paper!

                                               May 4th 2011