Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

An escape artist

Pilsen artist Sentrock’s Fulton Market mural offers symbols of freedom, hope for city

- BY ALEC KARAM, STAFF REPORTER akaram@suntimes.com | @_aleckaram

Joseph Perez, the Pilsen artist known as Sentrock, means for his art to offer an escape. His style is inspired by his favorite cartoons and the culture of Chicago’s Little Village and Pilsen communitie­s.

Consider “Embrace These Moments,” the mural he painted last fall outside an events venue at 1215 W. Fulton Market. Awash in primary colors, it pictures a man, in a red cardinal mask, in a yellow sweatshirt and pastel pink sweatpants who’s cradling a cardinal — a signature feature Sentrock says he includes in most of his work.

The artist, 35, says the bird mask “symbolizes freedom.”

“Growing up, I had a lot of family members — my father, brother, uncles — in and out of prison,” he says. “So, for me, that was my mental escape, signified through the idea of a bird being free. So I just put that mask on as a person, someone who wanted to be free to fly away.”

He says the cardinal in the man’s arms represents Chicago, the fiery red bird a symbol of keeping the city’s “flame alive.” He says he wants people who see the mural to feel “a sense of hope” as the city deals with the pandemic and all manner of political polarizati­on.

“I think that’s why street art is so important because it’s a direct communicat­ion with the everyday person,” he says.

Big block letters behind the man in the mural spell out “Chicago.”

“I painted in a lot of big cities like New York, L.A., Miami,” Sentrock says. “It’s very rare that you find a city that can match the same energy as Chicago.”

He got his start with art doing graffiti as a teenager and likes the fast-paced nature of street art. This particular piece was commission­ed on a Thursday last September and done by that Monday.

“People that work in the area went home Friday, came back Monday, and there’s a big mural on the side of a building,” Sentrock says.

Just a few feet away on an intersecti­ng wall is “BREEZY,” a mural by artist Jas Petersen filled with neon colors and a larger-thanlife woman with flowers and skyscraper­s. Petersen says she wants the mural to evoke nostalgia of driving with windows down on a warm Chicago night.

She says the mural showcases “Chicago in the most beautiful time.”

Commission­ed by the All Star Press art gallery, Sentrock’s mural launch coincided with The Other Art Fair, a fair that hosts shows in cities including London and Melbourne.

The gallery helped curate the art fair in Chicago, showcasing works by Sentrock and two other artists: Kelly Knaga and Griffin Goodman.

All Star Press owner Zissou TasseffEle­nkoff says the previously blank wall at the venue space was “calling out for a beautiful mural” and that Sentrock was a natural choice to paint the mural. The two have known each other and collaborat­ed for about a decade.

The mural was funded in part by Threadless, a Chicago digital art shop.

He says Sentrock pretty much was handed free rein in deciding the theme for the mural.

“I’m not trying to be a realist,” Sentrock says of the piece’s vibrant colors. “I’m not trying to do a portrait. I’m trying to create a different reality. When I do my work, I want it to be an escape.”

 ?? ROBERT HERGUTH/SUN-TIMES ?? A mural in the Fulton Market district by the Pilsen artist who goes by the name Sentrock depicts a cardinal as a symbol of freedom and hope for Chicago.
ROBERT HERGUTH/SUN-TIMES A mural in the Fulton Market district by the Pilsen artist who goes by the name Sentrock depicts a cardinal as a symbol of freedom and hope for Chicago.
 ?? ROBERT HERGUTH/SUN-TIMES ?? Artist Jas Petersen’s mural is located next to Sentrock’s Fulton Market mural.
ROBERT HERGUTH/SUN-TIMES Artist Jas Petersen’s mural is located next to Sentrock’s Fulton Market mural.

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