Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Podcast

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Democrats Pour Millions into White Media, But Continue to Starve the Black Press

Making Montessori Early Childhood Education More Accessible for the Black Community

Making Montessori Early Childhood Education More Accessible for the Black Community

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
The Windy City Word
  • Home
  • News
    1. Local
    2. View All

    Youth curfew vote stalled in Chicago City Council’s public safety committee

    Organizers, CBA Coalition pushback on proposed luxury hotel near Obama Presidential Center

    New petition calls for state oversight and new leadership at Roseland Community Hospital

    UFC Gym to replace shuttered Esporta in Morgan Park

    Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

    Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

    Week 4 HBCU Football Recap: DeSean Jackson’s Delaware State Wins Big

    COMMENTARY: Health Care is a Civil Rights Issue

  • Opinion

    Capitalize on Slower Car Dealership Sales in 2025

    The High Cost Of Wealth Worship

    What Every Black Child Needs in the World

    Changing the Game: Westside Mom Shares Bally’s Job Experience with Son

    The Subtle Signs of Emotional Abuse: 10 Common Patterns

  • Business

    Illinois Department of Innovation & Technology supplier diversity office to host procurement webinar for vendors

    Crusader Publisher host Ukrainian Tech Businessmen eyeing Gary investment

    Sims applauds $220,000 in local Back to Business grants

    New Hire360 partnership to support diversity in local trades

    Taking your small business to the next level

  • Health

    Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

    Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

    COMMENTARY: Health Care is a Civil Rights Issue

    RFK Junior and Vaccines: Bade Mix or Bad Mix

    Mental Illness Linked to Higher Heart Disease Risk and Shorter Lives

  • Education

    After Plunge, Black Students Enroll in Harvard

    What Is Montessori Education?

    Nation’s Report Card Shows Drop in Reading, Math, and Science Scores

    The Lasting Impact of Bedtime Stories

    The Lasting Impact of Bedtime Stories

  • Sports

    Week 4 HBCU Football Recap: DeSean Jackson’s Delaware State Wins Big

    Turning the Tide: Unity, History, and the Future of College Football in Mississippi

    Week Three HBCU Football Recap: Grambling Cornerback Tyrell Raby Continues to Shine

    Week 1 HBCU Football Recap: Jackson State extends winning streak

    North Carolina Central impresses during win over Southern in MEAC-SWAC Challenge

  • Podcast
The Windy City Word
News

Skateboarding as social practice

staffBy staffUpdated:No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

An average spectator might observe a skateboarder as nothing but a person on wheels; they see an athlete—or a delinquent, maybe—pushing and coasting and jumping (“How does the board stick to the bottom of their feet?”), there one minute and gone the next.

But from the rider’s perspective, the world is transforming around them. Minute shifts in body weight affect balance, a slight change in toe placement means a different trick. It’s all about speed, it’s all about power, it’s a perfect storm of technique, confidence, and a little bit of magic.

That experience touches on the ethos of The Useless Tool (Skate Sessions), an upcoming free event at the University of Chicago’s Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry.

The Useless Tool is billed as “a day of skateboarding and conversation about skateboarding as social and embodied practice.” It was organized by Kyle Beachy, local skateboarder, associate professor at Roosevelt University, and author of The Most Fun Thing: Dispatches from a Skateboard Life (Grand Central, 2021); Tina Post, a performance theorist and assistant professor of theater and performance studies at the University of Chicago; and Alexis Sablone, artist, architect, and professional skateboarder.

The event is structured into two sessions, with food, skating, and community-building before, between, and after. The first session is loosely titled “skateboarding and the world,” featuring pro skateboarders Kristin Ebeling and Timothy Johnson; Natty Bwoy, a skateboard and bicycle repair shop on the south side of Chicago; and FroSkate, a local skate collective that centers BIPOC femme, trans, gender nonconforming, and nonbinary skaters.

“Our concerns in the morning session will be skateboarding’s emplacement, for lack of a better word: space, place, race and gender, community formation,” Post wrote in an email.

