A dog? A bear? KC Q gets to know the animal on those Children’s Mercy Hospital signs
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By James Wooldridge - The Kansas City Star
Drive past Children’s Mercy Hospital and you’ll be greeted by some unusual road signs.
It’s some sort of animal helping to direct drivers to the hospital entrance amid construction on the new Children’s Research Institute, scheduled to be completed by 2020.
The signs prompted Amanda Krenos to ask “What’s Your KCQ?”: “What type of animal are the construction signs around Children’s Mercy?” “What’s Your KCQ?” is an ongoing series in which The Star and the Kansas City Public Library partner to answer reader queries about our region.
“It’s just a big goofy bear,” said Children’s Mercy in-house artist Donald Ross. “I picture him as like a walking 3-D employee of the hospital that’s helping people.”
The bears are a resurrection of the Mercy Bear, a mascot the hospital hasn’t used in a long time. Ross, a graffiti artist who goes by the name Scribe, was tempted to make the signs kids’ size, but he decided to make them larger for readability.
“I like it when it’s like larger than life,” he said. “It feels like the cartoons are invading the real world.”
After almost two decades of Scribe’s employment at the hospital, his work sparks imagination in almost every room. Children can play “I spy” with the murals lining waiting rooms and cafeterias. Whales float on the floor while smiling bumble bees hang from the ceiling.
“The bears are just kind of part of a larger cast of characters that make the kids feel safe and secure about being here at Children’s,” he said. Scribe still watches cartoons with his two sons. Through the shows, he can glimpse what young children are watching and laughing at.
“Maybe I’m struggling with growing up myself,” he said with a chuckle. “But I think that like laughter and smiles and stuff behind artwork like that are one of the coolest gifts that you can give people.”