Nonprofit organization in Philadelphia, United States
Mural Arts Philadelphia is a non-profit organization that supports the creation of public murals in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1986 as Mural Arts Program, the organization was renamed in 2016.[1] Having ushered more than 3,000 murals into being, it calls itself "the nation’s largest public art program".[2] As of 2022, the organization says it runs 50 to 100 public art projects each year; it also works to maintain existing murals.
The program was founded under the direction of the local artist
Jane Golden, as part of the
Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network, with to facilitate collaboration between professional artists and prosecuted graffiti writers to create new murals in the city. The program, which employs more than 300 artists at least part-time, is one of the largest employers of artists in Philadelphia.[citation needed] The program also hires more than 100 prosecuted graffiti writers every year and involves them in the creation of murals around Philadelphia. In 2006, the program employed 36 former graffiti artists as staff members on permanent payroll.[3]
It also works with
community groups to educate and children in the arts and involve them in the creation of the murals;[4] in 2006, it involved more than 300 children a year.[3]
The Mural Arts Program is responsible for the creation of the largest mural in Philadelphia, at 600 feet (180 m) in length. Titled History of Immigration, it displays
settlers of different ethnicities who settled in Philadelphia over time.
The program has been criticized for supporting the criminalization of graffiti and for hiring non-Philadelphia artists.[5]
History
In 1984, artist Jane Golden approached Tim Spencer, who was head of the Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network, about adding a program named "Umbrella". Spencer had initially envisioned a program that would rehabilitate graffiti artists and lead them towards other art forms. In the end, Golden's proposal won.[6] In 1986, Mural Arts Project, led by Golden,[6][4] was founded as a division of the Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network.[3][7]
At some point,[when?] the Philadelphia Recreation Department absorbed the Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network and elevated the Mural Arts Program to a separate entity.[3][7] The Philadelphia Mural Arts Advocates was founded as a nonprofit corporation to raise funds for the Mural Arts Program.[10]
In 1995, the Mural Arts Program commissioned Philadelphia artist Diane Keller to paint a multistory mural of former Philadelphia Mayor
Frank Rizzo[11] at Ninth and Montrose Streets, near the city's
Italian Market.[12] Though some in the
city's Italian-American community took pride in the depiction of Rizzo, the mural was frequently defaced in protest of his rough treatment of the city’s
Black and
gay communities. In 2010, the MAP had Keller repaint the mural at a cost of $20,000.[13] After the mural was again defaced during the
George Floyd protests, the Mural Arts Program issued a statement ("We know that the removal of this mural does not erase painful memories and are deeply apologetic for the amount of grief it has caused”) and painted over it in the early hours of June 7, 2020.[14]
Since 2001 the Mural Arts Program has been headquartered in the former home and studio of the painter
Thomas Eakins at 1727-29 Mount Vernon Street in the Spring Garden section of Philadelphia.
During the 2001–2004 Neighborhood Transformation Initiative, the Mural Arts Program painted more than 600 murals around Philadelphia.[15]
In 2004, the murals painted by the program were on average the height of a three-story
row house and 35 feet (11 m) wide. The average cost of each mural was $10,000–$15,000, including artists' commissions and supplies.[16]
In February 2006, the city of
Watertown,
New York, asked Jane Golden to speak in hopes of creating a similar program in their community.[17] In 2007,
Prince Charles and his wife
Camilla visited the Donald Gensler[18] mural Reading: A Journey, at 40th and Penns Grove Streets. The visit was intended to demonstrate how the murals have inspired regeneration in the
West Philadelphia neighborhood. Prince Charles was interested in creating a similar project in
London.[19]
In 2014 the Mural Arts Program celebrated its 30th anniversary with the book "Philadelphia Mural Arts @30"[20] and an exhibition at the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
In 2016, the organization was renamed Mural Arts Philadelphia.
In 2017, the program worked with
Monument Lab to produce several works of public art in Philadelphia.[21][22]
Murals
1984: Several graffiti taggers were given the option to either go to jail or take part in a new city beautification initiative. Since then, the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program has overseen the creation of more than 3,800 pieces of art painted on sides of buildings. Of these art pieces painted on buildings, 2,000 are still viewable by the public, making this collection the "World’s Largest Outdoor Art Gallery."
1998: Mural artist
Meg Saligman created Common Threads[23] at Broad and Spring Garden streets. The work comments on the shared history of humanity through the juxtaposition of classical sculptural forms with those of local high school students.[24]
1999: Artist Josh Sarantitis created Colors of Light at 12th and Vine Streets, facing the Vine Street Expressway. Commissioned in partnership with the Asian Arts Initiative, the mural represents the local Asian American community, including Asian Arts Initiative founder Gayle Isa and a poem by Jeffrey Loo. In 2017, the mural was completely covered by the construction of XS House, a 7-unit apartment building built on the adjoining 11' x 93' lot to the north.[25][26][27]
2016: The Atlas of Tomorrow: A Device for Philosophical Reflection (533 South Juniper Street, Philadelphia) is a piece by
Candy Chang, an artist whose pieces often have a participatory element to them. In this kinetic mural, viewers are invited to spin a numeric dial. Where the dial lands directs the viewer to read and reflect on one of 64 unique stories.[28]
2018: Artist
Joshua Mays and DJ
King Britt worked with Mural Arts Philadelphia to create Dreams, Diaspora and Destiny, an "
augmented reality" mural that included music and a
mobile app. The piece is at 5300 Landsdowne Ave.[29]
June 2019: Baltimore artists Jessie Unterhalter and Katey Truhn along with curator Ryan Strand Greenberg created Folding the Prism, a mural that highlights the textile history of the Spring Garden neighborhood of Philadelphia. The piece is located at 12th and Spring Gardens Streets.[30]
November 2020: artists Paul Santoleri and Abdul Karim Awad created "Light of the Northeast", a mural that features the Statue of Liberty. The mural is located at 6826 Bustleton Avenue in Philadelphia.[31]
^Maialetti, David; Adelman, Jacob; Graham, Kristen A. (June 7, 2020).
"'My eyes feel at peace now'". Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from
the original on October 26, 2022. Retrieved 2022-10-26.