Media
Contact: Micki Leventhal, 312-344-7383; mleventhal@colum.edu
Artist
Contact: Gina J. Grillo 773-989-7160; ggrillo@colum.edu
NOTE: Gina J. Grillo is available for interviews. BETWEEN
CULTURES CAPTURES THE ESSENCE OF THE IMMIGRANT LEGACY
Gina
Grillo Explores the World of Children of Immigrants in a
Photodocumentary
Project from the Heart
Chicago,
January 2004 "I grew up with a longing for my Italian heritage,
to know my grandparents who had come to America long before I was born
.Their
immigrant stories were told to me the way one receives a prayer, and
part of my history was made in their repeating." So begins the
artists introductory essay by Gina J. Grillo in Between Cultures:
Children of Immigrants in America (March 2004, $29.95), the second book
of photography in a series published by The Center for American Places
in collaboration with Columbia College Chicago.
Grillos
personal commitment to exploring immigrant life in the United States
has turned into a creative odyssey. Since 1996 the photographer has
documented the faces and captured the souls of the young people whose
lives straddle two cultures. In her early twenties, employed at the
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, Grillos personal interest
in her immigrant heritage broadened to encompass larger issues of immigration
and acculturation. Later returning to graduate school to pursue an MFA
in photography, she was influenced by the work of Jacob Riis, Lewis
Hine and Augustus Sherman and her course was set.
She
began by haunting the lines outside Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS), later negotiating entry to citizenship swearing in ceremonies,
exploring immigrant neighborhoods and ultimately being invited by the
INS to photograph new immigrant families arriving at OHare. This
opportunity led Grillo to develop relationships with individuals, enriching
not only her work, but also her understanding of her own heritage. The
images in Between Cultures capture families experiences arriving
in Chicago as new Americans and chronicle their integration into urban
life in new neighborhoods, with family, at cultural celebrations,
citizenship ceremonies and many other everyday scenes. "When I
started Between Cultures, I didnt realize the gift of stepping
back to look at my own life and to examine the meaning of the immigrant
journey. My photographic journey seems as unquestionable to me as my
grandparents coming to America."
BETWEEN
CULTURES/ADD ONE
"[In]
Gina J. Grillos telling photographs, one discovers faces filled
with joy and radiant expectation, others show stoic calmness, still
others reveal questioning wariness and, it seems at times, sadness,"
writes historian Leo Schelbert in the books conclusion. "Great
longing for what they had to leave behind coupled with unease about
their new surroundings, with their different tongue, lifestyle, and
occasional disdain and hostility, seem to fill their souls. Grillos
masterful look at children of immigrants in contemporary America provides
a unique perspective on the newcomers enduring challenges."
A
major exhibition of Between Cultures: Children of Immigrants in America
runs through May 16, 2004 at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum, Statue
of Liberty National Monument, National Park Service. Between Cultures:
Children of Immigrants in America will be in bookstores in April and
is distributed by University of Chicago Press ($29.95 hardcover).
Gina
Grillo has taught photography at Columbia College Chicago since 1997.
Her work documenting children of immigrants to America has been on exhibition
at the Museum of Contemporary Photography, The Field Museum, The Childrens
Immigration Museum, the Glass Curtain Gallery, Chicagos OHare
International Airport and was recently selected for "The Spirit
of Family," a book and exhibition project produced by Al and Tipper
Gore. Her photographs have appeared in The Chicago Tribune, Exito, Interiors,
New World Publications, Migration World and Family Support Magazine.
She has done documentary projects for the Chicago Department of Cultural
Affairs, the Family Resource Coalition and the Heartland Alliance for
Human Needs and Human Rights.
Future
editions in the photography series co-published by The Center for American
Places and Columbia College Chicago include Youre Not From Around
Here by Michael Smith (April 2004); Place, Art, and Self by Yi-F Tuan
(April 2004) and The Dan Ryan Expressway by Jay Wolke (October 2004),
among many others.