Flip a Beat Membership Chicago (FABC) chapter participant and artist Ace makes beats utilizing an MPC (or “beat machine”) on the bar and artwork house Nighthawk in Chicago on Might 15. In keeping with FABC Chicago founder Cory Morrison, individuals make beats utilizing samples offered by the membership. The occasion is livestreamed.
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On a vivid, heat Saturday afternoon in Chicago, two group hubs on reverse sides of the town have been bursting with creative exercise.
Nighthawk is situated in Albany Park, on Chicago’s North Aspect. As soon as upon a time, it was only a native bar. “We have been coming right here for the final 10 years, virtually since they opened,” mentioned David Chavez, who by day plans applications and cultural occasions for the town of Chicago.
Again then, he and three members of his household — Ana Bermudez, Samantha Bermudez and Juan Bermudez — have been simply patrons at this cozy neighborhood grasp. However since then, they’ve reimagined Nighthawk into one thing else altogether.
Bar co-managing companions (from left) Juan Bermudez, his spouse Sam Bermudez, and their relations Ana Bermudez and David Chavez pose for a portrait outdoors the doorway at Nighthawk on Might 15.
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Originally of 2025, the 4 of them grew to become managing companions on this native joint — they usually’ve turned it into probably the most fascinating small arts venues within the metropolis.
They current reside music and DJs, visible artwork exhibitions, reside drawing and portray evenings; you do not have to purchase something to attend. On this sunny Saturday afternoon, they’re internet hosting a dialogue on documentary movies on their yard patio.
“It meant creating actions that have been past simply consuming alcohol. It meant creating a 3rd house and meant having issues that different — perhaps that folk haven’t got entry to in any other case, like art-making, drawing, portray, conversations about present occasions,” Chavez mentioned.
Chavez mentioned that they need this house to function on the nexus of the humanities and native activism.
Flip a Beat Membership Chicago (FABC) chapter founder Cory Morrison.
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Artist Fernando Bounce works on his beats at Nighthawk.
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Artist SLGHTR! 13x works on his beats.
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Nighthawk sponsors a meals pantry and sometimes presents group fundraisers. Albany Park is a closely Latino neighborhood, and it was one of many communities significantly affected when Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramped up its immigration raids within the metropolis final fall.
In response, Nighthawk started a brand new sequence of occasions. “We helped set up these whistle kit-making gatherings each Friday the place the bar was full. We had 150 folks in right here. And we have been making 1,500, 2,000 whistles each Friday,” Chavez mentioned. (Whistles alerting neighbors to the close by presence of ICE brokers have turn into an essential activist instrument in Chicago and elsewhere.)
Nighthawk co-managing director and Future Rootz Data member David Chavez. Chavez reimagined Nighthawk alongside along with his spouse and two different members of the family.
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The analog reel-to-reel tape machine performs for the Cuban Reel-to-Reel listening social gathering and the Future Rootz launch social gathering at Nighthawk. Co-lead, DJ and music producer Edgar González, who goes by the stage title “Garo,” says they accumulate and play uncommon sounds and music from Cuba.
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A patron enters the bar from the patio at Nighthawk.
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Elsewhere in Chicago, on the South Aspect, one other group has been grappling with its response to the ICE raids.
“We’re nonetheless reeling from the trauma of an infusion of ICE brokers that have been pulling folks out of daycare facilities,” mentioned Rami Nashashibi. He is the MacArthur grant-winning founder and govt director of the Inside-Metropolis Muslim Motion Community (IMAN), a group group in Chicago and Atlanta that focuses on well being, wellness and therapeutic.
Actually, Nighthawk and IMAN begin out from completely different factors of departure: Nighthawk is a bar, and IMAN is a middle of group activism with Muslim roots. However like Nighthawk, IMAN has used artwork to assist group members navigate the fallout of the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement and different insurance policies.
The doorway to IMAN Central, which is the occasion house on the Inside-Metropolis Muslim Motion Community (IMAN) headquarters, on July 8 in Chicago.
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Rami Nashashibi, founder and govt director of IMAN, within the group’s ceramics studio.
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Nashashibi mentioned the humanities have at all times been important to IMAN’s mission: “It truly is on the core of how we see ourselves on the earth. And so creative, artistic, non secular expression was a giant a part of our work from the inception.” He spoke in the course of IMAN’s ceramics studio, situated in Marquette Park.
“Artwork has been a car to continuously, radically reimagine a approach out, a distinct tomorrow,” Nashashibi mentioned. “And that wasn’t nearly fanciful creativeness. It was additionally about actual activism in organizing and pathways to remain collectively and to maintain our communities collectively within the face of a lot trauma.”
Jannah Sellars, the artistic and cultural organizing supervisor at IMAN, reveals a bit of artwork by Shirien Damra made for a Gaza profit live performance, now displayed within the Arts Lounge within the group’s headquarters.
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Sellars shows a bowl she made within the ceramics studio.
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In mid-Might, IMAN celebrated at its web site in Englewood with a road truthful, connecting neighbors with reasonably priced, native, recent meals choices, after many individuals misplaced all or a few of their federal meals help as a result of federal cuts.
A girl dances throughout an IMAN-organized road truthful on Might 15 in Chicago. The truthful linked neighbors with reasonably priced, native, recent meals choices after many individuals misplaced all or a few of their federal meals help due to congressional laws.
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Latara Sutton shares her ideas in the course of the weekly IMAN organizing committee assembly on July 8 in Chicago.
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Sellars leads the weekly Organizing Committee assembly at IMAN headquarters.
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Regardless of their variations, Nighthawk and IMAN share sure objectives: They each nurture native artwork and native activism for native residents. And that is sustaining people’ spirits.
Jennifer Vanasco edited this story for broadcast and digital. Danielle Scruggs edited the pictures. Chloee Weiner combined the audio.
