BEGIN:VCALENDAR
TZID:
BEGIN:VEVENT
CLASS:PUBLIC
CREATED:20260613T052237
DESCRIPTION:<strong>ENOUGH</strong><strong> </strong><strong>Comes to The Art Center Highland Park, Saturday, June 25</strong>\n\n<strong>Speakers: 12 PM - 1 PM</strong>\n\n<strong>Interactive Art: 11 AM - 3 PM</strong>\n\nOver thirty thousand children have lost their lives to gun violence since the Sandy Hook massacre. <span data-markjs="true" data-ogac="" data-ogab="" data-ogsc="" data-ogsb="">Enough</span> is <span data-markjs="true" data-ogac="" data-ogab="" data-ogsc="" data-ogsb="">enough</span>.\n\nContinuing TAC's deep commitment to social impact, artist Jacqueline von Edelberg brings her interactive public art installation “<span data-markjs="true" data-ogac="" data-ogab="" data-ogsc="" data-ogsb="">Enough</span>” to The Art Center campus, 1957 Sheridan Road, in Highland Park, as part of their Arts in Action initiative.\n\n‘<span data-markjs="true" data-ogac="" data-ogab="" data-ogsc="" data-ogsb="">Enough</span>’ features some 30 thousand strips of orange fabric, representing all the children across America who have been shot to death since Sandy Hook.\n\nWhy orange?\n\nIn 2013, Hadiya Pendleton marched in President Obama’s second inaugural parade. Just one week later, she was shot to death on a Chicago playground. Hadiya’s friends commemorated her life by wearing orange, the color hunters wear in the woods to protect themselves and others.\n\n“Thoughts and prayers are not <span data-markjs="true" data-ogac="" data-ogab="" data-ogsc="" data-ogsb="">enough</span>. The best way to honor victims is to demand our Representatives pass sane gun control laws.” Says von Edelberg.\n\n“Jacqueline is an integral part of our ‘Arts in Action’ initiative, a program specifically created to allow The Art Center to live up to Toni Morisson’s call to action, “This is precisely the time when artists go to work. There is no time for despair, no place for self-pity, no need for silence, no room for fear. We speak, we write, we do language. That is how civilizations heal," says Executive Director James M Lynch.\n\nThe installation will host an interactive public art event on Saturday, June 25, beginning at 11 AM. Activities include chalking, message writing, and reading the names of the victims of the Texas massacre.\n\nJacqueline von Edelberg is an artist, activist, social entrepreneur, and unapologetic ‘nasty woman.’ With two decades of applying creative thinking to seemingly intractable real-world challenges, Jacqueline is globally recognized for her public art on progressive issues. She recently decorated the TAC Limo Cow to draw attention to reproductive rights and Ukrainian refugees. Last winter, her Atlanta interactive art installation <a href="https://votetree.org/" data-auth="NotApplicable" data-linkindex="0">VoteTree</a> helped change the course of history. She is passionate about building coalitions, glittery movements, and digital platforms that drive civic engagement and create systemic change.
DTEND:20220625T150000Z
DTSTAMP:20260613T052237
DTSTART:20220625T110000
LAST-MODIFIED:20091109T101015
LOCATION:The Art Center Highland Park, 1957 Sheridan Rd, , IL, 60035
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:Enough; A Community Action Against Gun Violence
BEGIN:VALARM
TRIGGER:-PT1440M
ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Reminder
END:VALARM
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
