In 1986, four sculptors decided to hide a mermaid along the Chicago lakefront, and now that stone amphibitress is a permanent fixture along the city's waterfront.
The artists - Roman Villareal, Jose Moreno, Fred Arroyo, and Edfu Kingigna - were outsider guerrilla artists. Based on sketches of Villareal's daughter, the four picked a hidden spot by the water in Chicago's Burnham Park and spent nine days and nights secretly carving a rocky outcropping into the image of a mermaid sunning herself along the water. Despite being visited by the police multiple times throughout the process, they were able to complete their unauthorized masterpiece unhindered.
During its time in its original location, the sculpture was just a fun local secret. The mermaid's cover was blown when it was discovered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers during a shoreline revetment restoration in 2000. A brief flurry in the local press speculated that it was everything ranging from the leftovers of a Gilded Age mansion, to Columbian Exhibition waste, to the work of a lovelorn sculptor working alone by the water. Little did they know the mermaid's creator, Villareal, was a laid-off South Side steelworker recuperating in a Virginia hospital a few blocks away.
The park district put the statue into storage in 2004, but a group of students worked with the park district to restore it and get it back in the public eye in 2007. The work has sat in its current Oakland location since 2010.