AMANDA WILLIAMS: Holding on to Vision
Architect and visual artist Amanda Williams explores the complexities of race, place, and urban spaces in response to racial and social inequity. Staying true to her practice involves risking opportunities and relationships that affect her career. Through her wisdom and courage, supported by legal and curatorial expertise, a model emerges for how artists can maintain their integrity and artistic vision while navigating the art world.
Amanda Williams
Amanda Williams is a visual artist who trained as an architect. Her creative practice employs color as a way to draw attention to the complexities of how race shapes how we assign value to space in cities. The landscapes in which she operates are the visual residue of the invisible policies and forces that have misshapen most major US cities. Williams’ installations, paintings, and works on paper seek to inspire new ways of looking at the familiar and, in the process, raise questions about the state of urban space and ownership in America. Amanda has exhibited widely, including the MoMA (NY), the Venice Architecture Biennale, the MCA Chicago, and a public commission at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis. She recently won the commission to design a permanent monument to Shirley Chisholm in Brooklyn, NY. Amanda has been recognized as a Joan Mitchell Foundation grantee, a USA Ford Fellow, an Efroymson Arts Fellow, and a Leadership Greater Chicago Fellow. Amanda is also a member of the Obama Presidential Center's Museum Design Team and sits on the boards of the Graham Foundation, Garfield Park Conservatory, and Hyde Park Art Center. Her work is in several permanent collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago and the MoMA (NY). Williams lives and works on the south side of Chicago.
Patrice Perkins
Founding Partner, Creative Genius Law
Anthony Hirschel
Museum and Arts Consultant, AGH Arts Strategies, LLC; Lecturer in law, University of Chicago Law School
Jennifer Carty
Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago