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For 25 years the “Declaration of Independence,” a 112-foot mural of a classically Greco-Roman sculpture, looked over one of Philadelphia’s busiest intersections at 15th and Arch streets from the towering wall of what is now a Courtyard by Marriott hotel.
Artist Peter Pagast had used one of the statues at City Hall across the street to evoke the ancient Roman influence of the American republic.
But no more. After a quarter century of exposure to the elements, “Declaration” had to come down.
“It was badly deteriorated,” said Mural Arts Philadelphia project director Brian Campbell. “The building ownership had approached us about doing something. They wanted it restored or replaced.”
Campbell said the cost of restoring would be the same as creating a new mural, so Mural Arts opted for the latter, asking celebrated street artist and designer Shepard Fairey, who came to widespread prominence when he designed the “Hope” poster during the first Barack Obama presidential campaign, to come up with something new.
Fairey’s “Uplift Justice” is strikingly different from its predecessor, whose monochrome palate has been replaced by vibrant pops of teal, aquamarine, scarlet red and yellow. A woman’s face looks upward toward a scale of justice.
So different, but not really. The works from Fairey and Pagast both deliver bedrock ideas about American democracy.
“The last lines in the Pledge of Allegiance are, ‘With liberty and justice for all,’” Fairey said, stressing the final two words. “This to me is about representing that concept of justice, and that relationship between a symbol and our actions in the wake of considering the symbol.”
Shepard Fairey stands on a rooftop beside his new mural, ”Uplife Justice.” (Emma Lee/WHYY)
Fairey has created other large-scale public artworks in Philadelphia before, but typically made in wheat paste, which is not designed to last long. Pieces he had installed in Center City and Fishtown over the last 11 years have since disappeared.