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Chicago murals: From James Jankowiak's West Lawn library mural, kids can do a scavenger hunt

As James Jankowiak planned his mural for the Chicago Public Library’s West Lawn branch, he knew he wanted to pay tribute to the little person's tavern that once stood on the property.

With an X-acto blade that he also used to create dozens of colorful silhouettes for the mural, he shaped ruby slippers and a soldier to include. That was to recognize actor and tavern founder Parnell St. Aubin, who played a Munchkin soldier in "The Wizard of Oz."

Those were among many neighborhood-flavored characters and figures that Jankowiak, a native of the Southwest Side, included in the 30-foot-long mural titled “Our Collective Catalog / Nuestro Catálogo.” Unveiled in March, it arcs around the curved brick wall in the library’s community room.

“I’m pretty much from the neighborhood,” Jankowiak says of the library branch at 4020 W. 63rd St. in West Lawn. “When I was a youngster, the exciting thing about going to a library was the vast breadth of knowledge at your fingertips. It was a place where I could learn about anything.”

Chicago artist James Jankowiak.

Chicago artist James Jankowiak.

Diana Solis

He says he hoped to appeal especially to kids, to give them something that might take them away for a bit from their phones.

“I wanted to create an artwork where, every time they go to the library, they see something different in it,” says Jankowiak, who was hired for the project by the Chicago Public Library and the city's Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events.

This mural by James Jankowiak at the Chicago Public Library's West Lawn branch features a colorful array of silhouettes.

This mural by James Jankowiak at the Chicago Public Library’s West Lawn branch features a colorful array of silhouettes.

James Jankowiak

The mural, which stands seven feet tall, is made of pieces of archival fiberboard laser-cut into the shape of Popsicle sticks and assembled side by side. Jankowiak projected about 200 silhouette images onto paper, used an X-acto blade to cut out each one, traced the silhouettes onto the giant sticks and colored them in with acrylic paint.

“They gave me complete creative control,” says Jankwiak, a former graffiti artist. “I tried to include as many different career paths as possible. Working people, scientists, artists, musicians, athletes — Candace Parker, rookie of the year, Connor Bedard of the Blackhawks. For a baseball player, I used the general stock image of a Little League player.”

Another closeup view of James Jankowiak's mural at the Chicago Public Library's West Lawn branch.

Another closeup view of James Jankowiak’s mural at the Chicago Public Library’s West Lawn branch.

Provided

The library is offering visitors a do-it-yourself scavenger hunt, Jankowiak says, to search for items and people in the mural.

Jankowiak used a font he designed himself to script the words “La Amada Comunidad,” or "The Beloved Community,” that nestle among the images. The phrase was coined by philosopher and theologian Josiah Royce and popularized by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who marched for equitable housing in nearby Marquette Park and Gage Park.

Murals and Mosaics Newsletter

"It was my guiding principle going into the project," he says, "this idea of giving something to the community that held up this ideal.”

Chicago’s murals and mosaics sidebar

Chicago’s murals & mosaics

Part of a series on public art in the city and suburbs. Know of a mural or mosaic? Tell us where, and email a photo to murals@suntimes.com. We might do a story on it.

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