7 Minutes SW of the Loop
1996 - 2012
“It takes roughly 7 minutes to ride a bike to the Loop in downtown Chicago from the eastern edge of Pilsen,” retrieved from an entry in 2000 from journal #10.
Chicago’s near southwest side has been a port of entry to the city for generations. In the early 20th century the neighborhood was inhabited by European immigrants from Czechoslovakia, Ireland, Lithuania, and Poland. By the late 1960s Pilsen evolved into a Spanish speaking neighborhood inhabited predominately by new arrivals from Mexico. In recent time, due to cheap rents, the ability to convert large industrial spaces into live/work environments and proximity to the downtown, artist and musicians have taken up residency in this section of the city. Presented here are portraits of inhabitants and the place these creatives call home.
"Little Sonny” Scott Jr. on Maxwell Street, musician, 2001
Vicinity of 15th and Desplaines, 2010
Brian Ulrich, photographer, 2006
Vicinity of Union and Maxwell, 2001
Juan Angel Chavez, sculptor, and puppies, 2003
Vicinity of Halsted and 18th Street, 1996
Sara Schnadt, curator and performance artist, 2003
Vicinity of Canal and 16th Street, 2012
Dick DeLange, architect, and Bridgette Bouquet, ceramicist, 2003
Garden in vicinity of 18th and Halsted, 2010
Miguel Cortez, owner of Antenna, 2007
Vicinity of Canal and Maxwell Street, 1999
Jason Kosnitzke, furniture maker, and Kelly Weime, artist, 2006
Isabelino Landor, drummer, and Patricia Bercowetz, nurse, 1997
Kirsten Todd, teacher, and Thomas Frank, painter, 1995
Vicinity of Paulina and Cermak, 2004
Sandra Kaminska Costello, research analyst, 2004
Vicinity of Halsted and 18th Street, 1998
Marcos Raya, artist, 1995