NEW YORK — The new 1 World Trade Center opened to great fanfare last month as the first tenants moved into the 1,776-foot tower through a vast lobby dominated by a monumental abstract mural. The color-splashed, 90-by-15-foot painting is among more than a dozen works selected or commissioned for the skyscraper.
Asher Edelman, whose New York gallery curated the works, said the only criteria were that they be abstract, thought-provoking and exciting enough to get people "to look up from their hand-held devices and actually look around them."
A look at the artists and their works:
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JOSE PARLA
The Miami-born, Cuban-American artist is known for his vibrant, large-scale works, which can also be found at Brooklyn's Barclays Center and the Brooklyn Academy of Music. His graffiti-like mural "ONE: Union of the Senses" is his largest work to date and was created as a symbol for diversity and unity.
"With the title, I wanted to convey unity among all people," Parla said. "I wanted to use as many colors as possible. The diversity of color represents people."
Working out of his Brooklyn studio for the better part of a year on the work, Parla described how he created some of the long strokes by climbing a ladder, putting his brush to the canvas and then jumping off.