arts&life art / on the cover Rise! Beverly Fishman’s dynamic new mural shines. SUZANNE CHESSLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER everly Fishman’s art- work has long been in the spotlight, but her latest project opens up to sun- light. Rise, a colorful and massive abstract mural spanning 170 feet by 60 feet — the largest design she has ever originated — covers the north-facing wall of the Detroit City Club Apartments under construc- tion at the Downtown site once holding the Statler Hotel. “I’m a city girl at heart and wanted to make a dynamic impact,” Fishman says about her approach to the commis- sion greeting onlookers along Washington Boulevard. “The title was chosen to reflect the theme of light — sunrise and sunset — as well as the posi- tive changes that are occur- ring in the Motor City right now.” Fishman, who teamed up with Motown Sign to complete the installation, takes on inde- pendent assignments while serving as artist-in-residence and head of the painting department at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills. Segments of her earlier work have expressed scientific and pharmaceutical themes. The mural, estimated to cost $100,000, was commis- sioned at the direction of Jonathan Holtzman, CEO of City Club Apartments and a longtime Cranbrook Academy B of Art board member. “Art really adds dimension to a city,” says Holtzman, a member of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) who is also involved with donating segments of the vast literary collection of his late father, Irwin T. Holtzman, to the National Library of Israel as it gets a new facility. “Beverly Fishman’s mural is dynamic and colorful, and the idea that a Cranbrook artist-in-resi- dence did the design really ties together Detroiters in improv- ing our city.” The outdoor piece adorns a multi-use development under construction by Holtzman’s family-owned company with a 100-year history and a com- mitment to art programming in its structures. The mural adds to the artist’s lengthy resume, which lists represen- tation in numerous exhibits in and out of the country as well as more than two dozen public and private collections. Among the out-of-state museums that hold Fishman’s work are the Miami Art Museum, Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio and Stamford Museum and Nature Center in Connecticut. Fishman, who earned her master’s degree at Yale and taught in the graduate pro- gram at the College of New Rochelle and the Maryland 42 jn June 14 • 2018