Mural adds style, substance to Garfield plaza
East Garfield Park residents and leaders gathered on August 30 for the ribbon-cutting on a new mural, constructed this summer by 15 high-school students under the tutelage of local muralist Gerry Lang, located across from the newly installed plaza at California Avenue, Madison Street and Fifth Avenue.To watch a video of part of the ceremony, please click to this page on the site of NCP lead agency the Near West Side Community Development Corp.
Photo: Eric Young Smith
Fifteen high-school students designed and constructed the mural with supervision from muralist Gerry Lang.
“It’s right there at our gateway,” said Mike Tomas, NCP director for the alliance. “The plaza’s been wildly successful,” with little vandalism or graffiti since it was installed last fall with help from a $20,000 LISC/Chicago grant.
The design for the mural, based on hopes and dreams that the children of East Garfield will grow up happy and healthy despite their challenging environment, depicts flowers, doves, hearts, peace symbols and children dancing.
Photo: Ed Finkel
Students painstakingly work piece by piece.
“I asked them questions,” he said, raising his voice slightly to be heard over the sound of a squad car wailing down Madison . “When you’re walking down the street here, what kind of message do you want to present? … You know all this other stuff is happening.”
Once they settled on a more hopeful theme, students designed the collage with help from magazine clippings and images downloaded off the Internet. They put together a two-foot-wide scale design with oil pastels, made changes, and then submitted the design for review by a community committee, Lang said.
Photo: Ed Finkel
The mural adds to the beauty of the plaza at California, Madison and Fifth.
Smaller elements like bees, stars and flowers were built first, with larger pieces of the collage built around them. Most individual elements of the collage were outlined with mirrored tile surrounding the colored pieces to make them stand out.
“Once the grout gets in there, these things will really pop out,” said Lang, a muralist since 2000 who has painted murals at Kelvyn Park High School . “A lot of the kids had never done anything like this, and they had no idea they were getting in so deep. But most of them have stepped up.”
Photo: Eric Young Smith
Children enjoy a warm August morning during the ribbon-cutting ceremony.
“There’s so much violence going on,” said Johnnie Redmond, a 10th grader at Dunbar High School who affixed the peace sign and butterfly. “We did this to show we want peace in the area. It shows how everybody can come together to play with each other.”
“It’s been hard. It’s been fun, though,” said Tierra Zeigler, an 11th grader at Al Raby Community and Environmental High School , who pointed with pride to the butterfly and flowers she designed. “When you get done with what you’re doing, it looks nice.”
Photo: Ed Finkel
Students take a break from working up on scaffolds to chow down on some Little Caesar's.
“I like that we get to put our ideas into something the community is going to see. I like that we put our all into something so beautiful,” said Jerry Gladney, a 10th grader at Al Raby. “It shows people who do the violence how much peace people want.”
Daylea Adams, a 10th grader at Al Raby, hopes the mural will prove something about the hearts and minds of youth in the community. “Sometimes, older people think the younger people ain’t good for nothing,” she said. “By doing this, we showed them we could bring something different to the world. Our message was to set out our hopes and dreams.”
But first, they had to finish the hard work, as Lang reminded them. “All right. We’ve got to get this done,” he said when lunch ended. “Jerry, I need you to focus on the flower,” Lang added and began to parcel out other assignments. Then, he turned to mixing grout in a pristine-looking tub. “We’ve got to christen this thing.”
Photo: Eric Young Smith
Built through a partnership with Chicago Public Art Group, the mural was designed in early summer at NCP lead agency the Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance.



