Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Candy

For the first three days of our visit, in a bid to win our favor, Chicago gave us candy.

You think I'm joking?

Day one, at the Chicago Art Institute:

20130810_132700.jpg
Yes, that's a big pile of candy.

20130810_132643.jpg
You can't quite read that, I'm sure, but it explains about the candy, which is part of a work of art by Felix Gonzalez-Torres. His partner died of an AIDS-related illness, but before he got sick, he weighed 175 pounds--the same weight as the candy in the installation. Viewers are invited to take candy, an act that represents, among other things, a kind of wasting away.

20130810_132758.jpg
So I took a purple-wrapped candy.

Day Two, at the Museum of Science and Industry:

20130811_222456.jpg


I participated in an experiment being conducted by two university students. A stranger (male, middle-aged, British, also plucked from the museum's visitors) sat next to me, took a pen, and closed his eyes. I verbally guided him through a maze on paper. We were timed. We got candy at the end. I chose the candy I thought Dave might want.

Day Three, at a production called Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind by a theater group called The Neo-Futurists:

20130811_222526.jpg

One of the thirty plays the performed in sixty minutes was about Monsanto bid to take over the world. At the end, they handed out candy.


Despite the offered sweetness, I have to admit that Chicago is not my town. I agree with the critic who called it a city second to New York. Why? Because it's one of the most segregated big cities that I've ever been in. I mean, similar to Jackson, Mississippi, and Los Angeles, California, in Chicago, the white people are on one side of the counter, the brown/black people on the other side. Guess who's being served. Guess who's doing the serving. Whereas in New York City--in Manhattan anyway--you can step out the front door and get into a cab driven by an Ethiopian who just dropped off a Chinese woman for her balalaika lesson with a Ukrainian music teacher. That's my kind of city. I want to throw my travel cash around that city, not in the Jackson, Mississippi of the north.


2 comments:

Laura Farrow said...

hear, hear.. I'm with you on that. my man is a milky way kinda guy too. me? I need peanuts in my candy. xo

Rosa said...

Hola Laurita! I like my candy like I like my men: dark, chocolatey, and straight up! Unless it's a Twix or a Kit Kat. (Or any other kind of candy, really.)

;)