A look back at midcentury on the occasion of the publication of Modern in the Middle: Chicago Houses 1929–1975 and Jay Doblin’s 100th birthday. From buildings to materials and products to people, panelists will discuss how principles of democratization and sustainability have become increasingly important today. Discover how the built and lived domestic environment—where we spend so much of our COVID time—has become what we recognize, and Chicago’s important role in defining our surroundings. Experts reveal the overlaps in ideas and approaches among creatives who called Chicago home over the past 100 years. Presented by the Design Museum of Chicago, IIT College of Architecture, and IIT Institute of Design (ID).
Author-signed copies of the book are available through the Illinois Institute of Technology bookstore and can be purchased three different ways:
Through the IIT website (Books are $50 and IIT offers free shipping.)
In person at the Campus Bookstore. (3201 S State in the McCormick Tribune Building). The store is currently open M-TH 9 to 6, Friday 10-3. Before visiting, we recommend confirming hours by calling (312) 567-3120 as COVID-19 restrictions continue to evolve.
Reach out directly to Eric Medalis at 312-567-3120 or emedalis@iit.edu.
About the panelists:
• Aamena Ansari (MDes 2021), ID student and moderator
• Michelangelo Sabatino, PhD is co-author of Modern in the Middle (The Monacelli Press, September 2020) and Professor and Director of the PhD program at the IIT College of Architecture and John Vinci Distinguished Research Fellow. An educator, academic administrator, curator, and award-winning scholar, Sabatino has shaped discourse and practice in the Americas and beyond.
• Martin Thaler is co-author of 101 Things I Learned in Product Design School (Crown, October 2020) and Studio Professor at ID, where he teaches product design and environmental design. Keenly interested in the fundamentals of design, Thaler contributed to ID’s collaborative research project with Fortune magazine, “100 Great Designs of Modern Times.”
• Marcia Weese is an award-winning interior designer and artist. Whether space planning, designing rugs and furniture, or making art, Weese creates dynamic and restorative environments. Exposure to these intersecting worlds came early. She grew up in Chicago surrounded by the work of her father, modernist architect Harry Weese, her mother, interior designer Kitty Baldwin Weese and their cadre of friends including Alvar Aalto, Eero Saarinen and Charles and Ray Eames.
• Bud Rodecker, founder and design director at SPAN, designed Modern in the Middle. Rodecker was a designer and later a partner at Thirst from 2005 to 2019. His work with Thirst has been displayed in the Venice Architectural Biennale, the Chicago Cultural Center, and Typeforce, published in various publications including Graphis, Concept Magazine Indonesia, IdN Magazine, and Slanted, archived in The Chicago Design Archive, and recognized by the STA 100, Design Observer 50 Books 50 Covers, and Graphis. Outside the studio, Rodecker explores the process of creativity through self-initiated experiments and teaching design at DePaul University.
About the Design Museum of Chicago
The Design Museum of Chicago inspires, educates, and innovates through design. We define design broadly, from architecture to street art, from choreography to urban planning. Design is more than a powerful source of inspiration. It is an integral tool that can help to connect communities and create equity. Through free, short-term exhibitions, engaging public programming, and robust partnerships with other arts, academic, and non-profit organizations, the Design Museum contextualizes and humanizes design's influence in everyday life.
The Design Museum of Chicago is partially supported by grants from the Illinois Arts Council Agency; City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events; Truettner Foundation; Terra Foundation for American Art; MacArthur Funds for Culture, Equity, and the Arts at the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and Illinois Humanities.
About IIT College of Architecture
The College of Architecture at Illinois Institute of Technology builds on a legacy of disciplined experimentation in materials and technologies to educate and inspire the next generation of architects and landscape architects. From its landmark campus and home at S. R. Crown Hall, IIT Architecture champions an interdisciplinary approach to education and research that is simultaneously local and global in its impact. IIT Architecture students are educated to address complex, contemporary challenges of designing and constructing across all scales. Both faculty and students enjoy a longstanding relationship with professional practice in Chicago, a city with a vibrant history of innovation in architecture, design, landscape architecture, and urbanism.
About IIT Institute of Design
IIT Institute of Design (ID) builds responsible, cooperative, intelligent futures. Founded by László Moholy-Nagy as The New Bauhaus in 1937, ID is known for pioneering human-centered design and systems design. Today ID is home to the only US design school devoted completely to graduate students. But ID is more than a graduate school. ID is an international community of learners and practitioners who are addressing the biggest issues of our time by eliciting a power unique to humans: creativity. Learn more about ID at id.iit.edu.