Chicago Sun-Times

‘ OUR SPIRIT IS THERE’

Pilsen residents discuss repainting Casa Aztlan mural which was destroyed lastweek

- BY AMANDA SVACHULA Staff Reporter Email: asvachula@suntimes.com Twitter: @AmandaSvac­hula

Pilsen residents crowded together in the room of a small cafe on Tuesday night, ready for action after last week’s destructio­n of the historic Casa Aztlan mural.

“When you see the gray paint going over it, you think, ‘ What happened?’ ” community leader Laura Guerra said to a room of over 100 residents, artists and activists.

The Pilsen Alliance hosted the two- hour meeting Tuesday night at La Catrina Cafe, 1011 W. 18th St., presenting a panel that discussed the repainting of the mural, and the historical significan­ce and possible replacemen­t of the Casa Aztlan community center, which was shut down in 2013.

That building, at 1831 S. Racine, is now being turned into luxury condominiu­ms, and itwas during that ongoing constructi­on that the exterior mural by artist Ray Patlan was painted over.

Andrew Ahitow, founder of real estate company City Pads LLC, is behind the developmen­t. He did not attend the meeting. He provided a statement read to the audience, that promised the start of a new mural in the next 60 days.

Also lost, Patlan told the Chicago Sun- Times on Tuesday, were the building’s interior murals. They had been damaged by fire years ago, and what was left also was lost during the condo constructi­on, he said.

Ahitow did not respond to a request for comment.

Local artist Hector Duarte introduced the importance of Casa Aztlan to the crowd, speaking about how important the center’s services were in the 1970s for immigrants, children and even artists.

Patlan, who called into the meeting over Skype from his Oakland home, painted the interior murals in 1970 in the hallways of the original community center, a place he said served as “a second home” because of the social services it offered.

A year later, in the midst of the Chicano movement, he painted the vibrant exterior mural, featuring major cultural figures, including Rudy Lozano and Frida Kahlo.

Patlan told the crowd the building that held Casa Aztlan still “needs amark.”

“Something that says our spirit is there, that we are there,” he said.

Other community members said a new mural would only raise the property value of the building. Guerra said it would be a “contradict­ion” to have a “representa­tion of our struggle where there are luxury apartments inside.”

Patlan said he also hopes if a new community center is created that it too will feature murals both inside and out — similar to the original Casa Aztlan.

In three breakout sessions after the panel, residents discussed art as activism, rising housing costs and what the next steps should be for Pilsen activists trying to preserve the original culture of the neighborho­od.

Rogelio Herrera, 17, came to the meeting because hewas raised in Pilsen, and he said many of his family members and friends have been losing homes because of rising housing prices in the area.

Recently his family was given three months to find a new place to live, he said.

“Taking down the murals is like erasing our history,” he said.

 ?? | AMANDASVAC­HULA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Developers painted over the Casa Aztlan mural in Pilsen last week.
| AMANDASVAC­HULA/ SUN- TIMES Developers painted over the Casa Aztlan mural in Pilsen last week.

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