Floating Museum's Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford, avery r. young, Faheem Majeed, and Andrew Schachman in the Chicago Cultural Center
Cory Dewald Floating Museum's Jeremiah Hulsebos-Spofford, avery r. young, Faheem Majeed, and Andrew Schachman in the Chicago Cultural Center

As the opening date for the Chicago Architecture Biennial draws closer, the Windy City nonprofit has announced extended exhibition dates alongside a list of additional contributors and cultural partners. The biennial's fifth edition, dubbed This is a Rehearsal, will run across two phases: the first, decentralized phase will open on Sept. 21 via installations scattered across the city; a second phase integrated into the Chicago Cultural Center and the Graham Foundation will open Nov. 1, following an official opening ceremony. The exhibition at the CAC will remain open to the public through Feb. 11, 2024.

"The Chicago Architecture Biennial has many audiences, all of which enhance our city," said Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson in a CAB press release. "In addition to being a vital part of Chicago’s arts and cultural environment, the biennial is an important element of attracting tourists, drawing visitors from across the country and throughout the world. Closer to home, the biennial’s partnerships with community arts organizations enrich our neighborhoods. Together they focus on architecture and design to address the issues which confront urban areas everywhere."

Floating Museum, a Chicago-based artist collective, will direct this year's biennial, organizing programming that spans Chicago neighborhoods including the Loop, Lakeview, Gold Coast, Devon Avenue, Bronzeville, Englewood, South Chicago, Hyde Park, Grand Crossing, and North Lawndale. After revealing a list of 70 exhibition participants earlier this year, CAB has also published a list of more than 100 cultural partners that will present programming that complements This is a Rehearsal.

Below, read more from CAB on this cycle's cultural partners.

From CAB:

Programs Organized with 2023 Cultural Partners & City Sites Include:

Through the curatorial framework, the Floating Museum has invited institutions as participants to the exhibition. Local organizations include Grow Greater Englewood, Urban Growers Collective, Project Onward, SpaceShift, and the Southside Community Art Center. CAB 5 will also present work developed by New York–based organizations such as Storefront for Art and Architecture, The Highline, and the Buell Center at Columbia University. The participant projects will bring direct interventions into the urban landscape, coordinated in partnership with local community organizations through exhibitions, installations, programs, and performance, all with the intent to rehearse the ways in which the architectural process can positively impact local communities.

Partnerships with city sites such as Urban Growers Collective will explore topics including urban agriculture and land renewal. In a collaboration between UGC and New York–based architect David Benjamin and Columbia GSAPP’s Footprint Project, CAB 5 will reveal a new outdoor art studio and culinary space to establish an arts residency program that is informed by nature, vision, and communal sharing of diverse narratives. This new space will support emergent collaborations on the seven-acre South Chicago Farm adjacent to Clara Shafer Park. Further expanding on the regenerative and liberatory capacity of rebuilding urban land, the Boston-based landscape design firm Stoss Landscape Urbanism will explore the capacity for urban-ecological transformation through two public forestry initiatives that showcase the benefits of nurturing woodland nurseries and embracing decay's rejuvenating effects. Stoss will cultivate a circular, new-growth forest installation called The Woodland Circle. To accompany the reimagined public green space, in an under-utilized alleyway adjacent to the Field, Stoss will present Tree Cycles—an installation of public seating that utilizes trees at all stages of their life cycles.

SpaceShift, a creative hub for experimentation, will present Shamiana, an immersive multi-sensory public art installation and community gathering space in Chicago’s South Asian neighborhood on Devon Avenue—an area that concurrently serves as a portal for immigrants and refugees to Chicago. With support from Good City Group, the structure will create space for a place for gathering and growth, continuing SpaceShift’s placemaking in the neighborhood.

In partnership with the Poetry Foundation, Theatre for One—a mobile, state-of-the-art performance space for one actor and one audience member, created by Christine Jones and designed by LOT-EK—will feature local Chicago poets and actors performing new poems commissioned by Theatre For One, as well as a new sound installation created by Andrew Schneider activating poetry and connectivity across the city at select sites. Similarly, GELITIN, will activate a major new sculpture that will make a series of brief guest appearances at select Biennial sites. The sculpture will be included in an exhibition at the Neubauer Collegium that will open on September 23 and remain on view through January 12, 2024.

