[ Music and applause ] >> Michal Pilato: Thank you. Thank you so much. This is truly an honor for me. My whole life I've been painting murals. Since I was five years old I was doing artwork at the Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts with my mother. The murals were merely a backdrop for the stage of life. In 1996, I met Yuri Karabosh, who was a friend, a teacher, and a mentor and we did about ten murals here in State College and we were working on a mural on the Deli Restaurant across the street from where the inspiration mural now is. I was looking across the street at this big blank wall and I was drooling, I was going oh my God I would love to paint that building. The owner of the Deli Restaurant overheard me and he said, "Michael what would you paint on that wall?" I said, "Andy Zangilli you know, could I go home and think about that." I went home that night and I thought about my life. I thought about the community in State College. I thought about the Broadway shows I went to at the Eisenhower. It thought about all my artist friends. I thought about the musicians who would entertain us every night. I thought about the great professors at Penn State who inspire every day. I thought about the students who are so energetic and bring life into our community. And then I thought of a title. I said, "Let's call it Inspiration." I went back and I talked with Andy, he loved the idea and he said, you know, go across the street and talk to the Herbovich's [ assumed spelling ] who own the building and talk to the student bookstore. They also liked the idea so Yuri and I went to different business owners and different people in the community and everybody that we went to supported the project. I knew the piece would be an educational tool. I also knew that it would help teach. But a lot of things that I didn't know happened. This is the mural behind me. It's 100 feet long. I'd like to share with you some stories that happened during that mural process. I was working on Eugene Lederer, who was a Penn State renaissance person. He also donated a park here in the community called Lederer Park that me and my twin brother would go and do artwork in many times. While I was working on him, I got a phone call from my ex-wife telling me that one of her students from the Friends School had died and was hit by a car right in front of Lederer Park. So I called Andrew Friedman's mother and I said I don't know where you go when you die but I think your son would have taken that walk with Mr. Lederer. So I painted the two of them together and I put love on the chalkboard and his family and friends came out and teachers and they all painted love over and over again and some of them still come today and paint it. It's getting thicker and thicker. I felt the power of art and I felt art in healing. One of the other stories I'd like to share with you is Colonel Russell. Colonel Russell was one of the founders here of the Special Olympics and the United Way's day of caring and he's pictured there with his late wife Eileen. Colonel Russell is looking across the street at the Deli Restaurant at another small mural of himself the age he was when he went into Iwo Jima. He went in with 1200 men and on the fifth day of battle he had 500 men left. His good friend was next to him with tears streaming through the black sand on his face and he goes, "That's the most beautiful thing I've ever seen." Colonel Russell turns to see what he's looking at and it's the guys raising the flag on the side of Mt. Suribachi so he's right directly across the street from the mural again at the whales and if you walk up and you look in the eye of the whale, you'll see the guys raising the flag from Mt. Suribachi. [ applause ] Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. There were so many stories; I went to different universities and did lectures about communities and I was lucky enough to go to Williamsport, Pennsylvania to Lycoming College. It's a wonderful community. You know, I was just so impressed with all their stories and I also realized very quickly that their community has stories such as ours. Through 2010 and the chamber of commerce there, we received hundreds of letters from people of their inspirational stories. We went through those letters and those are over the 400 people that are on their walls there. It's the largest outdoor portraiture mural in the world. Mr. William Schreyer and his wife, I went to them, we had raised half of the money and we were having trouble because there were so many different organizations trying to get money in that community. And I went there and he could tell that I was nervous. And you know and he said, "Michael, I want to teach you one thing. You just have to ask me what you want and I'll either say yes or no." So I asked him to match the money that we had raised and he says yes. I was so happy, I walked outside of his office and I was like, thank you, God and I had tears rolling down my face. I went back to Mr. Schreyer a year later and I said, "Mr. Schreyer, you're going to hate that you taught me that one thing." He said, "Michael, what do you need?" And I asked him for a substantial large amount of money and he looked at me and he said, "Michael, I'm going to do this for you but when you walk out of my office could you please not scream and