ARTful Evening: What the Lady Bears Were Doing: Women, Music and the 1950s

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Thursday March 23

6:00 PM  –  7:00 PM

Visual artists were not the only women breaking new ground in the 1950s. Women vocalists, songwriters and musicians also cast a vast and relatively forgotten musical canvas of cultural production. Drawing from interviews or autobiographies of Esther Phillips, Big Mama Thornton, Etta James, Mabel Liston, Kay Starr, and Della Reese, this talk will explore the terrains of race, gender and industry. The Lady Bears, a term highlighted in Little Esther’s Double Crossing Blues and deepened by Big Mama Thornton, often emerged as teenagers and established themselves at the broad intersection of religious, Jazz, Blues, Folk, Country, Soul and extractive Popular music

 

Michelle S. Johnson PhD, aka Dj Disobedience, co-founder of the Institute of Public Scholarship, founder of Playgrown , co-founder of Fire Historical and Cultural Arts Collaborative and pre-pandemic host of  WIDR’s Slip Back Soul, will share her curatorial  process and perspective for the Art, Music, and Feminism in the 1950s exhibition catalog.  Joining her in conversation will be Meagan McNeal, singer/songwriter and recording artist from Chicago, Illinois. Locally loved, McNeal renders Soul, Jazz, and R&B and has received national and international acclaim on stages as wide as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and NBC’s “The Voice” in 2017. Together they will use the power of storytelling and classic vinyl to shine a spotlight on these six women musicians.

Members: To receive your discount, please sign in to your member account in the upper right-hand corner. Once you have signed in, select the Member ticket option and your discount will appear on the final check out screen.

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