A mural of bees and red, pink, orange and yellow flowers on a green background adorn a viaduct on West Irving Park Road in Portage Park. The artist is Cyd Smillie.

“And the Bees,” a mural painted by Cyd Smillie, is under a West Irving Park Road viaduct in Portage Park. A companion piece, “Birds of a Feather,” is across the street.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Bees and brilliant blooms brighten Portage Park viaduct

Some Chicago murals “are political, and some are purely beautiful, and most are somewhere in between,” artist Cyd Smillie says.

Neighborhood master gardeners helped artist Cyd Smillie as she crafted a mural with honeycombs, bees and blooms on the viaduct at 4600 W. Irving Park Road in Portage Park.

The president of the nonprofit Arts Alive Chicago, Smillie, of Mayfair, has painted and overseen dozens of murals around Chicago. On a whim, she applied to do this one, which Portage Park business Novak Construction commissioned. Then she got the assignment, and about 65 neighborhood residents joined her in the summer of 2022 to paint the whimsical flowers and protected pollinators on the south wall of the viaduct.

“It was really about color and beauty and the bees,” she says.

Artist Cyd Smillie holds paintbrushes as she stands in front of red flowers and a bee that appear in a Portage Park mural she painted.

Artist Cyd Smillie says in Chicago some murals “are political, and some are purely beautiful, and most are somewhere in between.”

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

The flowers, including gerbera daisies and African violets, “were chosen for size and colors and contours,” Smillie says. The bees were added to recognize their shrinking population.

The 10-foot-tall mural stretches 100 feet.

This wasn’t her first mural under the viaduct. Across the street, in 2021, she helped artist Jill Arena paint a robin, blue jay and goldfinch — birds that often run into high-rise windows and suffer from disease. That mural was commissioned by the Old Irving Park and Six Corners associations, with consultation from local members of the Audubon Society.

Blue and red birds appear in a mural under a viaduct in Portage Park.

Across the street from the bees mural, artist Cyd Smillie helped artist Jill Arena paint a birds mural in 2021.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Do you have a favorite mural spotted from the L train?


We want to hear about murals you watch for on your L train rides. We’ll be showcasing them occasionally in the weekly Murals and Mosaics feature. Email murals@suntimes.com with your suggestions.

Smillie says she’s proud to be a muralist in Chicago, a city where some murals “are political, and some are purely beautiful, and most are somewhere in between.”

They don’t look like travel brochures or textbook art, she says.

She’s also proud that “women muralists are creating the world we forget to see,” often recognizing nature in locations that otherwise lack it, she says.

Smillie was nervous about the detailed work involved in painting the honeycombs, she says, but “a couple high school girls just locked into those,” and they were done in record time.

Working with schools and students is a passion, and she was glad to have them involved. Her recent work involves painting murals at Haugen Elementary, and she teaches after-school programs at Hibbard Elementary, both in Albany Park. She considers murals and street art as a form of “artistic literacy” for students who might not have a chance to study art in school or have an opportunity to visit the city’s renowned museums.

A bee, honeycombs and pink flowers appear on a mural painted under a Portage Park viaduct.

High school students helped artist Cyd Smillie the detailed work involved in painting the honeycombs.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Now she’s working with students who don’t speak English as a first language, and is learning all the terminology for painting, drawing and art techniques in Spanish, she says.

Learning art can help students in unpredictable ways, she says. It “tells you how to lay out your science fair project or class presentations,” among other skills.

Murals and Mosaics Newsletter
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.

Viaduct and underpass murals
He has a knack for turning dark spaces around Chicago into something bright and inviting — like these bulls, rams, gazelles and totems in Avondale, near where he grew up.
“Woven Together” is a seemingly shape-shifting piece that accentuates the 19th-century viaduct’s architecture while illuminating the walkway for pedestrians.
More than 30 artists converged on the Peoria Street underpass in October to create art, ‘visual healing’ — from portrait-style works and wildlife imagery to abstracts.
Now, you can see what the dozens of artists who took part in the street art event left behind: dreary railroad viaducts transformed with colorful creations.
“Today, as a mother of a gun violence victim, who was forced to live this devastating journey, I share my love, my pain and my continued roar for change,” said Annette Flores, mother of Neftali Reyes Jr. “Our youth deserve it; our children need us.”
Since Amanda Paulson completed her viaduct mural of Lake Michigan fish in 2011, her two brothers, both avid fishermen, have died. She sees the painting as a memorial to them.
Art
The artists were taking part in the international “Meeting of Styles” festival, which returned to Chicago this weekend for its fourth year. Some of the artists came from Mexico and Germany to paint viaduct walls near Commercial and South Chicago avenues.
“I try to draw an expression,” muralist Erick Chavez says. “You’re going to get a moment in time.”
Anna Murphy’s latest work, using her signature blue, white and gold palate, is geared toward children and the young at heart. The kids that the Pilsen artist drew held a special significance for her.
Some Chicago murals “are political, and some are purely beautiful, and most are somewhere in between,” artist Cyd Smillie says.

The Latest
Ald. Bennett Lawson (44th) spent more than a year trying to find common ground on the volatile issue of accessory dwelling units that pitted bungalow belt Council members against colleagues with more density.
Exposure to lead can cause infants and children to have decreases in IQ and attention span and adults to have increased risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney, or nervous system problems.
Edith Renfrow Smith, who turned 111 Monday, is still reading, still voting, still baking, still an advocate of living every day to the fullest.
Martin told the Sun-Times on Monday that the settlement is for an undisclosed amount.
Shaniqua Kinnard, 30, was found unresponsive around 8:10 a.m. Friday in the 13000 block of South Martin Luther King Drive, according to Chicago police.