shout?" [ laughing ] And then the terrible day of September 11th came. On the mural on Williamsport and the mural at State College, it actually happened before then, excuse me. I went out with Yuri Karabash and we painted symbolic images on the wall. Ten firefighters were honored at Beaver Stadium at a Nebraska football game right after Penn State. They came to the mural and they got a tour. They went across the street to the Deli Restaurant and they said, "Yo, Mike come over for a beer." Went over, drew a picture on a napkin very quickly of a firefighter, put 22 in the helmet and wrote a poem for them. One week later Tony Martin sent a photocopy of that back to me with a picture of his cousin who had died and they were identical and he was from fire station number 22. So I painted this picture of Saint Nick and I put all the guys who died behind him and I put his cousin right behind Saint Nick and I gave it to the firehouse for a Christmas present. Ever since then, I've been going up and having great meals with them; I've been on the fire truck with them and they honored me with two crosses made out of the steel of the twin towers. One of them is in the mural in Williamsport and one of them is in the mural in State College. 80 firefighters buff those crosses for an hour a day for 80 days straight. I ground the metal off the back of the crosses and when we put the crosses up, we put religious symbols. Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity, [ inaudible ] and Taoism and Muslim and we mixed the metal from the crosses into all the different symbols. For the last 11 years, I've done a 48 hour vigil. This is a piece from Williamsport called Never Forget. I was sharing stories, people, families that thought, you know, it was the worst day. A day that they thought they wouldn't smile, they were smiling. Again, I felt the power of art and my students through the Public Art Academy who took part it in also felt the power of art and art in healing. One of the stories in Williamsport I'd like to share with you is about Marshall Post. Marshall Post was nominated by so many people for two reasons. The latter reason mostly. In World War II he was a gunner on a plane. He did 150 missions over Suribachi, which was unheard of. He came out of that war, like a lot of veterans and said you can never be a winner of a war, only the better loser. He had five major heart attacks before he was 40 years old and he asked God. "God, why am I still alive? Why am I so fortunate with my family and successful?" And he came out of that with, every person I meet from this day forward, they're going to have a smile on their face when they walk away from me. I told that story at Sheridan Elementary in Williamsport and 60 children wrote Marshall letters that said Marshall, we heard you were nominated to be on the wall because you make people smile, so we want to write to you about people that make us smile. Marshall was dying at the time, so I took that painting into his deathbed and his daughter was reading him the letters while I was painting him. He was a fly fisherman so flies are glued to his hat that he tied, he died the first day of fishing season so his halo is made of fish doing the infinity symbol. That's his handprint above his head and he wrote a poem especially for the mural that his grandson came in and scribed. Those are his grandchildren's footprints; they're also in the lens of the camera and he's taking a picture across the street of the other mural of his girlfriend waving at him and his daughter and his son in law. Again, I felt the power of art. Another story is of Kyri Hall. I was painting the mural and I heard the news that Kyri Hall had died of a heart attack during a Williamsport basketball game. So I came out and I painted Kyri. Kyri was all about diversity and unity so he's got the rainbow colored shirt. His family members' handprints all all through him. Handprints from children from the center are all around him. Letters to this day from hundreds of people as you can see there, his family, his friends came out and did that. He loved BB King so I put BB King in front of him and he got to meet BB King in Williamsport at the Community Arts Theater. He also loved the Nutcracker Suite so the Nutcracker lies down there below him. That's his coach Allen Taylor and that's his little brother Altimar. His mother told me that the night Kyri died, his little brother went outside and saw a halo around the moon and he went inside and he said, "Mom, you've got to come out and see this. Kyri's an angel." His little brother Altimar, when he came to the mural and saw him, he said, "I told you he's an angel. I told you he's an angel!" And he was running around the parking lot. It was amazing. So in his eye, when you go to the mural and you look into his eyes, you'll see the moon and the halo and he wrote this story about the moon and the halo on the piece below him. Again, I felt the power of art. In Williamsport, tons of tour busses would come in. It was a route from Washington, DC to Niagara Falls and Williamsport was the halfway point. And I would explain to international people the stories of the United States, also bringing up stories of State College. And I found out that their stories were like ours and they were like, oh we would love to have a mural like this in our country. So