Thursday, October 16, 2025

business card, c. early 2010s

FROM THE ARCHIVE / #TBT: Early Faheem business card, c. 2010s. 

Faheem was very confused when I told him that I wanted to share one of his old business cards online; when I'd first came across one and asked him about it, he confirmed what I thought was intriguing about it at first glance - there is absolutely no discerning information a business card would typically contain here. In conversation, he talked about how he'd only had his UIC administrative cards at the time and that he needed new ones, thinking it might be pretty funny if this was the card he handed out (that scene in American Psycho was also referenced in our conversation). 

A visit to Staples and voilĂ . Professional punk-rock, true Faheem-style. 


business card, front

business card, back

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

PASSIONS, DREAMS and OBSESSIONS, 2007

FROM THE ARCHIVE / #TBT: PASSIONS, DREAMS, and OBSESSIONS: Artists at Work in Their Studios, an exhibition in Berkeley, CA and documentary project by Janet Sheard, 2007

handbill, front


handbill, back


I came across PASSIONS, DREAMS and OBSESSIONS as this handbill and DVD containing a rare video, digitized and included here below. A unique glimpse into Faheem's early practice, this project by photographer Janet Sheard is also one which exists in obscurity; besides a mention of Artists at Work on her own website and under her biography on CAAP's site, Janet Sheard and this project, one which also included Richard Hunt (pioneering metal sculptor and early Faheem mentor), Va Lizzo (one of the founding members of the Chicago Artists' Coalition), Allen Stringfellow, and a number of other artists with personal histories and legacies no doubt prolific in their own right, appear to remain today with little evidence of its' existence, or at least its' existence online. Of course, this project and these people live on in memory, word of mouth, in community, or continue to walk among us and shape those around them in the present. It may now also exist here, in the archive, and for you to enjoy in the form of a blog post. 

Thursday, October 2, 2025

The Demise of the South Side Community Art Center (2009): Vacant Box (2007)

FROM THE ARCHIVE / #TBT: As part of Faheem Majeed's 2009 graduate thesis The Demise of the South Side Community Art Center, 13" x 13" x 13" wooden boxes constructed from shipping crates were released into the immediate environment of the South Side Community Art Center and documented as they traveled through the neighborhood. Over the course of a few months, these boxes eventually disappeared. They exist here, now, as these photographs. 


1. Vacant lot behind the SSCAC

2. Unpackaged Shona Sculpture

3. Crates housing Shona Sculpture

4. Vacant Box and milk crate seating


Provided here is Faheem's writing on Vacant Box, pulled from his original thesis text:

“A portion of my work deals with the impact of the SSCAC on its surrounding/immediate community and the community’s impact in the SSCAC. Located in Bronzeville, the SSCAC sits on a block in which boundaries have been created by differences in class, religion, financial and social status. The “Vacant Box” work is concerned with challenging these boundaries and creating dialogue between residents of this block. Located across the alley behind the SSCAC is a vacant lot (image 1) that has become a meeting space for local residents. The vacant lot is owned by Apostolic Faith Church and is used as a parking lot for its parishioners on Sundays. Monday through Saturday it has been adopted as a neighborhood gathering space. To the west of the vacant lot across the alley sits the South Side Community Art Center, to north is the studio of well known artist Kerry James Marshall, to south is a small thrift store, and on the corner is Rothschild liquor store. The vacant lots also share an alley with a number of new and rehabbed condo developments. The groups of people who meet in the space are predominately African-American males, ranging from 50 to 70 years in age. Usually the meetings are accompanied by consumption of alcohol and chemical substances. The presence of the Rothschild Liquors on the blocks South East Corner and the drug dealers North West corner, make the vacant lot the ideal meeting location for the inebriated. In “Vacant Box”, I fabricated 13” x 13” x 13” cubes out of wood planks from shipping crates used to package and send Shona Sculpture from Ghana to the States (images 2 & 3). The history of these materials that were used by West African laborers to package art work that was locally created and shipped to the states for consumers intrigued me. The crates were riddled with imperfections and functional solutions; bent reused rusty nails, poorly cut irregular planks, shredded local newspapers, and shipping information written in red and black marker. I found these crates to be far more interesting than the sculptures that were shipped because the imperfections found on the boxes imply a far more interesting history than the mass produced, generic shona sculptures that they contained. Each wooden box was similar in size to the milk crates that are used as stools for sitting (image 4). My strategy was to insert the boxes into the vacant lot over the course of two months by exchanging them for the milk crates. In my delivering of the boxes, I would create opportunities for dialogue between myself and the men and women who frequented the vacant lot. Through these conversations, I worked to challenge the social boundaries of the block and the wariness or concern that arise from interaction. Through my discussions while sitting on the boxes, I found that many of the people within the lot had been coming there for decades. We spoke about the gentrification and the change of terrain on the block. I was given a history lesson in what residents and businesses were around in previous decades. We also spoke of various subjects including local, national, global politics. I was chastised for not being able to keep up in the conversation and was told I needed to be more knowledgeable on international issues. I also learned more about how my offering needed to be more customized to its surrounding. I realized that in my making of the boxes, I had become engaged in the materials, but not directly with the end users. I had accidentally overlooked certain necessities, like handles, that would allow the users to easily move the boxes as needed. After the initial two month period, the boxes slowly began to move off of the vacant lot. I have surmised that some were destroyed in fits of anger and some might have been removed for personal use. Ultimately, the boxes disappeared.”  

-- The Demise of the South Side Community Art Center (2009), Faheem Majeed 


Woman carrying milk crates.

Spot the Vacant Box.

Rothschild Liquors, interior

Man sitting on Vacant Box crate, Rothschild Liquor exterior.

Vacant Box remnants.

Vacant Box remnant.