In Chicago area’s Oak Park, a portrait of suburban renewal, one artist at a time

Post card promoting Oak Park, Illinois' Arts Retreat Weekend in October
Just west of Chicago’s Austin neighborhood, a stretch of Harrison Street in Oak Park, Ill. is revitalizing once-sleepy (and empty) storefronts with a force retrograde to any Great Recession.
On Oct. 2-4, the Oak Park Arts District will hold its first Arts Retreat Weekend. The idea, as community events go, is to provide a “staycation” experience for locals whose funds have been tapped out by the recessionary drought. And to that end, the culinary, musical and artistic events typify anything that you’ll see in any of the Chicago area’s arts-rich areas.
If this blog concerned yet another weekend arts festival, we could stop the story right here. But the nine blocks of boutiques, art galleries, cafes and restaurants speak volumes about what a determined group of citizens, business owners and artists can do to cultivate hope, life and promise amidst economic turmoil and uncertainty.
For much of the Bush presidency, our nation suffered under the lie that art was something superfluous, a frill that schools could trash, so long as we taught computer skills or business acumen. And thanks to the ranting of right-wing talk show baboons, funding for the National Endowment for the Arts sank to record lows–putting the United States on par with banana republics in terms of government support for the arts. Compare our nation to France or Canada, where so much public investment in art has reaped huge dividends, both civic and economic.
But if it marked a bad time for art lovers, Oak Park citizens and entrepreneurs chose to take the bull by the horn. And so they have: decorating public benches, auctioning custom-painted rain barrels, beckoning other artists to join them on the strip. New restaurants such as Trattoria 225 and Briejo have added zest to a once-moribund dining scene. Intuit Dance has become a magnet for parents and kids.
And while the rest of suburban Chicago suffers from storefronts papered over in the wake of recent closings, signs of space renovation pepper Harrison Street from east to west. It might not look like a boomtown, but folks here have patiently planted their seeds and nurtured them. Now the fruits of recovery and renewal are coming to harvest.
I expect the Arts Retreat Weekend will give all of us in the Big City an excuse to get on the Eisenhower Expressway and check out what’s making Harrison Street special. In the meantime, these merchants continue to prove that a community that supports and nurtures the artists creates not just baubles and paintings, but a much more vibrant place to live, shop and play. More so than any strip mall, for certain.
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