Tours & Programming
See the available programming for Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt.
Curator-led Tours
Dates:
- November 12, 2025, at 12:00 p.m.
*This tour is included in the price of the exhibition ticket.
Film Screening:
"Light of Truth: Richard Hunt's Monument to Ida B. Wells"
Description:
- This feature documentary weaves together sculptor Richard Hunt’s process and life story, with that of civil rights crusader, suffragist, and antilynching activist, Ida B. Wells. Hunt creates the Light of Truth monument for the Bronzeville community at the former site of the Ida B. Wells Homes. Wells’ history and the sculptor’s history intersect as they confront the injustices of racism with their work.
Dates:
- November 13, 2025, at 6:00 p.m.
Location:
- School of Communications Screening Room 222 (51 E Pearson St, Chicago, IL 60611)
Admission:
- Panel included with admission. RSVP to luma@luc.edu.
- Tickets sold on .
- Free for LUC Students, Faculty, and Staff.
External Tours
with
Dates:
- Wednesdays–Sundays at 1:30 pm, starting September 3, 2025
Location:
- Visit
Admission:
- $55; includes admission to the Loyola Museum of Art (LUMA) exhibit, Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt
About the Curator
Ross Stanton Jordan is a curator interested in the confluence of politics, history, and visual culture. He is the curator at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, Chicago’s dynamic monument to democracy. At the museum and independently, Ross has produced dozens of exhibitions and one hundred public programs that connect the social justice issues of the past to the present-day demands for social equity via collaborations with artists, scholars, and community-based organizations. Ross has held curatorial fellowships at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, Independent Curators International, and the American Association of Museums. In 2022, Newcity Magazine named Ross one of the top 50 Chicago arts administrators working to make a more equitable and sustainable arts world. In 2024, the Chicago Tribune named Ross, along with his colleagues at Hull-House, Chicagoans of the Year in Museums.
He holds a studio arts degree from Connecticut College and dual master's degrees in art history and arts administration and policy from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
See the available programming for Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt.
Curator-led Tours
Dates:
- November 12, 2025, at 12:00 p.m.
*This tour is included in the price of the exhibition ticket.
Film Screening:
"Light of Truth: Richard Hunt's Monument to Ida B. Wells"
Description:
- This feature documentary weaves together sculptor Richard Hunt’s process and life story, with that of civil rights crusader, suffragist, and antilynching activist, Ida B. Wells. Hunt creates the Light of Truth monument for the Bronzeville community at the former site of the Ida B. Wells Homes. Wells’ history and the sculptor’s history intersect as they confront the injustices of racism with their work.
Dates:
- November 13, 2025, at 6:00 p.m.
Location:
- School of Communications Screening Room 222 (51 E Pearson St, Chicago, IL 60611)
Admission:
- Panel included with admission. RSVP to luma@luc.edu.
- Tickets sold on .
- Free for LUC Students, Faculty, and Staff.
External Tours
with
Dates:
- Wednesdays–Sundays at 1:30 pm, starting September 3, 2025
Location:
- Visit
Admission:
- $55; includes admission to the Loyola Museum of Art (LUMA) exhibit, Freedom in Form: Richard Hunt
About the Curator
Ross Stanton Jordan is a curator interested in the confluence of politics, history, and visual culture. He is the curator at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, Chicago’s dynamic monument to democracy. At the museum and independently, Ross has produced dozens of exhibitions and one hundred public programs that connect the social justice issues of the past to the present-day demands for social equity via collaborations with artists, scholars, and community-based organizations. Ross has held curatorial fellowships at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, Independent Curators International, and the American Association of Museums. In 2022, Newcity Magazine named Ross one of the top 50 Chicago arts administrators working to make a more equitable and sustainable arts world. In 2024, the Chicago Tribune named Ross, along with his colleagues at Hull-House, Chicagoans of the Year in Museums.
He holds a studio arts degree from Connecticut College and dual master's degrees in art history and arts administration and policy from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago.