Chicago murals: Mark McKenzie’s art on Avondale’s Sleeping Village aims to draw in music lovers

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Chicago murals: Mark McKenzie's art on Avondale's Sleeping Village aims to draw in music lovers

Muralist Mark McKenzie sees the mural on the wall at the Sleeping Village music venue in Avondale as a black-and-white, psychedelic tribute to music.

“It’s a comic-esque visualization of cosmic and universal connection,” says McKenzie of Logan Square, who goes by the artist name Mac Blackout and painted the 100-foot-long, one-story tall mural in 2018.

Eyeballs, noses, feet and hands all seem to explode across the wall in an existential soup. Half the mural features thick black lines on a white background, which shift as you look down the wall to white lines on a black background. Whimsical details include stars, lightning bolts, stripes, the Chicago skyline and more. Still, somehow, the energy of the mural at North Ridgeway and West Belmont avenues guides patrons to the door — which is what McKenzie expected.

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This mural by artist Mac Blackout can be found on the side of Sleeping Village music venue, 3734 W. Belmont Ave., Avondale.

“It’s supposed to be very musical and improvised but I have referential elements like hands and noses and eyes flying around,” McKenzie says, noting that “I love to anthropomorphize things.”

Other McKenzie murals also reflect his musical passion. His works have appeared on an alley at Lincoln Hall in Lincoln Park and inside Bric-a-Brac Records in Logan Square, among other locations. His portrait of Herbie Hancock can be found on a wall in Pilsen.

“I’ve done a ton of work all over the city, but the music venues and the record stores are always a special thing,” he says.

McKenzie has two upcoming albums of his own with Chicago record store and label Torn Light Records. One is a solo album due out in January. The other is a trio with McKenzie and musicians Landon Caldwell and Nicholas Yeck-Stauffer on an album titled “Between Infinities,” due out this month.

The black and white design at Sleeping Village almost had a written music quality, with an improvisational feel, McKenzie says. While he typically works with bold and outrageous colors, the muted palette was a better fit for the smaller venue in a quieter neighborhood.

McKenzie says he is inspired by Spanish artist Victor Moscoso, who was one of the first to design the iconic psychedelic band art of the 1960s. His designs grew popular on magazines, billboards and album covers for artists including Hancock and Grateful Dead members Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir.

“I’ve been part of the music community for a long time. Doing stuff with the music community is really important to me,” McKenzie says. “It was awesome to be able to do that. I probably need to go over there and touch it up soon.”

McKenzie’s latest work can be found on Lawrence Avenue at Ravenswood Avenue under the Ravenswood Metra stop, where “Ravenswood Walls of Togetherness” was completed in October.

For that mural, McKenzie says he was inspired by the sense of everyone coming together after the isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic: “It’s really a celebration.”

Artist Mark McKenzie stands in front of a colorful he painted under the Ravenswood Metra stop.

Mark McKenzie’s latest work is this mural under the Ravenswood Metra stop. It was completed in October.

Stef Skills’ mural honoring the seminal rap group Public Enemy.

The rap group “baptized me into hip-hop music and culture,” the artist says, with lyrics that helped instill in her “the spirit of activism and being able to question things.”

A mural by Debbie Peterson featuring the signature lips image associated with the Rolling Stones on a building she co-owns at 412 N. Peoria St. She’s loved the band since high school.

Debbie Peterson used the band’s signature lips logo and other images associated with the Stones on a building she co-owns because she loves their music: “They’re like family.”

This mural by artist Richard Wilson on a building managed by the University of Chicago that houses the Small Cheval restaurant at 1307 E. 53rd St. honors the late singer Donny Hathaway.

Painted in May, the work by artist Richard Wilson includes lyrics written by a Hathaway friend for him as a show of support as he struggled with mental illness.

Winning mural at the Salt Shed. Eleven-year-old Lucy Holloway’s drawing was transformed into this mural at the Salt Shed as the grand prize in a student art contest sponsored by the Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and Vocalo.

Lucy Holloway’s artwork was transformed into a mural about 20 feet high and 100 feet across as the top prize in a student art contest sponsored by the Sun-Times, WBEZ and Vocalo.

Artist Corey Pane says he created this mural of Juice WRLD in a viaduct in the 800 block of West Hubbard Street near the Kennedy Expressway to celebrate the life of the Chicago rapper who died in December.

The works by artists Corey Pane and Chris Devins pay tribute to the Chicago rapper who died of an accidental drug overdose last December.

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The city Department of Streets and Sanitation says it didn’t paint over the murals. The man overseeing the murals says City Hall should have protected them.

Teresa Parod and her niece Ani Kramer painted this mural in Evanston last fall.

It’s about an artist, Wesley Kramer, her brother, who died in the 1990s. Parod worked with his daughter to re-create one of his prints — “keeping the art going to the next generation.”

This black-and-white mural by artist Mac Blackout is on the side of Sleeping Village music venue, 3734 W. Belmont Ave., Avondale.

Mark McKenzie’s design is intended to guide passers-by in the doors.



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