Brawl on the Square

Posted on October 2008   Page 5 of 9
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But before the first brushstroke could be made, Jane Golden insisted on calling a meeting of Rittenhouse residents. Over nearly 25 years, she had learned the hard way that it was better to deal with any neighborhood opposition to a mural early in the process rather than later. And while she’d worked in every Philadelphia neighborhood considered “tough,” Golden knew that the areas considered most genteel could be the most dangerous for her mission.

She and Webb hadn’t mentioned it to Paul Rosen at that point, but they’d had a proposed mural a few blocks south of Rittenhouse Square squelched by a small group of neighbors several years earlier. “A few people were able to block it,” Webb says. “They would not allow my design to even be looked at. It was just, No murals, no murals. There’s a feeling with some people that murals are a symbol that says, ‘Your neighborhood is blighted.’”

It’s hard to imagine how anyone around Rittenhouse Square could see a mural — no matter what it represented — giving the neighborhood the taint of blight. Yes, as the Inquirer would soon discover for a front-page series that was earth-shaking in its obviousness, there are homeless people who sleep, eat, bathe, and even have sex in the Square. A few of the last remaining townhouses on the perimeter are vacant and falling into disrepair. But two sleek and pricey apartment buildings are going up around the Square. Allan Domb’s company is still marketing the location as our equivalent to Palm Beach or Central Park. And resale prices in the established apartment buildings are strong.

“It’s a bunch of rich people who spent about $500 to $1,000 a square foot for their apartments,” says mural proponent and Rosen partner Alan Epstein. “And they’re quite proud of that kind of price appreciation. What do they want, a picture of a blond-haired woman in a pageboy?”





AT THE FIRST neighborhood meeting to discuss Rosen’s Justice mural, the polite veneer of Square social interaction was on display. On a warm evening in April, about three dozen people gathered in the garden of the Philadelphia Art Alliance at the corner of 18th and Rittenhouse streets.

That’s not a huge number, but the organizers from the Mural Arts Program hadn’t factored in an important impediment to communication in such a ritzy neighborhood. Their usual method of announcing a public meeting — spreading leaflets door-to-door — ran into strict rules forbidding leafleting at those apartment buildings where space costs $1,000 a square foot. “We might have been a little naive in that respect,” Golden admits.

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User Comments:

Many incorrect facts
Posted by Anonymous | Sep. 26, 2008 at 9:28 PM
COMMENT:
Spend a tad more time researching prior to going to print. There are many mistakes in this article posed as facts. For instance, the Weiss/Pinkenson pair have lived on the square since 1988. Just one example of many misrepresentations.
A portrait was painted here, if not there
Posted by Anonymous | Sep. 26, 2008 at 10:03 PM
COMMENT:
it's a shame how this article paints such an ugly elitest portrait (ironic) of some really forward thinking, outspoken intelligent people. Their verbosity however seems pointed, and edited to portray them (Paul) as elitest jerk offs only. They do a lot of good too. Where's the mention of that?
Is this Hollywood!
Posted by Anonymous | Oct. 12, 2008 at 7:37 AM
COMMENT:
I thought I had escaped tabloid lifestyles when I fled California! Rosen has nothing more significant to fight for? To fight to the death, no less. Does he feel bullied by the wealthy, for this certainly is not a very meaningful fight for equality. For instance: What is his wife doing for the homeless of her Square?
Rittenhouse Square Mural
Posted by Ella | Mar. 6, 2009 at 5:57 PM
COMMENT:
I was interested to read about the controversy over the Justice mural commissioned by Paul Rosen in Rittenhouse Square. But I do not live in Philadelphia, and have not seen any update about the mural. I would really like to know if it was completed. I hope that it was. I would love to read an update.
 
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