Neighborhood social centers will do much to reveal one neighbor to another.... There is a vast amount of experience and knowledge floating about and it is the drawing out of this that is brought about in these gatherings, brought for mutual benefit.
— Jane Addams, 1902

Jane Addams Hull-House Museum and Chicago Public Libraries partnered for “City of Stories”, a CPL Summer Learning Initiative. This partnership allowed CPL and JAHHM to share information, activities, and programs with library staff across eighty branches and tens-of-thousands of library visitors throughout Chicago’s neighborhoods.

JAHHM enhanced CPL's free drop-in programs with activities grounded in the social reform history and storytelling activities of Hull-House; this included bookbinding, zine making, art making, improvisation, and theater arts. The activities reveal collective and neighborhood stories and help everyone—children, teens, and adults—share their voices. Elements of “City of Stories” included professional development workshops led by Chicago-based artists (Regin Igloria, Aram Han Sifuentes, and improviser Mo Phillips-Spotts), programs led by librarians, JAHHM educational resources and materials, books recently awarded the Jane Addams Peace Association Book Award, and other books based on the theme “City of Stories.” Jane Addams herself believed everyone had a story to tell and public institutions could harness those voices for the common good.

UIC Press Release


Chicago Public Library events inspired by Hull-House Story-Making Workshops

Featured Activities

The following activities were featured throughout CPL locations over the course of the summer. These activities were designed by Chicago artists, activists, and educators, along with JAHHM educators, and were implemented by CPL staff for library patrons to participate in and enjoy. If you’d like to try these activities out at home, we’ve included PDFs of JAHHM activity guides that describe the activities and their importance to Hull-House history, as well as how relevant and important these activities still are when telling our own stories today.

  • Identity and Story-making Through Ceramics

    This activity allowed youth to express themselves and explore their identities by learning about the history of the Hull-House Kilns and how young people like them used pottery as a form of self expression nearly a century ago. Participants learned about the history of immigrants who worked in the kilns and how they became famous for embracing their culture through pottery. Participants were asked to reflect on their own identities and culture such as family history, traditions, and symbolism in order to reflect that through painting their pots like artists at the Hull-House kilns.

    • Hull-House Museum Activity Packet: Pots, Clay, Identity: Painting Pinch Pots. Expressing identity through clay - no kiln necessary! The Hull-House Kilns (1925-1935) provided a space for highly skilled Mexican immigrants to make ceramics and earn proceeds from the sale of their creations. This packet includes step-by-step instructions for making and decorating clay pots, along with prompting questions about identity and heritage. 

  • Story-making Through Community Binding

    This activity introduced participants to beginners’ bookbinding techniques that allowed for a variety of interpretations of the book form. Single-sheet folds and pamphlet stitching were taught as initial methods for recording narratives/stories, and participants came away with technical options to explore how stories can be shared through multiples, distribution, and sharing of work.

    • Hull-House Museum Activity Packet: Public Health Zines. How can art help us talk about problems in our communities? Hull-House Residents made countless strides toward public health reform in Chicago’s 19th Ward, from establishing the city’s first public baths to introducing the first child labor legislation in the state. Using this guide, create and illustrate a zine around a public health issue in your own community.

  • Theater Games, Community and Connection

    This activity will demonstrate improv, theater, and group play techniques, first developed from folk and children’s games at Hull-House. The games can be played in small groups and are particularly effective with children, but can be used with mixed age groups and adults.


Meet our Story-Maker Collaborators

 

Mo Phillips-Spotts

Mo Phillips-Spotts

Mo Phillips-Spotts (she/her/hers) is an actor/improviser from Atlanta, GA. She is a graduate of Williams College, the Second City Music program, and the 2021 Second City Bob Curry fellowship. Currently, she performs with ComedySportz Chicago, Baby Wants Candy, Playmakers Laboratory and Storytown improv. In her free time she likes to nap, try new baking recipes and work on her small business, Momo’s Book Club. Momo’s Book Club is a subscription book club for kids designed to make their library as diverse as the world. Every month books are sent out based on a theme to give parents and kids the same language and context to discuss the world.

