Meg Saligman
Meg Saligman is an internationally recognized American artist. She is best known for large scale murals and has painted more than fifty murals internationally, including several of the largest murals in the United States. The artist is known for mixing classical and contemporary aspects of painting, and for her community centered process. Saligman's seminal murals were painted in the late 1990s-early 2000s are credited as exceptionally influential to the contemporary mural movement. Her work resides as permanent public art all over the world, but is also part of private collections including the Johnson and Johnson works on paper collection and the Rutgers University Museum of Fine Arts print collection.
Early life and education
Saligman grew up in the small town of Olean, New York. In high school she helped to paint one of the murals in Olean. Saligman's first independent mural was painted on the front of a sweater factory that no longer exists. It was owned by a man that is now her husband. She attended Washington University in St. Louis where she earned a degree in painting, graduating as the Valedictorian of her program's class.Art
Saligman is known for mixing classical and contemporary painting techniques with an emphasis on figurative compositions with abstract accents. Her practice is focused on community, collaboration, and site specificity. Saligman's process often relates to themes of social practice in contemporary art, with the idea that exchange is essential between the viewer or participant, the artist, and the artwork. Saligman was one of, if not the, first muralist to utilize a grid and 'paint by numbers' approach to large scale mural painting. Saligman also popularized the use of mural cloth - where she would paint smaller sections of the mural in her studio on parachute cloth and then glue that cloth to the wall.Notable works
Saligman's public art can be divided into three distinct, but related, bodies of work: large-scale exterior murals, hybrid interior/exterior projects, and installations.Murals
- We Will Not Be Satisfied Until
- Water Tower, Water Tale
- Hues of the Heart
- Magic Hour
- The Evolving Faces of Nursing
- Fertile Ground
- Passing Through
- Theater of Life
- Once in a Millennium Moon
- Common Threads
Other murals include Philadelphia Muses on 13th and Locust streets, a multimedia Theatre of Life on Broad and Lombard streets, over the Schuylkill Expressway, and the paint and LED light installation at Broad and Vine streets, . Saligman's work can be viewed nationally in Shreveport, Louisiana, with Once in a Millennium Moon, and in Omaha, Nebraska, with Fertile Ground. Saligman's latest work, ' on MLK Boulevard in Chattanooga, TN. The mural is the largest mural in the Southeastern United States as well as one of the five largest murals in the United States.
Architecturally integrated works
- Woven Sanctuary
- Water, Earth, Fire
- Safety Net
- The Mustard Tree
Installations
- Our Common Ground - Vote for the Good Life
- Knotted Grotto