Chicago’s Creative Community Awaits the Opening of the Obama Center | N'Digo Studio Podcast Por  arte de portada

Chicago’s Creative Community Awaits the Opening of the Obama Center | N'Digo Studio

Chicago’s Creative Community Awaits the Opening of the Obama Center | N'Digo Studio

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Join host Hermene Hartman on N'Digo Studio for an inspiring conversation about how Chicago's historic Woodlawn neighborhood is experiencing a cultural and economic transformation. This episode explores the powerful intersection of art, entrepreneurship, and community development as the Obama Presidential Center prepares to open its doors in spring 2026.


Meet Quandra Speights, CEO/co-owner of the Urban Market Exchange and human resources professional turned community developer, who shares her vision for bringing minority-owned businesses back to the South Side. After experiencing corporate layoffs and completing entrepreneurial training at Sunshine Enterprises, Quandra purchased a building in Woodlawn that will house private studio spaces, a community café with transparent walls showcasing artists at work, retail pop-up stores, and specialty rooms equipped with 3D printers, laser cutters, sewing machines, and podcasting equipment.


Fine artist Dana Todd Pope discusses her journey creating paintings that celebrate Black childhood joy on Chicago's South Side. Growing up in Woodlawn with the Museum of Science and Industry nearby, Dana experienced a beautiful childhood that contrasted sharply with negative media portrayals. Her children's series emerged from a desire to paint the joy she knew rather than tragedy. Through Sunshine Enterprises, Dana found mentorship and resources that helped her exhibit at Chicago Public Schools, Gallery Guichard, and Navy Pier.

Yohance Lacour brings an extraordinary story of transformation. A Pulitzer Prize and Peabody Award winner for his investigative journalism podcast "You Didn't See Nothing" with the Invisible Institute, Yohance examined the 1997 beating of thirteen-year-old Lenard Clark in Bridgeport. While incarcerated, he taught himself leatherworking, learning from fellow inmates. Today, he creates bespoke leather shoes, purses, and bags.


The Urban Market Exchange represents a strategic response to community needs revealed during the pandemic. When Illinois sought 3,000 protective masks for minority communities, Quandra realized local makers lacked equipment and space to scale production. Opening March 2026, concurrent with the Obama Presidential Center, the space will serve artists in painting, jewelry making, cobbling, textile design, and 3D printing while prioritizing community members and youth through workshops and mentorship.

This conversation addresses neighborhood transformation realities. While the Obama Presidential Center brings investment and tourism to Woodlawn, the speakers acknowledge displacement concerns. Their response creates economic opportunities and cultural anchors serving existing residents first, building wealth and skills that help people stay in their neighborhoods.

The episode captures what Yohance calls a "second Chicago Black renaissance"—artists and makers working in community creating inspiration, camaraderie, and innovation while honoring Woodlawn's rich African-American history.


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