Miranda Bergman is an American contemporary muralist born in 1947 and grew up in grew up in the San Francisco Mission District where she attended Balboa High School.[1] Bergman is known for of the seven women artists who in 1994 created the MaestraPeace mural,[2] the largest mural in San Francisco, which covers The Women's Building. Most of the murals created/co-created by Bergman straddles artistry and social activism, giving her a space to express both social struggles and cultural celebrations. She now lives in Oakland.[3]
In the 1970s, she joined other artists such as Jane Norling and Peggy Tucker in the Haight-Ashbury Muralists; this was a group formed during protests against the Vietnam War.[4] From 1972 to 1976 Bergman created labor-themed posters with Norling for the Working Peoples' Artists collective.[5] In 1978, She worked on a CETA-funded project with young women in the city's Juvenile Hall to paint murals inside their own cell doors, as part as other parts of the jail.
In 1986, Bergman worked with Juana Alicia, Hector Noel Méndez, Ariella Seidenberg, and Arch Williams to create the mural El Amancer (The Dawn) in a park in Managua, Nicaragua.[6] [7] Bergman and Alicia completed part of the work in the middle of the night, guarded by armed teenagers and "working in spite of the threat of a U.S.-backed Contra attack."
Her South Africa-themed photo collage was included in the Syracuse Cultural Workers' 1987 calendar.[8]
She worked and lived in the Palestinian city of Ramallah for nine weeks in 1989 with three other Jewish-American women artists and teachers as part of the Break the Silence mural project.[9] The mural they created together is in the Popular Arts Center in Ramallah, Palestine.[10] Bergman's poster Tribute to Palestinian Women was included in the 1989-1990 traveling exhibition In Celebration of the State of Palestine and is now part of the digital collection of The Palestine Poster Project Archives.[11]
In 1984 she co-created "The Culture Contains the Seed of Resistance That Blossoms into the Flower of Liberation" with O’Brien Thiele, the last intact mural among the famed PLACA murals of Balmy Alley in San Francisco.[12] This mural depicts a naturally beautiful landscape contrasted against women holding photographs of desaparecidos.[13] Aside from that, Bergman has worked on other murals during her time with the PLACA in the San Francisco Bay Area.[14] [15] In the 1990s, Bergman was also a consulting editor of .[16]
Bergman participated in the May, 2017 San Francisco SOMArts Cultural Center's exhibition, "Shifting Movements: Art Inspired by the Life and Activism of Yuri Kochiyama (1921-2014)."[17]