Inspired by
The Dream Garden by Maxfield Parrish, the works in
the lobby of the ARA Tower are incorporated into an architectural
setting that includes a waterfall, trees and smaller plants,
and a reflecting pool. Behind large marble columns the viewer
sees a three-paneled acrylic-on-canvas mural by Ronald Bateman.
In these panels a stream winds through an idyllic pastoral
landscape, passing Philadelphia's original waterworks (where
City Hall now stands) and the Fairmount Waterworks. In the
foreground the stream becomes a small lake that seems to spill
out of the mural into an actual waterfall.
From left to right in the mural panels, the scene changes
from early morning to midday to evening—a theme of passing
time symbolized by the moving water and echoed in Walter Erlebacher's
two bronze nudes that flank the waterfall. The left-hand sculpture,
S'élever, represents a woman rising from sleep;
the figure on the right, S'endormir, is a woman preparing
for sleep. The sculptures bring the dreamlike time of the
murals into the present, offering what Erlebacher described
as "allegories of the daily routine." People rise,
come to the building to work in their offices, and return
home to sleep again as time passes. The project was initiated
through the Redevelopment Authority's 1% program. The garden
and waterfall were designed by Cope Linder in collaboration
with Bower Lewis Thrower.
Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny
Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
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