
Color(ed) Theory: Harold's Chicken Shack
<p>For her series <em>Color(ed) Theory</em>, Amanda Williams repainted and photographed eight vacated and condemned houses in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago, drawing attention to the issue of underinvestment in African American communities around the city. The artist painted the buildings in a palette of colors found in products and services marketed primarily toward Black people that she felt represented Black consumer culture: Harold’s Chicken Shack, Newport 100s, Crown Royal Bag, Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, Ultrasheen, Pink Oil Moisturizer, Currency Exchange, and Safe Passage.</p> <p>Williams painted the houses with the help of family, friends, and other members of the community; their activity invited passersby to reflect on the complexities of race, place, and value in cities. The bright colors transformed buildings scheduled for demolition, which viewers might otherwise ignore, into sculptural objects. The series raises questions about the racial, social, and political forces shaping the city and their relationship to color: What color is poverty? What color is gentrification? It also highlights the racist history of urban strategies, including policies like redlining that have blocked Black Americans’ equal access to real estate and “white flight” out of cities and into suburbs.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 2016
- Dimensions
- 56 × 81 cm (22 × 32 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Amanda Williams
Artist

Printmaking
Amanda Williams is an American artist.
Full artist profile →More
More by Amanda Williams
Blue Smells Like We Been Outside
2025 · Innovation Blue pigment, distemper, casein on wood panel
CandyLadyBlack (Located somewhere between when Millie Cox finally met Florida Evans)
2022 · Oil, alkyd medium, and matte varnish on wood panel
What black is this you say?—”I thought red koolaid was juice til I was 10 years old”—black (06.03.20)
2021 · Oil, mixed media on canvas
Untitled (Nina Challenge #3)
2019 · Collage of cut and torn, printed and colored papers, with brush and red ink, on white wove paper
Untitled (Nina Challenge #4)
2019 · Collage of torn, printed papers on white wove paper
Untitled (Nina Challenge #5)
2019 · Collage of torn, printed papers on white wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Amanda Williams
- Year
- 2016
- Dimensions
- 56 × 81 cm (22 × 32 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-2016-127118
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





