F Newsmagazine - The School of the Art Institute of Chicago - Art, Culture, and Politics
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Sullivan Galleries

Going Underground: The New SAIC Galleries

Newly moved and renamed, the former Sullivan Galleries face new challenges.

Eternal Labors

A conversation with the organizers of the Re:Working Labor exhibition.

Art and the End of Mass Incarceration

How artists envision a future without mass incarceration.

Low-Residency, High Impact

The 2019 Low-Res MFA show invokes questions of place and belonging.

Dreaming of “STATE”-hood

"STATE" is collaboration in its most faithful sense.

“The Art of Connection”: Graduating Art Therapists Get Personal

Graduating art therapy students' work turned the therapeutic gaze inward.

Speaking Truth to Power in “Talking to Action”

Political art from across the Americas at SAIC's Sullivan Galleries.

Low Residency MFA Show 2018 Embraces Inquiry and Vulnerability

The show included photography, installation, and performance.

The Art of Connection

Artwork From the MA Art Therapy Program in the Sullivan Galleries

Makeshift New Media

Cuban Artists Overcome Technological Shortages

The New Ism

Experience-based art gets redefined in light of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago's Sullivan Galleries exhibit A Proximity of Consciousness: Art and Social Action.

Last Days of Current Sullivan Galleries Exhibitions

"Attachments" and the Post-Baccalaureate Exhibition on view through July 3.

A Visit to “Tracing Affinities” and “Faculty Projects”

The latest shows at the Sullivan Galleries both foster dialogues, rather than simply show-and-tell.

Look, Look, and Look Again

A Review of the Fall 2013 Undergraduate Exhibition


Multiple visits to this semester's BFA show proves that SAIC students continue to create innovative and interdisciplinary statements.

Planting an Agricultural Urbanism

Artists in Chicago and India Consider the Possibilities of Urban Architecture


The Rooting: Regional Networks, Global Concerns Symposium brings together sustainable food communities and artists to consider the agricultural issues facing dense urban populations and imagine new legacies.