
Gatecrashers. That’s the term newspapers nearly 100 years ago called the works of self-taught artists when they began “crashing the gates” of the elite art world. It was then when names like Horace Pippin, Anna Mary Robertson (Grandma Moses), and Martin Ramírez were just beginning to be considered consequential contributors to America’s creative excellence.
Since then, a broader understanding and appreciation has grown for the vision and perspective of artists who, for an assortment of reasons, remained or continue to be, untrained. Once the focus shifts from the origins or situational attributes of the artist and to the artistic quality and merit of their artwork, the wealth of talent obscured by bias becomes infinitely more visible.
Recently renovated into a bright jewel-box of an exhibition space, Intuit Art Museum (IAM) in West Town has been championing the output of self-taught and outsider artists for the past 35 years. A trio of new exhibitions that opened in early April gives testimony to the vitality and psychological energy emanating from this branch of the art world. The showings also offer a fresh re-introduction to the breadth of aesthetic beauty found in this creative offshoot. Art at its most natural and original.

Installation views courtesy Intuit Art Museum
Life is an Art: The Collection of Jan Petry showcases the discerning eye of one collector in this rich and highly varied genre. Petry, who enjoyed a long affiliation with IAM when she served as a museum board member for several years, donated more than 60 works from her collection to the museum before her death in 2024. Including paintings, sculptures, folk art and subject matter that was extremely dear to her personally, the Life is an Art exhibition reveals how deep and diverse self-taught art can be.
Greek born Drossos Skyllas’s painting, Tree of Life creates an otherworldly mood of surreal calm as it tells a timeless story regeneration. The skill in which Skyllas manipulates light, causing the painting to be bright and subdued at the same time, immediately attracts. Initially the contrast draws you to the painting where, once you’re before it, you fall even deeper into its compositional riddle.

Tree of Life by Drossos Skylla - M. Oldham, photography
Across the room, a Martin Ramírez watercolor with crayon and paper, (Untitled - Caballero 1950) captures with its subtle complexity. Ramirez often depicted men on horseback, warriors from some bygone south of the border past. In Caballero, a man sits on his mount pointing a highly stylized pistol. The intricate pattern of lines surrounding him on three sides makes him look as if he’s on a stage. Above him, a lavishly ornate canopy locks him in, creating a snapshot of some real or imagined experience through “a world of patterns and repetitions”.

Caballero by Martin Ramirez- M. Oldham, photography
Paintings that spring from biblical inspirations give artistic expression to deeply held belief. The end results can be stunning. Reverend Samuel David Phillips' Revelations gains power the longer you look at it. Through Phillips’ depiction of the seven headed beast in the Bible’s last chapter, he captures the unfathomable essence of apocalypse.

Revelations by Reverend Samuel David Phillips - M. Oldham, photography
Considered one of the most famous self-taught artists of the 20th century, Howard Finster tweaks a conventional portrait piece by turning it into a well-intentioned warning. In his painting Earth Being Watched, otherworldly but seemingly amiable spirits and a single angel peer over and around mountain peaks at three people meaningful, in their own way, to the artist. One of them is Finster’s grandson. The image and the message are a far departure from Revelations’ apprehensive prophesy and show how divergent faith-based art can be in the self-taught realm.
The exhibition dedicated to the Petry collection churns with work that surprises and stimulates; admirably encapsulating the diverse wonder that can be found in this stream of creativity.
In the adjoining room, elegant futuristic whimsy made of tin fill a warmly lit welcoming space. Drawing with Metal: Sculpture by Bill Brady takes self-taught art to a very unexpected place. One full of sleek timeless conjectures of the imagination constructed of light weight metal. Now in his 80’s and still prolific, Brady learned metalworking from his father and went from re-producing the past to designing and making his own creations. Many of them intended to be suspended in the air, his work evokes space, timelessness and perpetual serenity.
Impressions of the City, honoring the work of native Chicagoan Marvin Young, pulses with the energy of a metropolis. Young recreates the cityscape of his youth and the people who inhabit his world. Then he supercharges them with life. Chicago walk-ups are bulked up, are exaggerated and seem to come alive as they lean slightly; as if they’re about to take motion. Cars and taxicabs crossing bridges catch the urgency of rush hour traffic and perfectly mirror its frenetic intensity. Look closely and you’ll notice one of the cars in the string is faced in the wrong direction. In another drawing, a bus has far too many seats. These puzzling touches add a humanizing element to his drawings that gives them new dimension and singes them with curiosity.

