Exhibition

  • The Contract Buyers League Project
    John Wolf
    Curator
    Homan Square Community Center, Chicago
    Jul 16, 2015 to Jul 18, 2015
  • GRANTEE
    Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago
    GRANT YEAR
    2013

Contract Buyers League evictions, 1970, Chicago. Courtesy of California Newsreel.

The Contract Buyers League Project is an exhibition, blog, and public discourse that employs the architecture and built environment of the Chicago neighborhood North Lawndale to tell the story of the Contract Buyers League (CBL). The CBL was a grassroots movement in 1960s North Lawndale that fought against an exploitative housing system, and ultimately led to housing policy changes on a national level. The exhibition explores the mechanisms for exploitation, the personal narrative of those involved, and the activism and impact of the CBL on North Lawndale. It fosters further discussion of a more holistic view of place and how people, psychology, policy, economics, race, and history shape place. North Lawndale's history has many chapters, including industrial productivity, political activity, and racial transitions, and the CBL story is a critical moment in that continuum.

John Wolf serves as curator of the project. Formerly an Americorps VISTA Summer Associate at Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, Wolf researched and documented the history of the Contract Buyers League and maintains the Contract Buyers League Blog. He is currently employed as an architect at Muller & Muller, Ltd. in Chicago.

A nonprofit organization established in 1975, Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago’s mission is to create opportunities for people to live in affordable homes, improve their lives, and strengthen their neighborhoods.