Momo’s Book Club: Kids are playful, curious and keen to learn more about the world we live in. Sometimes those topics can be difficult to talk about with kids and that's where Momo's Book Club can help. Our carefully curated book tracks provide parents and kids with the same language to discuss the world. Learn more about Mo Phillips-Spotts’ book club.

 
 

Regin igloria

 

Aram han sifuentes

Regin Igloria 

Regin Igloria (he/him/his) is a multi-disciplinary artist and bookbinder from Chicago's Albany Park neighborhood. His studio community fosters an open approach to sharing work with new audiences and encourages collaboration and integration. Igloria is also the founder of North Branch Projects (NBP), an independent, artist-run project that offers community-based bookbinding and provides outlets for exploring the creative process in places where few resources exist for the arts. Through his art, he uses bookbinding to encourage dialogue between people in an inclusive setting, making it possible for ideas to have a positive impact on society.  
 
North Branch Projects (NBP) uses the book arts as a community organizing tool. NBP was founded 2010 and was originally located in the business district of the Albany Park neighborhood. The Lawrence Avenue storefront occupied 1500 square feet with exhibition and studio rental spaces located in the rear. With overhead costs preventing the continuation and progress of the project, the move to make North Branch Projects more mobile became a necessity. The storefront closed in November 2014 and now operates on a pop-up basis, with the Everything on Wheels project leading the charge. NBP participates in local street festivals throughout the year and continues to provide workshops and classes. 

 Watch a video for Regin’s previous collaboration with Jane Addams Hull-House Museum.

 

Aram Han Sifentues

The Protest Banner Lending Library is a space for people to gain skills to learn to make their own banners. It’s a communal sewing space where we support each other’s voices, and a place where people can check out handmade banners to use in protests...The words and these banners have a growing history. They are made by someone, used in a protest, returned to the library, and then taken by someone else to a different protest. The banners carry the histories of the hands that hold them and the places where they have travelled." —Aram Han Sifentues

Watch Aram talk about the project and see images of families making banners at Hull-House that then spread across the country. As part of the City of Stories program, a selection of these banners will be on display in an installment at the Harold Washington library throughout Summer 2022. Harold Washington Library’s YOUMedia program will be coordinating a banner lending library for the duration of the installation. Click the link under the banner for more information!

Aram Han Sifuentes (she/her/hers, they/them/theirs) is a fiber and social practice artist, writer, and educator who works to center immigrant and disenfranchised communities. Her work often revolves around skill sharing, specifically sewing techniques, to create multiethnic and intergenerational sewing circles, which become a place for empowerment, subversion, and protest. Han Sifuentes earned her B.A. in Art and Latin American Studies from the University of California, Berkeley, and her M.F.A. in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is an associate professor, adjunct at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. 

 
 

The Jane Addams Peace Association

The Jane Addams Peace Association perpetuates the spirit of activist and pacifist Jane Addams, her love for children and humanity, her commitment to freedom and democracy, and her devotion to the cause of world peace. They envision a future where people actively work to dismantle injustices and build a more peaceful, equitable world. Their mission is to deepen understanding of peace and justice for children and their adults through reflection, dialogue, and social action. This organization was founded in 1948 "to foster a better understanding between the people of the world toward the end that wars may be avoided and a more lasting peace enjoyed." They award exceptional works of children’s literature every year in order to inspire every generation in the spirit of Jane Addams. Head to their website to see the results of the 2022 Jane Addams Children’s Book Awards and learn more about JAPA.


In addition to workshops and events, CPL and Hull-House offered take-home activities:

  • Activity Guide

    Activity guides are still available at Hull-House and in many CPL locations! The activity guide is a booklet of activities that encourages youth to write about their own lives in order to learn about themselves and the world around them. It includes short biographies of important social reformers from Chicago’s history and activities involving drawing, writing, and dance! The activity guide also includes activities involving drawing, writing, and dancing.

  • Grab and Go Kits

    CPL locations offered grab and go kits based off of Hull-House programs. The most commonly offered kits were beginner bookbinding materials.