Face down on
a hard pedestal, Brower Hatcher's space traveler has crash-landed
in the midst of a Center City plaza. Above the 1,500-pound
bronze countenance, a 27-foot steel mesh "star trail"
stretches away into the sky like the tail of a meteor. Inside
the mesh, suspended objects suggest elements of civilization
or nature that Starman has picked up along the way:
a car, a wagon wheel, snakes, a pineapple, fish, a falling
person, geometric shapes, and more. The plaza surrounding
the sculpture takes the form of an ancient amphitheater and
garden, with columns, classical fragments, vines, and other
plantings, and a mysterious small pyramid. The columns also
echo the neoclassical architecture of nearby buildings, especially
the Walnut Street Theatre across the street. Surprisingly,
Starman's face is serene and classical despite his
crash.
Hatcher created this work for the Parkway Development Corporation
as part of the Redevelopment Authority's Fine Arts Program.
By mixing past, present, and future in a fantastic collision
of civilizations, he hoped to entice viewers to reflect on
"what we have been, what we are, and what we may become."
When construction of the nearby building caused the plaza
to be renovated in 2002, the developer engaged the artist
to redesign the space and the sculpture within it.
Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny
Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
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