- Radical Craft: Arts Education at Hull-House, 1889-1935
Radical Craft: Arts Education at Hull-House, 1889-1935, an exhibition, catalog, and workshop series, celebrates the work of immigrant artists and reformers at the country's most important social settlement
- Lost to time: Who made the crafts at Hull-House? | UIC today
When Ellen Gates Starr co-founded the Hull-House Settlement in Chicago with Jane Addams, she brought with her the principles of England’s Arts and Crafts movement, Olson said, which put art at the center of topics such as citizenship, public health and women’s suffrage
- Radical Craft: Arts Education at Hull-House, 1889-1935
As the first settlement house in the United States, Hull-House was more than just a place for people to learn — the institution quite literally crafted community and became an integral part of Chicago’s Near West Side neighborhood
- Learning Together: Exploring the Origins of Arts Education at Hull-House
Participants learned about the role of Hull-House in the history of arts education, took part in hands-on artmaking sessions, and visited local Chicago arts institutions
- Hull-House Museum and Jane Addams: Making the world a better place
Hull-House Museum showcases the works of Jane Addams, Ellen Gates Starr, and several other prominent philanthropists and activists Learn the stories behind these women and the house itself
- Revisiting Jane Addams at Hull House - Macmillan Teaching Community - 5097
My interest in Addams was renewed last week when I visited the Hull House Museum in Chicago Addams established Hull House in 1889 with fellow activist Ellen Gates Starr
- Hull-House of Possibilities – Jane Addams Papers Project
Much of the focus of the activities at Hull-House revolved around children, each one an effort to expose young people to a world beyond the tenements and dirty streets of urban Chicago, to organize activities to bring art and music and beauty to people in the settlement’s neighborhood
- Jane Addams: Hull-House - New Learning Online
Jane Addams (1860–1935) was a community educator, social worker, feminist and peace activist In 1889, she and her friend Ellen Starr leased a large house in Chicago, Hull House, where they would work with some of the poorest communities in the city
- Learning Together: Exploring the Origins of Arts Education at Hull . . .
Today, the Centre offers rich and varied programming of learning activities to connect with people of different ages and backgrounds
- Jane Addams (1860–1935) - House, Education, Hull, and Women . . .
Hull-House itself was an educational setting, furnished as a middle-class home, with fine art and fashionable furniture, because Addams believed that in a truly democratic society the poor needed to have access to a setting that enriched the lives of the upper classes
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