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frank lloyd wright walser house foreclosure 2730213

Frank Lloyd Wright's Walser House, a rare Prairie-style home in Chicago's Austin neighborhood, is returning to market after being acquired by Fannie Mae through foreclosure. The house has been vacant and neglected since 2019, when its long-time owner died, and requires an estimated $2 million in restoration work. A foreclosure sale in December 2025 failed when preservation advocates were priced out by a minimum bid of $240,000, well above the property's appraised value of $65,000. Fannie Mae now holds the title and is preparing the property for listing, offering a potential path to new ownership.

frank lloyd wright house sale fake listing 1234770410

A fake listing on Zillow claimed that Frank Lloyd Wright's Walser House in Chicago was for sale for $350,000, prompting widespread attention. The Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy investigated and confirmed the listing was fraudulent, warning it may have been an attempt to defraud potential buyers. The 123-year-old house, which is uninhabitable and requires at least $2 million in restoration, is actually owned by Fannie Mae after a foreclosure and is not currently on the market.

Theresa Hak Kyung Cha: Language of the Dispossessed

A major retrospective of artist and writer Theresa Hak Kyung Cha highlights her pioneering work in feminist conceptual art, focusing on videos and performances that explore displacement, language, and the violence of cultural hegemony. The exhibition, born from recent reassessments of her legacy, reconstructs the image of an artist whose brief career anticipated contemporary struggles with nationalism and identity.

Milwaukee art gallery owner working tirelessly to keep her space open amid potential foreclosure

Fatima Laster, owner of the 5 Points Art Gallery & Studios in Milwaukee’s 5 Points neighborhood, is facing potential foreclosure on the building she purchased in 2018. She acquired the property through the city’s ARCH loan program and financed it with a five-year loan from the Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Impact Investing program. The balloon payment of $260,000 is due by December 1, 2025. Laster has been fundraising to save the space, which has hosted hundreds of artists and thousands of visitors. Her current immersive installation, “Interrupted: Cash for Homes,” replicates her grandparents’ home and addresses gentrification and housing displacement on Milwaukee’s north side.

Milwaukee art gallery owner working tirelessly to keep her space open amid potential foreclosure

Fatima Laster, owner of the 5 Points Art Gallery & Studios in Milwaukee’s 5 Points neighborhood, is facing potential foreclosure on the building she purchased in 2018. The gallery, a Black-owned space for underrepresented artists, has hosted hundreds of artists and thousands of visitors. Laster is also an interdisciplinary artist whose current immersive installation, “Interrupted: Cash for Homes,” recreates her grandparents’ home to explore gentrification and housing displacement on Milwaukee’s north side. She acquired the building through the city’s ARCH loan program and took a five-year loan from the Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Impact Investing program, but a $260,000 balloon payment is due by December 1, 2025. Laster has been fundraising to keep the gallery open, citing rising costs, cuts to arts funding under the Trump administration, and the COVID-19 pandemic as major challenges.