Whitewashed
How the city wiped out a decade of history
By Liz Armstrong
September 29, 2006
WHEN YOU DUCK under the
Metra tracks at 47th
Street you do it through
an underpass whose walls gleam
with fresh white paint. But it’s not
supposed to be that way, says Sam
Mulberry, who helped paint murals
on those walls in the mid-90s. A few
weeks ago, the city painted over
them without explanation.
When Mulberry was still in high
school he got permission to practice
painting on a wall behind a Mobil
station on 53rd Street. “Guys like
me needed to get skills together and
do graffiti until we got comfortable
enough,” he says. “First time I did it,
it was a huge space, and I wanted to
get some more artists to come fill
out the wall with me.”
He asked a neighborhood graffiti
artist he idolized named Wyatt
Mitchell—best known as Attica,
though he’s used half a dozen other
monikers—to bring some people
over to teach him how to paint.
Among the people Mitchell brought
to the wall was Mario Gonzalez, one
of the founders of Higher Gliffs,
then a loosely organized street-youth
collective that advocated selfexpression
through public art (it’s
now better organized as a nonprofit,
though its goals remain the same).
With help from his father,
Mulberry says, he got permission
from Metra for Higher Gliffs to
paint the 47th Street underpass in
1996. The Department of Cultural
Affairs and Chicago Public Art
Group had already sponsored similar
projects for the underpasses at
53rd, 55th, 56th, and 57th.
The 47th Street underpass is
divided into 11 walls on the south
side and 12 on the north, and all of
them were covered with aerosol and
brush murals. The north side was
dedicated to a project called “The
Twelve Doorways of Perception,” a
“group prayer,” says Mulberry, that
depicted “12 different views of spirituality,”
including elements of Latin-American, African, Mayan, Indian,
and Native American spiritual practices.
The south side was the
“Gallery of Style,” an annually
changing wall of fame featuring
local and international graffiti legends.
One section became a memorial
two years ago when Mitchell
died. “You don’t paint over memorials,”
says Mulberry. “What [the
city] did was doubly disrespectful.”
Jon Pounds, executive director
of Chicago Public Art Group,
chalks up the whitewashing to an
honest mistake. About three years
ago, he says, the Department of
Transportation asked him to survey
the murals on Lake Park Avenue,
which runs along the Metra tracks,
and determine which to save and
restore as part of a plan to upgrade
the underpasses. The ones at 47th,
he says, were a “vital working active
surface. People were working to
maintain and update those murals.
For me it was part of having a complicated
surface, not homogenizing
the world.” He decided they should
stay, and the city accepted his recommendations.
Brian Steele, spokesperson for the
department, said Fourth Ward
alderman Toni Preckwinkle gave the
order to whitewash, and Mulberry
says Preckwinkle has apologized.
“She said, ‘Sorry, it was a mistake,’
and was seeing what could be done
to bring us back and do new
murals.” (Preckwinkle hadn’t
returned my calls by press time.)
Pounds says whitewashing is
never a satisfactory way of dealing
with public art. “When you paint
over murals, you wipe out a sense
of cultural history and then you
create a surface best remembered
for water stains,” he says. “Water
stains on a mural have a patina of
urban beauty. Now you just have a
stained wall.”
“We need reparations,” says
Mulberry, who, with Gonzalez, has
started a Higher Gliffs chapter in
Oakland, where he moved in 2000.
(He teaches a graffiti class to high
school students and leads several
after-school art projects.) “The city
of Chicago has vandalized our
mural. They just cut out a little part
of our soul. We need to go out and
make sure this gets fixed.”
SOME RELATIVELY NEW graffiti-style
murals are alive and well
on the walls inside Humboldt
Park’s Reversible Eye Gallery. A
few weeks ago the gallery invited
street artists, graffiti writers, art
school kids, and friends to paint
whatever they wanted as part of
Public Image Enemy, a bimonthly
series of visual and performance
art, dance, and music shows running
until the end of November
that’s meant to connect the
common points between hip-hop
and punk rock.
The place looked great: a panic-attack-inducing amount of graffiti
on walls and canvases, plus smaller,
scrappy, semi-industrial-looking
sculptures scattered around the
room. Billed as a “celebration of
the 30th anniversaries of punk
rock and hip-hop cultures,” the
series encourages “collision and
collaboration” between artists of
different genres and styles.
Good intentions aside, the
event was a bit of a letdown.
Like some modern version of
West Side Story meets Footloose
meets a junior high dance, the
punks and the backpackers never
mixed. Sidewalk Skolaz were performing
when I walked in, and
most of the art-damaged, mostly
white kids representing the “punk”
contingent drank their cans of
Pabst in the backyard. When headliners
Mahjongg went on they
switched places. Classic Chicago-style
segregation.
The two factions did click at the
end of Mahjongg’s set, when a
couple of B-boys cleared some
space in the mosh pit and busted
some moves for a few seconds while
the sweaty kids rocked out around
them. But even then it felt more
like a cheesy after-school special
where the jocks and the freaks
finally find common ground on the
dance floor than like any kind of
real breakthrough. 
Send a letter to the editor.
|
No comments yet
Add a comment