Sunday, November 24, 2024

CHICAGO ON FOOT: ART AND CULTURE OF THE WINDY CITY

In the bustling northeastern Illinois metropolis of Chicago, just getting around can be half the adventure. With a public transportation system second in the United States only to New York, options include buses, taxis and the “L” train (Chicago’s elevated subway system, so nicknamed because when it was first completed in 1943, most of it was elevated). Of course there’s always the more scenic option of walking.

On a recent visit to the windy city, my husband, Jeremy, and I decided to forego the plethora of cabs and hoof it to most of our destinations as we explored the arts and the city’s rich architectural history. Touring Chicago on foot would give us the chance to explore corner cafes and bistros and make us feel a part of the city.

The Chicago Architecture Foundation (CAF) provides many options for viewing historic and modern-day architecture. In addition to bus, boat and neighborhood tours, guided walking tours are a great way to observe the city. Most of the tours last two hours, and begin at the Archi Center Shop & Tour Center in the Santa Fe Building, at 224 South Michigan Avenue.

The CAF tour guides are all volunteers, with a wealth of knowledge concerning not only the history of the buildings themselves, but also of the architects who designed them. Interesting asides about the city’s history keep tour-goers captivated along the journey.

Jeremy and I took the historic skyscrapers tour, which covers skyscrapers built between 1885 and 1935. We learned how Chicago’s architecture was forever changed by the Great Chicago Fire of 1871.

In 1870, Chicago was growing rapidly, with a population of 300,000 people, many of whom worked in manufacturing jobs. Then in 1871, a fire started in a barn outside Chicago, and strong winds spread it to the city.

More than 17,000 structures were destroyed, and several hundred people died in the fire. Since the United States was in a recession, rebuilding didn’t begin until a decade later.

With land at a premium by then, architects began expanding buildings vertically, instead of horizontally. The first skyscrapers built following the fire were 16 to 18 stories high.

During this time, a school of architects was active in Chicago, and they created what became known as the Chicago School of architecture, with innovations in structure and design that helped to make Chicago the birthplace of the skyscraper.

The new style included steel-frame buildings clad with terra cotta, numerous windows to bring in ambient light and simple exterior adornment. Architects who were instrumental in implementing this new style of design included Daniel Burnham and Louis Sullivan.

The Santa Fe Building (224 S. Michigan Ave.), designed by architect Daniel Burnham’s firm in 1904, is a prime example of the “Chicago School” style of architecture. It now houses the Chicago Architecture Foundation. This simple structure features clean lines and numerous windows.

The building was originally designed with a light well, which served the purpose of providing light to the inner spaces of the building. The light well was converted to an atrium in the 1980s.

The Old Colony Building (407 S. Dearborn St.), constructed in 1894 by William Holabird and partners, was also built in the Chicago School style. A unique design feature of this building is its rounded corners with oriel windows. Although the building has minimal ornamentation, the gracefully curved corners with windows add elegance to the exterior.

The Fine Arts Building (410 S. Michigan Ave.), built in 1885 by Solon S. Beman, is the oldest on the historic high-rises tour. Arched windows accentuate the top three floors. This building has the distinction of being the only one left in the city today with a human-operated elevator, which takes visitors back to a time when all elevators were run this way.

For those interested in modern architecture, a tour of skyscrapers built after 1950 is also available. This tour introduces visitors to architectural wonders such as the 1,450-foot-tall (442 m) Sears Tower (233 South Wacker Dr.), completed in 1974, which to this day remains the tallest building in North America, and the 1,127-foot-tall (344 m) John Hancock Center (875 North Michigan Ave.).

High atop the John Hancock Center, visitors can enjoy unobstructed views of the city from the open-air viewing center at the Hancock Observatory. The Chicago Architecture Foundation even offers a tour of the newly completed Millennium Park, a redeveloped section of Grant Park.

Millennium Park, which opened in the summer of 2004, is a showcase for art, including Cloud Gate, a 110-ton stainless-steel art structure. An outdoor pavilion here is the setting for free classical concerts on weekends. The 24.5 acre (0.10 km²) park also houses the amazing Crown Fountain, which consists of two 50-foot (15.2 m) glass blocks, and features lights and video images.

Chicago is also home to world-renowned art museums, such as the Field Museum, the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art and the Art Institute of Chicago. The Field Museum is known for its blockbuster exhibits and its impressive research staff, especially in the fields of biology and paleontology.

The current exhibit, through January 1, 2007, is “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs.” Jeremy and I visited the Museum of Contemporary Art. The museum boasts an eclectic mix of works by well-known and new artists.

One work, called Proportioned to the Groove, 2005, by Sarah Sze, is composed of ordinary household items, including a bottle of glass cleaner and potato  chip crumbs positioned on the floor, under a floor-to-ceiling canopy of string.

Visitors must navigate their way under a break in the string in order to continue to the next exhibit. Chuck Close’s Cindy, oil on canvas, is an example of  pointillism. When I viewed up close, it appeared to be nothing more than a series of precisely placed dots, but when I stepped back 10 feet (3 m), it became a  portrait of a woman.

We also explored The Art Institute of Chicago, which has two functions: a top-notch art school and a museum. In the institute’s Kraft Education Center, for  young children, the long-term display “Faces, Places and Inner Spaces” combines paintings, sculpture and hands-on activities to help children develop their  own stories.