Featured Press

  • Preserving Public Art: The Murals of Meg Saligman
    | 3/29/22

    Preserving Public Art: The Murals of Meg Saligman

    Meg Saligman is a muralist, public artist, and conservation specialist who has worked across the country and around the world. She discusses her experiences ...
  • Mural Arts: Common Threads Restoration
    | 3/29/22

    Mural Arts: Common Threads Restoration

    Standing tall throughout the years, Common Threads, remains one of our most popular murals. When it was originally painted by Meg Saligman in 1998, and was M...
  • Perspective and Perception at PAFA
    | 3/29/22

    Perspective and Perception at PAFA

    This video is about Meg Saligman - PAFA
  • For Pope Francis' Visit, a 'Knotted Grotto' of Prayers, Struggles
    | 3/29/22

    For Pope Francis' Visit, a 'Knotted Grotto' of Prayers, Struggles

    Pope Francis passed by "The Knotted Grotto", an art installation at the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia, on Saturday. How did the exhibit of ...
  • America's Boulevard: A Mural on MLK
    | 3/29/22

    America's Boulevard: A Mural on MLK

    Presented by http://1504.co
    Directed and edited by Tyler Jones
    Produced by Mark Slagle

    Watch the full film here: http://www.americasblvd.com

    Synopsis:
    Renowned artist Meg Saligman has been commissioned to paint one of the largest murals in the country on M.L. King Boulevard in Chattanooga, TN. As the artists attempt to reflect the rich and complex racial history of the neighborhood, they encounter a community at the crossroads of change, and one that is reflective of America’s yet unfulfilled dream of equality for all.

    This story explores the intersection of public art and redevelopment from the perspectives of local residents and non-local artists who come together to ask: What do we want to preserve in our collective memories?

    “...The naming of streets for King provides a glimpse into where the country is in terms of race relations. Although named streets commemorate the civil rights movement as a completed part of the country’s past, they speak, perhaps more importantly, to the still unfinished nature of King’s dream of racial equality and social justice.” -Derek H. Alderman, PhD (University of Tennessee)
  • Meet Meg Saligman