Courtyard Sculpture Garden

Terrain Biennial is coming and we are hosting two installations in our courtyard garden

Check out what has landed and stop by to see the sculptures at OPAL.

CURRENTLY

Margot McMahon installed her reclaimed wood bird sculptures, entitled Flock, June 25, 2025. Previously part of the Chicago Tree Project and installed in Columbus Park, the tree the sculptures were in blew down on a recent sever storm. They have been repaired and repainted and are now occupying the courtyard garden.



COMING UP

Terrain Biennial - Oct 1 - November 15, 2025

The historic Oak Park Art League hosts two artist installations, one of solid materials in sculptural form (Bethany Cordero's The Architecture of Becoming) and the other a video projection (Pia Cruzalegui's Romeria). Together these works overlap and occupy the garden courtyard offering a contemplative experience to explore and witness changes in the works as the season progresses and collaborates with the two works, weathering the physical and changing the meaning over time.

Architecture of Becoming
Medium: Ceramic, steel, fiber

This work questions what it means to hold oneself together through layered time—what softens, what endures, and how materials, like memory or identity, are reshaped by the forces that surround them. The salvaged textiles speak to histories of use and care, while the ceramics offer both structural presence and subtle fragility. Together, they form a vertical body that will shift aesthetically through weather, sun, rain, and decay. The textiles will fray and bleach; the clay may stain or crack; The paper will undoubtedly disintegrate, and the steel will rust—all changes welcomed as part of the sculpture’s living evolution.

Bethany Cordero is an interdisciplinary artist whose work centers on the transformative potential of materiality. Working primarily with clay, fiber, and metal, her practice explores how these materials undergo shifts and adaptations, reflecting the fluid nature of identity and the passage of time. Themes of resilience, impermanence, and renewal are central to her sculptures, which often incorporate remnants of steel and bronze alongside textiles. By assembling these fragments, Cordero creates forms that hold memory and embody the tension between fragility and strength. Her process-driven approach, whether through welding or weaving, highlights the material's capacity for change, while drawing connections between personal experience and collective narratives.


Romeria
This video projection will be positioned to display on the large open brick courtyard, originating from within the upstairs Residency space. The video will loop and timing will be set to correspond with the light during the duration of the biennial.

Pia Cruzalegui
As an independent curator, Pia Cruzalegui (b. Peru) places special focus on contemporary issues related to the environment, women, and LGBTQ+ community. She has organized exhibitions in Chicago, Miami, and abroad, and is the producer of Oral Fixation Art Podcast. Pia received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2016) and a BA in Video, Film, and Multimedia from Florida Atlantic

Pia was given a recognition award by the Ministry of Culture and Heritage of Quito, Ecuador, for her work Rojo Rosa Rosado, in 2019, and her video documentation project, “American Tales in the Making” (2020), funded by the National Endowment of the Arts Big Read, was commissioned by and archived at the Freeport Art Museum, in Illinois. ​​​​​​​ Pia Cruzalegui was born in Peru. She lives and works in Chicago where she works as an artist, curator and producer.


We are always open to enhancing our garden courtyard, especially with works of art!
This is where you will find out who is exhibiting sculpture in the courtyard garden and how to be considered for this opportunity.

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Artist Opportunities