Cream City Collectives

The Cream City Collectives (CCC) was a volunteer-run collective space located at 732 E. Clarke St. in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It existed from 2006 until 2012.

1 year anniversary party

Activities

Cream City Collectives hosted the Mathilde Anneke Infoshop, the Milwaukee Screenprinting Collective, the CCC Gallery,[1] and other groups that shared the space for meetings and events. It opened with a storefront in October 2006. The infoshop was named after the German radical Mathilde Anneke, one of the Forty-Eighters who founded the first feminist newspaper in the United States in Milwaukee.[2] It hosted a lending library which contained thousands of books, primarily non-fiction titles on anti-authoritarian radical politics. There was a substantial collection of anarchist and anti-authoritarian books for sale, as well as free literature. Discussions, speaking events, workshops, pot lucks, shows, dance parties, dinners and other events were frequently hosted at the space. It was shut down on October 31, 2012.

Events

The CCC regularly hosted block parties in the summer. One typically on May Day, also known as the anniversary of Haymarket, and another scheduled around the anniversary of the opening of the space. The first May Day block party, in the tradition of the anti-capitalist holiday also featured an organized Really Really Free Market, in which a gift economy is put into practice. People brought things to share and everything was free. The Really Really Free Market as event and social practice was taken up by the Milwaukee Network for Social Change who now distributed free clothing in the winter and hosted free events in the summer. The block parties were often full of games and mischief. At the end of one there was a water balloon fight that encouraged the entire neighborhood to participate and included 1,500 water balloons. [3]

gollark: It's not *just* cancer.
gollark: I mean, sure, lots of people would be horribly irradiated, but it would be very convenient.
gollark: It's a shame there aren't really RTGs in consumer applications. The battery in my watch will theoretically need replacing in about 5 years.
gollark: Great!
gollark: You do also need batteries. Which I think generally degrade quite fast.

References

  1. "MKE Online". Archived from the original on 2007-11-30. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  2. Wisconsin Historical Society
  3. Milwaukee Indymedia Archived 2012-07-11 at Archive.today

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