Join us for a talk by Chicago-based artist Vida Sačić on her work as a visual artist, educator, and the ways she grounds her work in lived experience.

Hear about her installation, Self-Evident: A Letterpress Exploration of the Declaration of Independence, currently on view at the Museum, which features immigrant responses to language drawn from the Declaration of Independence. She will discuss the project’s conceptual framework and material processes, exploring how letterpress printing, historical typography, and contemporary voices intersect in the work. The talk will also reflect on themes of immigration, authorship, collective narrative, and print as both a historical and living medium.

Prior to her talk, be sure to view Self-Evident in our main lobby. This work is the first of four installations in 2026 celebrating US at 250: Civic Action in Chicago featuring works by Chicago artists that respond to four founding documents of the United States: the Declaration of Independence, US Constitution, Northwest Ordinance, and the Thirteenth Amendment.

Free and open to the public. RSVP requested.

A copy of the Declaration of Independence, browned with age and originally folded. Declaration of Independence, 1776. CHM, ICHi-059818
Vida Sacic_Wavelength "Valna Duljina" ("Wavelength"), installed at Gallery Flora in Dubrovnik, Croatia, July 2024. Vida Sačić.
Vida Sacic_Body_Home_Land "Home / Body / Land," April 2022; installed at the Newberry Library, Chicago, 2025. Vida Sačić.
_DSC7026 (1) "Self-Evident: A Letterpress Exploration of the Declaration of Independence," January 2026; installed at the Chicago History Museum, 2026. Vida Sačić.

About the Artist

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Vida Sačić

Vida Sačić is a Chicago-based artist. Born and raised in Croatia, she moved to the United States as a student and eventually earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from Indiana University Bloomington. Upon moving to Chicago, she was awarded a residency at The Center for Book and Paper Arts at Columbia College, where she focused on working with print media, which continues to be her primary medium.

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