Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A MURAL ABOUT CHARITY —FORA CHARITY

Artist Langston Allston fled New Orleans ahead of Hurricane Ida last year, then painted this work inspired by the generosity he saw in storm’s wake

- BY AUSTIN HOJDAR, STAFF REPORTER ahojdar@suntimes.com | @austinhojd­ar

Now living in New Orleans, artist Langston Allston evacuated to Chicago ahead of Hurricane Ida last year, staying with friends.

It was an “emotionall­y intense time for me,” Allston says. One way he coped was to paint a mural that he completed on the Near West Side about a month after the storm ravaged Louisiana.

Spanning two exterior walls of a Salvation Army building at 20 S. Campbell Ave., it features a scene of “people united together” in a “family embrace-type scenario,” says Allston, 31.

It also shows a woman handing someone a blanket in an “act of charity,” reflecting the Salvation Army’s mission, says Allston, who painted the faces and hands in bold reds and blues against background­s heavy on orange and yellow.

“Using bold colors makes it nicer for me to look at,” he says.

He says his inspiratio­n was the generosity and charity that came after Hurricane Ida destroyed homes, knocked out power and forced many from their neighborho­ods.

“I tried to paint a little bit of apprehensi­on in the faces of people receiving the charity,” he says,

“because I think that goes hand in hand with organizati­ons passing out charity.”

Allston was hired to do the mural thanks to a friend and fellow muralist known as Penny Pinch, who knew the Salvation Army was looking for an artist whose vision “would vibe well with that space and that congregati­on and that community.”

Allston grew up in Champaign and, thanks to his father, was into comic books and “all types of literature.”

“I was exposed to that type of expression really thoroughly as a kid,” he says. “It introduced me to being able to tell a story and have people listen and, like, make it beautiful.”

He did his first mural in 2014. After creating one in New Orleans in 2015, he decided to stay on there but says he is “still really strongly anchored to Chicago.”

When he started making murals, Allston says he would go into each one with a “specific propaganda intent,” like dealing with police violence.

But he says: “I got depressed by the process of that all. It’s exhausting to make work that’s intentiona­lly propaganda, I think.”

Now, he says he tries to focus on “telling personal stories.”

Allston says he wants his art to offer something for “any viewer, especially viewers of color and especially Black viewers.”

“I wanted to make beautiful Black art that wasn’t trauma-centered that could tell stories that were maybe traumatic or intense but in a way that was elegant.”

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Langston Allston painted this mural in September 2021 at 20 S. Campbell Ave.
PROVIDED Langston Allston painted this mural in September 2021 at 20 S. Campbell Ave.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Artist Langston Allston
PROVIDED Artist Langston Allston

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