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A collection of news and information related to School of the Art Institute of Chicago published by this site and its partners.

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    May 17, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Anchee Min's American story

    When I started reading Anchee Min's latest memoir, "The Cooked Seed," I presumed there would be many commonalities between her life journey in America and mine. We both emigrated from Shanghai — Min came over to the United States as a student in...

    Tags: Chicago Public Library, Amy Chua, The Home Depot, Oprah Winfrey, Literature

  2. May 11, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Anchee Min on her memoir, "The Cooked Seed"

    In “Red Azalea,” her best-selling 1994 memoir, Anchee Min told the compelling story of her childhood and early adulthood in China during the Cultural Revolution. The daughter of former teachers who were reassigned to jobs as manual laborers in...

    Tags: Teaching and Learning, Literature, Chinese Restaurants, Authors, Nobel Prize Awards

  4. May 10, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. 'The Walk' showcases designs by students

    Techno music played as models glided down the runway in cutting-edge designs by students from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago at its 79th annual fashion show, "The Walk." More than 250 innovative creations were presented to almost 500 attendees inside a tent at Millennium Park on May 3.
    Techno music played as models glided down the runway in cutting-edge designs by students from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago at its 79th annual fashion show, "The Walk." More than 250 innovative creations were presented to almost 500 attendees...

    Tags: Fashion Shows, Entertainment, Rodarte, Awards and Prizes, Sage

  6. May 5, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Fast fashion: SAIC fashion pop-up shop opens May 10

    Runway looks, particularly those created by students, seldom see the light of a storefront. But this year, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago will be selling its student designers' garments in a bigger way after its May 3 annual fashion extravaganza. The SAIC pop-up shop, called Su_7 (referencing the fashion department's home on the seventh floor of the school's Sullivan Center), will take up residence May 10 to 18 at Block 37, 108 N. State St. The shop, at street level close to Red Line and Blue Line "L" stops, will be open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.
    Runway looks, particularly those created by students, seldom see the light of a storefront. But this year, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago will be selling its student designers' garments in a bigger way after its May 3 annual fashion...

    Tags: Education, Teaching and Learning, Students

  8. May 3, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  9. Five books by Lit Fest presenters

    About 150,000 people attend Printers Row Lit Fest each year to wander the book fair lining Dearborn Street and to listen to authors speak about their work. For a handful of the 200 or so authors who will appear this year, the event will be a homecoming. For our roundup this week, we've chosen Lit Fest authors with Chicago roots — roots that run deep in the books listed here.
    About 150,000 people attend Printers Row Lit Fest each year to wander the book fair lining Dearborn Street and to listen to authors speak about their work. For a handful of the 200 or so authors who will appear this year, the event will be a homecoming....

    Tags: Heart Attack, Nobel Prize Awards, Hugh Hefner, Festive Events, Arts and Culture

  10. Apr 22, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Authors A-C

    div.article div.byline p.date {display:none;} 826CHI 826CHI is a nonprofit writing and tutoring center dedicated to supporting students ages 6-18 with their creative and expository writing skills, and to helping teachers inspire their students....

    Tags: Psychotherapy, United Nations, Literature, Food Network (tv network), Restaurant and Catering Industry

  12. Apr 23, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. Mollie Michala Lyman, model and artist, 1926–2013

    As a girl, Mollie Michala Lyman, created paper dolls with custom wardrobes, illustrated her own daily newspaper and drew with crayons on an iron radiator because she liked the way the colors melted in the heat.
    As a girl, Mollie Michala Lyman, created paper dolls with custom wardrobes, illustrated her own daily newspaper and drew with crayons on an iron radiator because she liked the way the colors melted in the heat. "Even as a child she was unconventional,"...

    Tags: University of Chicago, Artists, Teaching and Learning, Philosophy, Colleges and Universities

  14. Apr 21, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. 3-D technology reshapes Chicago manufacturing

    The machine, no larger than a coffee maker and encased in black like Darth Vader's helmet, hums at a whisper.
    The machine, no larger than a coffee maker and encased in black like Darth Vader's helmet, hums at a whisper. Swinging open the shell's door reveals a slim metal nozzle moving smoothly over a platform, putting down melted black filament in thin layers...

    Tags: Startups, Science and Technology, Chess Playing, Lifestyle and Leisure, Technology

  16. Apr 18, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Gender-bending rapper Mykki Blanco is Chicago through and through

    Before Michael Quattlebaum was going glamazon in the pages of Vogue, being christened the most exciting thing in the downtown party scene by The New York Times, before he was boasting about being Jay-Z's natural-born legatee in song — which is to say before he was taking the world by force as Mykki Blanco — Quattlebaum was just another School of the Art Institute of Chicago freshman trying to hold it together in the big city.
    Before Michael Quattlebaum was going glamazon in the pages of Vogue, being christened the most exciting thing in the downtown party scene by The New York Times, before he was boasting about being Jay-Z's natural-born legatee in song — which is to...

    Tags: Artists, Minority Groups, Homophobia, Entertainment, Music

  18. Apr 14, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  19. Going the distance, with careers in 2 cities

    Sandra Smith was starting her first day as a sales trader in Chicago.
    Sandra Smith was starting her first day as a sales trader in Chicago. Leaving her second post-college job at a hedge fund in New York, she was back in the city where she grew up and where several members of her family had worked in the financial trading...

    Tags: New York Mercantile Exchange, Holy Name Cathedral, Commodity Markets, Television Industry, Sailing

  20. Mar 20, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Teaching compassion

    Margie Huff, a second-year medical student at Northwestern University, picked up a drawing pencil and carefully sketched the upper border of an eye socket.
    Margie Huff, a second-year medical student at Northwestern University, picked up a drawing pencil and carefully sketched the upper border of an eye socket. Huff then peered at her own reflection in a small cosmetics mirror and made a couple of small...

    Tags: Education, University of Chicago, Hershey (Dauphin, Pennsylvania), Teaching and Learning, Internists

  22. Mar 30, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Benjamin Lytal on 'A Map of Tulsa'

    If Chicago author Benjamin Lytal were the typical writer of semi-autobiographical fiction, his first novel would have been the story of a young man who escaped his hometown in the interior of the country to become immersed in the colorful characters and witty conversation of the New York literary scene. The hometown — in this case Tulsa, Okla. — would barely have registered in the rear-view mirror, if that mirror had been consulted at all. But neither Lytal nor his elegantly crafted debut novel, “A Map of Tulsa,” are the least bit typical. Like Lytal himself, the book's hero, Jim Praley, leaves Oklahoma to go to college in the Northeast, and later works for a magazine in New York.
    If Chicago author Benjamin Lytal were the typical writer of semi-autobiographical fiction, his first novel would have been the story of a young man who escaped his hometown in the interior of the country to become immersed in the colorful characters and...

    Tags: University of Chicago, Chicago Tribune, Literature, Colleges and Universities, Authors

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School of the Art Institute of Chicago Photos
Phil Rheinecker and Brian McIntyre at a reception follo...
(May 3, 2013)
Phil Rheinecker and Brian McIntyre
Victoria Dior and Marie Froehlich at a reception follow...
(May 3, 2013)
Victoria Dior and Marie Froehlich
Shirley and Walter Massey at the School of the Art Inst...
(May 3, 2013)
Shirley and Walter Massey