“Hasty Happenings” exposes the art in hurried moments

Institutional art typically requires a set of standards – a specific sort of effort or background to deem it notable. To some, these guidelines give the craft a level of principle, an “only-the-best-make-it” type of mentality.

But you don’t realize how refreshing it is to dispose of this standard until you walk into an exhibition and watch a video of someone roughly singing “I Dreamed a Dream” on Photo Booth whilst taking shots and doing poppers.

Hasty Happenings,” an exhibition of art outside of traditional merits of art presentation, showed at the Co-Prosperity Sphere in Bridgeport this past Thursday, April 19. The exhibit was conceived by Adrien Guadagnino, with the help of Alex Chitty, the head of Co-Prosperity Sphere’s artist-led programming council. For one night only, the exhibition featured art made quickly, with little thought about presentation.

The exhibit was open to the public and featured performance, visual and sensory art. Artists dropped off their pieces the night before, and there was a sign up slot day-of for performances.

“Each piece in the exhibition is a snapshot of the momentary mental and emotional state assumed at the time of creation” the event’s web page said, “tapping into the pleasure of completion and reverential observance of the tossed off.”

The hurried nature of the pieces was evident, adding an endearing quality without sacrificing impact– custom personal scents from someone who worked at a luxury perfume store, a salt lamp inside an animal cracker container, disconcerting pictures of an artist’s ex-boyfriends, and quickly choreographed ballets by an SAIC class. The pieces weren’t thoughtless, they were just working outside of convention.

Attendees of "Hasty Happenings" event seated around a stage watching musical acts.
Attendees of “Hasty Happenings” watching musical performances. Photo by: Lucy Grundhauser

For Issy Bottger, the performing arts aspect gave way to a charming and comical dance, where she removed articles of clothing with expressive choreography. The three-minute piece had the appearance of being improvisational but felt piercingly personal.

“It’s private performance that comes in my mind in the moment,” Botter said on the creation of the piece, “I’ve been really sick and really sad lately and the choreography felt like silly acts of violence.”

“Hasty Happenings” was the perfect medium, providing an outlet where typical standards for preparation were thrown out the window.

“This is the best place for art in the moment,” she said, “This piece couldn’t really be anywhere else.”

Two people in face paint performing an original ballet.
SAIC students performing an original ballet prepared in less than a day. Photo by: Lucy Grundhauser

The exhibition was honest and felt like a better representation of day-to-day and the way human narrative functions. It gently proposed the potential beauty in letting go of specific expectations, making room for art in the everyday.

Ratmansky’s “Whipped Cream” invents a mystifying and captivating dessert dream world

A young boy overindulges in whipped cream at a Viennese sweet shop where the desserts come alive.

The boy is hospitalized, and the pristine Princess Praline, as well as dancing bottles of alcohol, save him from a sinister drunk doctor.

The boy is subsequently given a golden crown in a sweet dreamland of dessert citizens.

It’s the classic coming-of-age tale.

The American Ballet Theatre performed the surreal “Whipped Cream,” choreographed by Alexei Ratmansky, at the Auditorium Theatre this past weekend. Scored by Richard Strauss, the show was a revitalization of a 1924 production in Vienna, pairing the original score with new choreography.

The ballet’s dream-like nonsense was a two-hour escape with its intricate set, fantastical costumes and nonsensical plot exploring childlike dreams.

Designed by pop-surrealist artist Mark Ryden, the costumes and set existed as bizarre facades, developing an aesthetic that was both enthralling and bewildering.


The big-headed priest stands watching the dessert kingdom. Photo by: Kent G Becker/flickr

The doctor, priest and baker had giant heads, making their bodies seem small and movements distorted. “Gumball Lady” was woman wearing a skirt of 159 gumballs that, according to the playbill, weighs 50 pounds. My personal favorite was a colossal puppet of a “Snow Yak” that was ridden by a massive puppet baby holding a flag.

The show featured riveting absurdities like military routines by dessert soldiers, multitudes of white-clad dancers emulating whipped cream as they slid down a giant slide, and nurses dancing forebodingly with giant syringes.

“Whipped Cream” is profoundly family-friendly, a spectacle for children and adults alike.

Though her four-year-old daughter had a fear of giant eyeballs, a problem considering several scenes featured a giant blinking eyeball projected above the stage, retired ballet professional Melissa Mallinson enjoyed experiencing the show with her young daughter.

“It was really original and kind of trippy,” she said, “It’s a new take on the classical ballet, a disconnect from the traditional.”

The escapism in “Whipped Cream” was captivating. It explored what it means to be a child and what it means to be outrageous, using frivolity with intent.  Art is often pointedly meaningful, and it was refreshing to seriously contemplate something that was fundamentally meaninglessness.

Auditorium Theatre at intermission with one of Mark Ryden’s surrealist designs. Photo by: Patsy Newitt

Though “Whipped Cream” is no longer showing, the Auditorium Theatre, a 7-minute walk from DePaul’s Loop campus, will show several ballets in the next few months. With the discount code GOLDRUSH and a student ID, students can get tickets for $15 instead of the typical $44.