Websites
Exhibition microsites are designed to be enduring resources, sharing a wealth of information from reading lists, playlists, installation views, images, and videos, to exhibition gallery guides, reviews, and more.
Becoming The Breeze: Alex Chitty With Alexander Calder
by Jack Schneider and Raven Falquez Munsell
Chicago Works: Deborah Stratman
This digital brochure was published on the occasion of the exhibition Chicago Works: Deborah Stratman, organized by Jack Schneider, Curatorial Assistant. It is presented in the Dr. Paul and Dorie Sternberg Family Gallery and Ed and Jackie Rabin Gallery on the museum's third floor.
Fragments of a Crucifixion
This website was built on the occasion of the exhibition Fragments of a Crucifixion at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, May 25–November 3, 2019, organized by Marjorie Susman Curatorial Fellow Chanon Kenji Praepipatmongkol and presented in the McCormick Tribune Orientation Gallery on the museum's second floor. It brings together new scholarship exploring the themes of the exhibition.
Chicago Works: Jessica Campbell
This digital brochure was published on the occasion of the exhibition Chicago Works: Jessica Campbell, organized by Nina Wexelblatt, Curatorial Assistant, and presented from , to , in the Dr. Paul and Dorie Sternberg Family Gallery and the Ed and Jackie Rabin Gallery on the museum's third floor.
West by Midwest
I Was Raised on the Internet
This website presents online-only artworks from the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago's exhibition I Was Raised on the Internet as well as readings about networked technology and its effects on our everyday lives.
Kenneth Josephson
KENNETH JOSEPHSON IS TALL, and in his ninth decade still stands straight. He has worn his hair long and tied back for years even as it has thinned and turned white. His gaze is steady, and often holds a slant of inquiry, as if he's thinking deeply while he listens, and even more deeply while he speaks in his soft, deliberate voice with the flat tones of his midwestern heritage. He favors cowboy boots and hats; some of his self-portraits show his behatted shadow.[[1]](#ref-1)
Howardena Pindell: What Remains To Be Seen
This website, published on the occasion of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago's retrospective exhibition Howardena Pindell: What Remains To Be Seen, is a showcase of the work of a groundbreaking contemporary artist. Much as the exhibition aims to reanimate discussion about the craft and importance of Pindell's artwork, the site refocuses attention on her output as an author, activist, researcher, and museum professional. Built to serve as an enduring resource for those interested in Pindell's life and work, it presents many of Pindell's previously published writings alongside her influential research on racism in the arts.
Diana Thater: The Sympathetic Imagination
Diana Thater’s groundbreaking and influential works of art in film, video, and installation challenge the normative ways in which moving images are experienced. Her dynamic, immersive installations address key issues that span the realms of film, museum exhibitions, the natural sciences, and contemporary culture through the deployment of movement, scale, and architecture. This website features audio of the artist discussing in depth each of the 12 artworks in the exhibition as well as about the exhibition itself.
Kerry James Marshall: Mastry
This website was created for the Kerry James Marshall: Mastry exhibition to not only provide insight into the works contained within the exhibition but also to serve as a scholarly resource. It captures knowledge created in the research process for the publication and the exhibition that would otherwise be inaccessible.
Doris Salcedo
This website pairs video excerpts from interviews with the artist and her studio assistants with images of her major bodies of work to illustrate the process behind their creation. Also included are texts from the exhibition catalogue as well as the exhibition documentary.
Learning and Public Programs
Teacher Institute
Explore these teaching materials developed by members of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Teacher Institute to use as inspiration and application back in your classroom.
4 Stories
4 Stories was a special web feature designed for you to use on a mobile device at the museum. It presented information about art and artists as well as animations, maps, photographs, and videos of four objects—one on each of the museum’s four floors. Issued covered works on view between 2013–15.