Art in Alternative Spaces
presents
Remembrances
Memorial Boxes by Jacqueline Moses
Artists Reception: Friday, June 18, 2004 (5:30 pm -
7:30 pm)
Also a Memorial Box Workshop
Saturday - June 26 2004 (1 - 3 p.m.)
Jackie will teach a workshop at Gilda's Club on how to create a memorial box for a loved one on Saturday June 26 (1-3pm). The workshop is free but seating is limited. Call to RSVP. Participants must bring their own momentos.
On Display at
Gilda's Club Chicago, 537
North Wells, Chicago, IL
Exhibition continues through August 15, 2004.
There is no charge for viewing the artwork.
Regular Viewing hours
M-Th 9:00am-7:00pm
F 9:00am-5:00pm
Sat 9:00am-1:00pm
Jacqueline
Moses
Jackie received a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a MFA from Northern Illinois University. Her paintings have been exhibited in several galleries in the Chicago area. |
Mixed Media |
Mixed Media |
Mixed Media |
Mixed Media |
Mixed Media |
GILDA'S CLUB CHICAGO opened its
signature red door in 1998. The non-profit organization provides a warm and welcoming meeting place where men, women and children with cancer, and their family and friends, can join with others to build social and emotional support as an essential supplement to medical care.
Membership and program are free of charge. They offer support and networking groups, lectures, workshops and social events in our warm, home-like clubhouse.
Gilda's Club Chicago is a support community for men, women and children living with cancer, and their families and friends.
They offer a place where members can join together to give and receive the benefits of our unique program.
At Gilda's Club they believe:
* Our members living with cancer are the experts - and we listen and learn from them
* As experts, our members offer each other support while learning how best to live with cancer
* Cancer happens to the entire family and its social network, so club membership is extended to include all who are impacted by cancer. Each member develops a Customized Membership Plan to meet their needs. All are welcome.
Gilda Radner is best known as an original cast member of Saturday Night Live. As one of the "Not Ready for Prime Time Players" she created lovable characters like Rosanne Rosannadanna, Emily Litella and Lisa Loopner.
Gilda's astonishing career was cut short when she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 1986. Joanna Bull, Gilda's cancer psychotherapist, introduced her to cancer support groups. Recognizing how integral the support experience was to her treatment, Gilda's dream was to develop a community where anyone with cancer would receive the kind of support she had found. In her best-selling book It's Always Something, Gilda wrote about experiences living with cancer. She spoke of establishing such a support community in New York when she felt better and said, "There should be a thousand of them."
Gilda's ovarian cancer was diagnosed too late for effective treatment and she died in 1989. Following her death, Gilda's husband, actor and comedian Gene Wilder, Joanna Bull and many of Gilda's friends founded Gilda's Club in her memory. The first Club with its signature red door opened in New York City in June 1995. Under the guidance of Gilda's Club Worldwide, there are 13 affiliate Clubs open in North America and 14 Clubs currently in development.
For more information on Gilda's Club Chicago, please go to their website at www.gildasclubchicago.org
Founded in 1991, Anatomically Correct is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to showcasing works by artists in alternative spaces in a combined effort to educate, diversify, and promote community awareness of the visual and performing arts.
All artwork available for purchase.
For more information, please contact:
Anatomically Correct
858 W. Armitage #354, Chicago, IL 60614
anatomicallycorrect2022@gmail.com