Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids is home to ArtPrize — one of the world's largest and most democratic art competitions — and its mural culture reflects that open spirit. The Heartside neighborhood packs more public art per block than almost anywhere in Michigan. Eastown's cafes and Heritage Hill's Victorian streetscapes frame a city that has made the radical choice to put art at the center of its civic identity.
Featured Artists
All artists →Tia Richardson
Grand Rapids native whose ArtPrize wins helped establish her as one of the city's most prominent public artists. Richardson's Heartside work draws on Odawa and Potawatomi river culture — the pre-contact communities who named and used the Grand River long before the city was incorporated. Her work is a pointed reminder of what "public" in public art truly means.
Marcus van der Berg
Dutch-American muralist who came to Grand Rapids for ArtPrize a decade ago and never left. His Eastown work marries Dutch Golden Age compositional values with West Michigan's indie commercial aesthetic — coffee shop windows and vintage record store facades rendered with the authority of a Vermeer interior.
Elena Petrova
Russian-born architectural illustrator who turned to murals as a way of documenting Grand Rapids' historic building stock. Petrova's Heritage Hill piece reconstructs seven demolished Victorian homes at true scale on the remaining wall of a surviving neighbor — a quiet act of architectural memory that has become a neighborhood landmark.