The Useless Tool (Skate Sessions)
Thu 6/2, 9:45 AM-7 PM, Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry, 929 E. 60th, graycenter.uchicago.edu, free, bring your own skateboard

The second session is “skateboarding and the moving body,” with performance company Every house has a door, collaborative artist practice Sonnenzimmer, and writer and technologist Maxwell Neely-Cohen. 

Post noted, “We’re trying to thread the needle of, on the one hand, enough structure to ensure no one feels like the day was just hanging out, and on the other, enough looseness to feel like a skate session—free form, improvisatory, spontaneous, and able to hold both success and failure. For the sake of some structure we’ve organized their parts into the morning and afternoon, it’s really the case that we’re hoping to all skate and think together across sessions.”

The typical skate session Post refers to is not uncommon. There’s a growing number of collectives and groups that meet up across Chicago to find community in skateboarding, especially women, queer people, and anyone else not seen as the “traditional” skateboarder. Alongside FroSkate, there’s OnWord Skate Collective here in Chicago, and beyond that, there’s SK8 Babes on the east coast, Skate Like a Girl on the west coast, Proper Gnar elsewhere in the midwest—the list goes on.

Still, an event like The Useless Tool feels unique, with a distinct focus on the body and physicality of skateboarding. Post described further what the angle is here, especially as she brings her perspective of theater and performance. 

“I believe there’s such a thing as embodied knowledge, and I love thinking about how we acquire this and what it informs about our lives, and what becomes available to us when our brains become more aware of the things our bodies know. For example, it is interesting to me that in order to land a trick, you have to be able to anticipate how fast your board is going and how fast your body is going and also where your weight will need to be in the future, down to a second. The anticipation of moving balance, the future sensing of your interior senses, seems metaphorically rich (in addition to the more obvious valuable things about skateboarding, like being banged up and stubborn and so forth).” 

“I also love thinking through style,” she continued. “How and why do bodies acquire style in movement? What’s adjustable and what’s not? What drives which things demand aesthetic adjustment and what values are encoded therein?”

By asking these questions, Post is helping to make skateboarding the center of the inquiry at the Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry, but it’s been a goal at the Center for some time.

With the support of director of programs and fellowships Zachary Cahill, assistant director of fellowships and operations Mike Schuh has been working to bring skateboarding programming to the Gray Center since 2017. Early on, Schuh connected with Beachy, who contributed skateboarding content to the Center’s journal Portable Gray, and participated in a livestreamed conversation event with Sablone in 2021. This whole team got together, with the addition of Post, to plan the upcoming June 2 event—and they hope to continue the conversation on skateboarding in the future.

When asked about what she expects from The Useless Tool, Post said, “As this event is coming together, I think it really will be in the best spirit of ‘arts and inquiry’—heady, experimental, and above all, fun.”

On the same question, Beachy added, “The more you push on skateboarding the more you realize that it’s magic. . . . I don’t think any of us really have any idea how this is going to go. And that too is skateboarding: personal catastrophe and outrageous success are all always equally possible. That’s exciting.”



Related

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleEx-Chicago Bears DT Akiem Hicks signs a 1-year deal with Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Next Article Schaumburg mother killed and two kids hurt parasailing in the Florida Keys
staff

Related Posts

Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

Week 4 HBCU Football Recap: DeSean Jackson’s Delaware State Wins Big

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxFXtgzTu4U
Advertisement
Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjfvYnUXHuI
ABOUT US

 

The Windy City Word is a weekly newspaper that projects a positive image of the community it serves. It reflects life on the Greater West Side as seen by the people who live and work here.

OUR PICKS

Celebrities we lost in 2024

Real Driver’s Car: Feel the Road, Forget the Specs #shorts

Healing in Hard Times: Coping with Fear, Racism & Uncertainty Part 2

MOST POPULAR

Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

Democrats Dig In: Healthcare at the Center of Looming Shutdown Fight

COMMENTARY: Health Care is a Civil Rights Issue

© 2025 The Windy City Word. Site Designed by No Regret Medai.
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.