This year CAB will feature programs and exhibitions from long-time partners such as the Chicago Architecture Center, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Chicago Humanities Festival, Hyde Park Art Center, Volume Gallery, the National Public Housing Museum and Villa Albertine. Returning CAB partner 6018NORTH will present Water, an exhibition that positions the Chicago River as a point of entry for exploring how the city and its people can be stewards of water and of the greater environment. Organized in collaboration with artist and architect Jennifer Buyck, curator Tricia Van Eck, and French-American residency program Villa Albertine, the exhibition and accompanying public programs aim to reveal how water can be re-examined, better understood, and re-imagined, so that we can become better stewards of water and all that it connects.

CAB and Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events will continue to expand the partnership as the Biennial’s official Presenting Partner at the Chicago Cultural Center through collaborations around exhibitions and programs and a residency at the Chicago Cultural Center Learning Lab with Mobile Makers. New forms of partnerships are being developed by a suite of other city governmental branches: the Chicago Department of Transportation, the Chicago Department of Planning and Development, and the Chicago Department of Buildings. Through these partnerships, CAB is rehearsing ways to produce cultural experiences that intersect with city initiatives.

CAB 2023 Partners:

150 Media Stream

6018North

Alliance Française de Chicago

ALLL x Leapfrog Project

Anna & Frederick Douglass Pavilion

ArchAgenda

archKIDecture

The Arts Club of Chicago

Art Institute of Chicago

Art on the Mart

Association for Community Design

Association of Architecture Organizations

Black Arts Consortium at Northwestern University

Buddy

Canopy

Center for Native Futures

Chicago Architectural Club

Chicago Architecture Center

Chicago Collections Consortium

Chicago Department of Buildings

Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events

Chicago Department of Housing

Chicago Department of Planning and Development

Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation Bureau of Forestry

Chicago Department of Transportation

Chicago Humanities Festival

Chicago International Film Festival

Chicago Loop Alliance

Chicago Park District

Chicago Women in Architecture

Cultural Services French Embassy, Chicago

DePaul Museum of Art

Design Museum of Chicago

Design Trust Chicago

DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center

Edith Farnsworth House

European Cultural Centre

Experimental Sound Studio

EXPO CHICAGO

Galaudet Gallery

Gallery 400 at the University of Illinois at Chicago

Glessner House

Goethe-Institut Chicago

GOOD CITY GROUP

Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts

Grow Greater Englewood

Human Scale

Hyde Park Arts Center

Illinois Chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architects (I-NOMA)

Illinois Institute of Technology College of Architecture

Independent Curators International (ICI)

Istituto Italiano di Cultura a Chicago

Jane Addams Hull-House Museum

Joffrey Ballet

Lampo

Latent

Lawndale Pop-Up Spot

Marwen

MAS Context

meme01

Memorial Nature Fund

Metrotopia Metaverse

Mobile Makers

Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago

Museum of Contemporary Photography

National Museum of Mexican Art

National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture

National Organization of Minority Architects

National Public Housing Museum

Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society

NEXT.cc STEAM by DESIGN

Open Architecture Collaborative - Chicago

OPEN Center for the Arts

PLAMEN Art Foundation

Poetry Foundation

Project HOOD

Richard H. Driehaus Museum

Riverside Arts Center

Royal Society of Arts

School of the Art Institute of Chicago at Homan Square

School of the Art Institute of Chicago Departments of Sculpture and Visual and Critical Studies

Society for Contemporary Art

Society of Architectural Historians

SOM

South Side Community Art Center

SpaceShift

Steel Studio

Studio Gang

Terrain Biennial 2023

Territory NFP

The Open Practice Committee in the Department of Visual Arts at The University of Chicago

The Renaissance Society

Theater on the Lake

Toronto Biennial of Art

University of Illinois Chicago School of Architecture

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign School of Architecture

Urban Growers Collective

Villa Albertine

Volume Gallery

Wayfinding

Woman's Athletic Club of Chicago

Wrightwood 659