Vicinity 2026: What’s Going On? gathers photography from across Chicagoland into a single exhibition shaped by Marvin Gaye’s question and his plea for empathy. On view from July 2 to July 26, 2026, the show treats photography as witness, drawing attention to portraiture, lived environments and the social pressures that shape daily life across the region.
Juror Jan Tichy, a professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and an artist known for work that bridges video, sculpture, architecture and photography, frames the exhibition around presence rather than certainty. His statement points to recurring concerns in the selected work: identity, labor, race, migration, ecology, intimacy, violence, memory and belonging. The photographs do not settle those questions. Instead, they hold them in tension, showing vulnerability beside resilience and isolation beside collective life.
The exhibition includes work by Robin Bailey, Ronit Bazelel,
Spiro Bolos, Drew Endicott, Nick Faitage, Shari Fellows, Zhenye Feng, Marcus Giolas, Jaeden Hannus, Yilin Jin, Hillary Johnson, Lauren Johnston, Jude Kharchou, Kurt Kramer, Wendy Love, Stephen Marc, Scott Mcintosh, David Obermeyer, Phillip Parker-Turner, Carolyn Potts, Berkley Reddick, Brent Showalter, Jack Siegel, Elizabeth Sisson-Freeman, Stafford Smith, Frank Styburski, Joyce Symoniak, Jayla Trenyce, Beatrice Turner and Becki Utigard. Across that range, portraiture remains central, but the images also move into streets, transit systems, domestic interiors, industrial spaces and improvised memorials.
Tichy’s own practice has often involved public-facing projects that give younger people room to share their experiences, and that interest in social space runs through the exhibition’s selection. The result is a portrait not only of individuals, but of a region marked by segregation, protest, reinvention and survival. Some works lean toward abstraction or alternative process, yet they remain anchored in the body and in place.
Borrowing its title from Marvin Gaye’s
What’s Going On, the exhibition avoids easy answers. It asks for sustained looking at a time when public conversation often moves too quickly to do the subject justice.
Image:
Between Class © David Obermeyer