Lois Weisberg | |
---|---|
Born | Lois Porges May 6, 1925 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | January 13, 2016 Palmetto Bay, Florida, U.S. | (aged 90)
Occupation(s) | Activist, socialite |
Spouse(s) |
Leonard Solomon (divorced)Bernie Weisberg (died 1999) |
Children | 4 |
Lois Weisberg (May 6, 1925 – January 13, 2016)[1] was the first Commissioner of Cultural Affairs for the City of Chicago, from 1989 until January 2011.
She was profiled by writer Malcolm Gladwell in a 1999 New Yorker essay, "Six Degrees of Lois Weisberg"; Gladwell, called Weisberg a "connector" for her ability to connect people from differing communities, and included the essay about her in his book The Tipping Point. He asked, "She's a grandmother, she lives in a big house in Chicago, and you've never heard of her. Does she run the world?"[2]
Weisberg was appointed by Mayor Harold Washington to head the city's Office of Event Planning (in the Department of Cultural Affairs) in 1983. She helped establish the Gallery 37 program, which gathered Chicago youths to a vacant block in downtown Chicago to make art; she also created the Chicago Blues Festival, the Chicago Gospel Festival, multiple citywide neighborhood festivals, and the Chicago Holiday Sharing It Program. She launched Chicago's Cows on Parade exhibit, the first in the US. Before her appointment in city government, she helped found the Chicago Cultural Center and Friends of the Park. She was given many civic and arts awards, including the League of Women Voters Civic Contribution Award, Governing Magazine's Public Official of the Year Award, the Harold Washington History Maker Award, an honorary Doctorate from Chicago's Spertus Institute, and the Chicago Tribune "Chicagoan of the Year" award.