ML - Aspen Peak

Aspen Peak - 2016 - Issue 1 - Summer

Aspen Peak - Niche Media - Aspen living at its peak

Issue link: http://digital.greengale.com/i/681153

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 109 of 179

Participating in Philly's Mural Arts program offers Meg Saligman (BELOW) "three things I absolutely love: painting on a large scale, being outside, and working with people," she says. Seen here, Common Threads, an eight-story mural she painted in 1998, features local high school students mirroring the poses of antique figurines. COVER, BOTTOM LEFT: Our Flag Unfurled (2001). PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOM CRANE (COMMON THREADS); MICHAEL SPAIN-SMITH (SALIGMAN); COURTESY OF SHERWIN WILLIAMS (OUR FLAG UNFURLED). OPPOSITE PAGE: COURTESY OF THE ARTIST As the creator of such beloved Philadelphia images as Our Flag Unfurled, artist Meg Saligman has become an integral part of the vibrant cultural life that drew her to the city. Painted on the side of a warehouse near the Benjamin Franklin Bridge, the mural was an immediate response to the events of 9/11, but now Saligman, 50, is meticulously restoring Flag so it will be ready to wel- come the thousands coming to Philly for the Democratic National Convention in July. Then she will turn her attention to a new Project HOME residence to serve the city's homeless: More than 100,000 prayer ribbons from the public installation she created for Pope Francis's his- toric visit to Philadelphia last September will form part of the building's façade. Saligman's oeuvre has grown to include private commissions in Mexico City, Ecuador, Tanzania, and a handful of American cities. Last year she completed her largest work ever, the 42,000-square-foot M.L. King Mural: We Will Not Be Satisfied Until... in Chattanooga, Tennessee, a richly hued tribute to an African-American neighborhood. "I'm very proud of my body of work," she says. "It's a great feeling when I drive by one and can say, 'I did that!'" megsaligman.com PHIL ADELPHIA M E G SA LIG M A N THE CELEBRATED MURALIST HAS CREATED SOME OF THE CITY'S MOST ICONIC PUBLIC ARTWORKS, AND THIS SUMMER SHE REIMAGINES TWO OF THEM. BY JOANN GRECO

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of ML - Aspen Peak - Aspen Peak - 2016 - Issue 1 - Summer