Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Naperville Art: Streaming History

The five tile panels of “Streaming History” were installed in 2017 along the foundation of the Water Street development. The artist, Debora Duran-Geiger, works out of Sante Fe, New Mexico and has been creating tile murals for over 20 years. Not only are these porcelain pieces frost-free, but they are impervious to water, which was especially useful when the river overflowed this spring.

Each panel depicts a scene recalling our city’s history. They are titled: Winter on the River, Immigration Celebration, Water Street Yesterdays, Harvest Time and Commerce Comes Alive. Accompanying plaques tell a little about each panel and the donors who commissioned them.

The Commerce Comes Alive scene features business activity from Native Americans and early traders through Rubin’s Department Store, sponsored by the Rubin family.

Sam and Anna Rubin moved to Naperville in 1920. Their first business was the Chicago Bargain Store, later called the Home Department Store. The shop was on Main Street which once was Carousel Shoes and is currently Liam Brex cabinetry.

Sam and Anna lived upstairs and their son Alfred was born there in December of 1920. He was joined by siblings Norman, Lucille and Gertrude. As adults, they formed the Rubin Family Partnership, responsible for many business and civic projects in Naperville, including the namesake Alfred Rubin Riverwalk Community Center across Eagle Street from the library.

Also in the Commerce Comes Alive mural is a tile version of a photograph of some “Bridge Sitters,” a legendary part of Naperville’s past. While certainly folks have always sat on bridges, during the 1960s and 1970s, the city was very concerned about the long-haired hippie freaks that hung out on the Washington Street bridge. While many of the teens were just mildly rebellious, there was also some serious drug trouble and downtown shoppers found the crowd intimidating. Then-Officer Pradel didn’t actually mind them congregating on the bridge, he later said, because “at least we knew where they were.”

Another in-joke depicted is the tiny portrait of Brand Bobosky with his signature bow tie. Brand’s law office used to overlook the river from the building which houses Empire Burger Bar and is now a few doors down Chicago Avenue. Brand is the guiding force behind the Century Walk art initiative.