Edward Cox’s intricate designs featuring traditional Celtic symbols on murals at the Irish American Heritage Center.

Edward Cox’s intricate designs featuring traditional Celtic symbols on murals at the Irish American Heritage Center.

Mary Norkol / Sun-Times

Retired Chicago art teacher spends his Saturdays painting Celtic murals at North Side center

For 30 years, Irish American artist Edward Cox has been painting murals at the Irish American Heritage Center. He’s drawn in his granddaughter to help.

Ahead of St. Patrick’s Day, many Irish Americans will be listening to bagpipes, drinking green beer and bursting with cultural pride.

Edward Cox, 85, celebrates that culture weekly. For more than 30 years, he has spent hours every Saturday painting traditional murals at Chicago’s Irish American Heritage Center, 4626 N. Knox Ave.

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 send a photo to murals@suntimes.com. We might do a story on it.

Cox draws inspiration for the murals from the traditional Book of Kells, which contains the four Gospels in Latin and traditional artwork created around the ninth century.

Edward Cox’s murals decorate the interior of the Irish American Heritage Center in Mayfair.

Edward Cox’s murals decorate the interior of the Irish American Heritage Center in Mayfair.

Provided

It’s disputed where the book was originally created — Scotland, Britain and Ireland all are possibilities. But it’s now kept at Trinity College in Dublin.

The book includes full “decoration pages” that feature Celtic designs. Cox takes inspiration from them and incorporates many of those elements in his art.

Dozens of murals decorate the center. Some feature parts of traditional Celtic designs. Others represent the four provinces of Ireland.

Some fit neatly in corners. Others span entire walls.

A mural in the library at the Irish American Heritage Center touts the importance of books.

A mural in the library at the Irish American Heritage Center touts the importance of books.

Provided

Cox doesn’t do it all alone. He took his granddaughter Maura Lally under his wing when she was just starting elementary school. Now 20 and a junior at Northwestern University, she still helps out when she can.

“Since before I could remember, my family has been hanging out here,” Lally, who’s studying physics, says of the center.

Following a visit from former Ireland President Mary Robinson, the center was dubbed the country’s “fifth province,” Cox says. One piece of art represents all four provinces — Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster — and the symbolic “fifth province,” representing Chicago and the rest of the world.

Cox, a retired art teacher who was born in the United States, says he wasn’t particularly connected to his Irish roots until his daughter took up Irish dance in the 1980s.

The Irish American Heritage Center hostsl lectures, classes and other events.

The Irish American Heritage Center hostsl lectures, classes and other events.

Mary Norkol / Sun-Times

That’s when he found the center, which was undergoing renovations. He offered his artistic talents, and began working on the murals.

The Irish American Heritage Center, located at 4626 N. Knox Ave.

The Irish American Heritage Center, 4626 N. Knox Ave.

Mary Norkol / Sun-Times

“And when I finished one, I just started another one without telling them,” he says.

He hasn’t stopped in more than 30 years.

Cox says he starts with a design combining elements from the Book of Kells and works his way into the center of the piece.

Cox’s murals also have been copied onto coasters and other knickknacks sold at the center’s gift shop.

Edward Cox and his granddaughter Maura Lally sit beneath one of their murals in the children’s library at the Irish American Heritage Center.

Edward Cox and his granddaughter Maura Lally sit beneath one of their murals in the children’s library at the Irish American Heritage Center.

Mary Norkol / Sun-Times

Click on the map below for a selection of Chicago-area murals

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