Untitled from Impressions of the City, Marvin Young artist - M. Oldham photography
Young’s portraits of people are interesting, even provocative in their candor. One of them quite large, they’re like sketches intended as much to capture some universal inner resolve as they are to interpret a face. Perhaps it’s because his subjects have a certain knowing quality about them. A tolerant and dignified c’est la vie persona that makes them interesting and commanding of respect. Young rarely, perhaps never, provides titles to his works. Each one stands on its own, nameless. Via a video monitor on the exhibition floor, Young explains making this art is a hobby for him. Something that’s always given him inestimable pleasure simply by doing it. A feeling of that’s very similar to joy and gratification this artistic three-fer induces in its visitors.
Life is an Art: The Collection of Jan Petry
April 9, 2026 - March 21, 2027
Impressions of a City: Drawing by Marvin Young
April 9, 2026 – August 23, 2026
Drawing with Metal: Sculpture by Bill Brady
April 9, 2026 - October 4, 2026
Intuit Art Museum
756 N. Milwaukee Ave.
Chicago, IL 60642
For more information: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Highly Recommended
When Terry Guest left Atlanta and arrived in Chicago ten years or so ago, a bracing reality check caused the…
When Jason Robert Brown’s The Last Five Years premiered at Chicago’s Northlight Theatre in 2001, it flipped the traditional rom-com…
Some stories refuse to fade with time, and Brokeback Mountain is one of them. What began as a modest short…
There’s something magical about stories. Stories have the power to transcend time, reaching across the centuries to share their thoughts,…
Produced in partnership with JunkHeart, The Metal Shop Performance Lab is proud to announce the cast and creative team for Anatomy of a Suicide, August…
Black Ensemble Theater Founder and Executive Director Jackie Taylor proudly announces Black Ensemble's Juneteenth Prelude: Celebrating Freedom and Black Expression, as part of…
Welcome to Southie, a Boston neighborhood where a night on the town means a few rounds of bingo, this month’s…
Award-winning Redtwist Theatre presents Deserted, playing June 14 through August 2, a world premiere by Melanie Coffey and directed by Laura Sturm*, at Redtwist Theatre, 1044 W. Bryn…
Black Ensemble Theater continues its 50th Anniversary Season with the return of the celebrated musical revue Men of Soul, written and directed by Artistic…
Now fully activated, Collaboraction Theatre Company’s new House of Belonging in the Kimball Arts Center, 1757 N. Kimball Ave in…
Definition Theatre's Amplify New Play Program exists to elevate emerging voices, and Netta Walker's keerah certainly arrives with ambition. Loosely…
Metropolis Performing Arts Centre, located in the heart of downtown Arlington Heights, 111 W. Campbell St., is proud to announce the cast…
No Dogs in the Kitchen Theatre is thrilled to continue its third season with The Importance of Being Earnest, written by…
Following is critically acclaimed productions of Sweeney Todd and Into the Woods, Kokandy Productions once again celebrates the great Stephen…
Some theatrical experiences ask you to sit back and watch. "The Last Word" invites you to pull up a chair,…
Paramount Theatre’s smash hit, immersive musical Million Dollar Quartet wrapped its spring run at downtown Aurora’s Stolp Island Theatre this…
Paramount Theatre is proud to host the world’s most influential name in comedy, The Second City, back for for a…
Studebaker Theater (Erica Berger and Jacob Harvey), P3 Productions (Ben Holtzman, Sammy Lopez, and Fiona Howe Rudin) and Audible, in collaboration with Teatro Vista…
About Face Theatre is proud to announce its 32nd season featuring the Pulitzer Prize winning musical A Strange Loop and the Midwest Premiere of i…
Broadway In Chicago will bring its free annual SUMMER CONCERT to Millennium Park on Monday, August 10, 2026. Sponsored by…
The South Florida based YI Love Jewish and Chicago-based Arts Judaica proudly join forces to present a limited engagement of the Chicago…
JK Entertainment is proud to announce the final production of their inaugural season: HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH, the cult-classic created…
Award-winning Porchlight Music Theatre announces today that the recent stars of Porchlight in Concert’s production of Follies, Tony Award-nominee Felicia P. Fields and Broadway’s…
Hot off their record-breaking, award-winning runs of Jekyll & Hyde and Amélie, Kokandy Productions is pleased to launch its 2026 Season with the revolutionary "love-rock"…
Babes With Blades Theatre Company’s (BWBTC) 2026 season opens with a world premiere, yo ho., by playwright SMJ, directed by JD Caudill and fight choreography by Carly…
PrideArts announced today that Craig Ramsay and Catherine Wreford will bring the magic of Broadway to the Hoover-Leppen Theatre at…
Music Theater Works is proud to announce the cast and creative team for the second production of its 2026 season, West Side…
David Koechner stormed into The Den Theatre’s Mainstage this weekend with the kind of unruly, big‑hearted presence that instantly reminded…
Chicago continues to produce some of the most exciting work in the country this Summer, offering a wide variety of plays…
Spaceman, presented by [producingbody], touches down at The Edge Off-Broadway with a quiet, unnerving force, pulling audiences into the fragile…
Guest’s New Andy Warhol Play A Study in Primo Theater
Intimate and Unflinching: The Last Five Years at Oil Lamp Theater
Does your theatre company want to connect with Buzz Center Stage or would you like to reach out and say "hello"? Message us through facebook or shoot us an email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
*This disclaimer informs readers that the views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author, and not necessarily to Buzz Center Stage. Buzz Center Stage is a non-profit, volunteer-based platform that enables, and encourages, staff members to post their own honest thoughts on a particular production.