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Night Before Last/Chicago by Arturo Herrera
Photo CreditLeslie Schwartz Photography
Night Before Last/Chicago
Photo CreditLeslie Schwartz Photography

Night Before Last/Chicago

Year2006
Classification painting
Medium enamel paint on wall
Dimensions8 x 37 ft. (243.8 x 1127.7 cm)
Credits Commissioned through the Art in Architecture Program
Fine Arts Collection
U.S. General Services Administration
  • An enticing glimpse of Arturo Herrera’s Night Before Last/Chicago is visible to those entering the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) building in Chicago. The mural’s tangled arabesques tumble out of sight as they proceed toward the atrium, sparking curiosity and conversation from visitors and employees who wish to decipher the artwork’s meanings. In some areas, the swirling lines gather into evocative fragments of cartoon figures from the 1937 Disney animated feature film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In other sections, the paint strokes loosen into vibrant abstractions, reminiscent of Jackson Pollock’s famous action paintings. Herrera seamlessly blends these two quintessential icons of American culture, along with myriad other references and influences, to create an artwork that resists easy definition and remains open to the unique perspectives and interpretations of individual viewers.


    As the district headquarters for the USCIS, the building receives visitors from all parts of the world daily. The universally recognizable cartoon imagery of Night Before Last/Chicago starts viewers out along familiar paths, allowing them to identify select forms: Snow white’s hair tied with a bow, the bulbous shoes and caps of the seven dwarfs, the handle of a pickax, a candlestick, small tufts of grass, a fluttering bird, and many other details. But the longer one looks at Herrera’s collaged image, the more one discovers. Soon, new and more personal associations may begin to emerge. Attempts to interpret the mural’s intricately layered shapes require creativity, imagination, and a willingness to engage new ideas. Such qualities are needed for any exploration, and are thematically relevant to the many visitors who arrive at the federal building in the midst of their journey toward a new life in a new country.


    Herrera—who was born in Venezuela—was once on such a journey. Following his university studies in the United States and periods abroad, he returned to Chicago to pursue graduate education and eventually acquired U.S. citizenship. Reflecting on his own experiences—which included many visits to buildings like this one— Herrera conceived Night Before Last/Chicago as an artwork that speaks to and energizes the broad range of people visiting the USCIS each day.