I started to think how wonderful it would be to take the mural in State College, stitch it on the internet to the mural in Williamsport, and from Williamsport, we would stitch murals all over the world working with artists with different styles so it would metamorphasize. I told this at a rotary club in Emporium PA where we were doing another mural and there was a woman in the audience by the name of Ann Olivet. Ann Olivet was getting ready to go to Norway to meet with her nephew who is a famous comedian, Jan Bach [ assumed spelling ] . She said, "Why don't you and Yuri come with us?" So we took the money that we raised on that project and we bought plane tickets. We flew to Norway and we met with him and we also were amazed by how people just loved the idea. By the end of that meeting we were in connection with the crown prince and princess, we had met with the Prime Minister Bondevic and it was just amazing. From there, through Christina Kluger in Sweden, we opened up into many countries around the world. But something happened on our way to Moldova where Yuri was from. We left to go to the airport, we were in Frankfurt at the airport, my board of directors was telling me how scary Moldova was. They were sending me articles and letters. They also sent me beautiful articles but I chose to look at the scary articles. My friends would say, you know, the guy from Ghostbusters, the evil guy, he was from Moldova. [ laughing ] When we got there, there were 10 gentleman standing there. White faces, dark under their eyes, no teeth, tattoos, short hair and they were all looking at me mean. They were from Moldova and I was like oh my God where am I going? We got on the plane, we, you know, we were diverted because there was fog over Moldova to Romania. We spent the night in Romania; I came down and there they were. They said, "Hey American, come over, the plane's been delayed a little bit more." I went over and it turned out that they were all in different countries working for their families, their stories were beautiful. I was a victim of sensationalism. I told them, you know, "Why were you looking at me mean?" And they said, "Because you were looking at us mean." [ laughter ] One of my board members alerted me of a wonderful woman by the name of Stella Rotaru who saved people from all over the globe on sex trafficking in Moldova. So I got on Facebook and I Facebooked over 300 Stella Rotarus. It was the day before we were leaving Moldova and she got a hold of me. I met with Stella and now she's a part of the world mural project and Stella told me, you know the papers come in, the news comes in, you know they dig up nine year old stories. They sometimes put people in harm's way. They're not showing the incredible work that she's doing and the country's doing to eradicate that problem. And we decided to make that a major part of the world mural in Moldova, to help sway the opinions of people. At this time I also heard terrible news in my own personal life of my daughter. My daughter was raped and it was just a really hard time in my life. And then the terrible day that we all felt. I was in Williamsport when I heard the news about Jerry Sandusky and what happened with him. You know, it's hard for me to talk about this. You know, I read the Grand Jury report; a mother of one of the victims emailed me and said can you please take Jerry Sandusky off of the wall. I drove up to State College thinking I was going to do this very quickly, I hadn't shaven, I come by the mural and there's hundreds of news cameras, satellite dishes, I thought that somebody had vandalized the mural. I got out of my car and it was like a movie. People were rushing me with microphones. I was petrified and I was not happy about what I had to do. This news soon went to millions of people of what I did. Yuri Karabosh designed a painting. That day there's a lion on the mural, a mountain lion, which is our Nittany Lion and the Native Americans that I met in Williamsport would say that the mountain lion represents courage, strength and dignity. And that's exactly what it took those young men to come and speak out so Yuri designed this which is now a mural. At the opening of this, my daughter came and she spoke out. She talked about what happened to her. After she spoke out, a woman who was 70 years old came up to my daughter and said, "I was raped like you when I was your age and I never spoke out about it and never seeked help. Listening to you, I am now going to get help." I have never been so proud in my life. Joe Paterno passed away and I came up like I did so many times to so many people on my murals, and I painted a halo over his head. The halos represented, to me, as soon as the people would walk by, I wanted them to see that we have a short time here on Earth, as all the halos appeared to do the great things like the people on the mural behind me. But it was taken as sanctification all over the world and it should have been because that what that symbol means. So I decided to remove all the halos from the mural and simply put rest in peace with a birth date and the death. The controversy was unbelievable but also I realized, as a public artist, that's exactly our job. The 48 hours this year was of Michael Murphy. We all know Michael Murphy. He was a great man, he was a vet or he got the Congressional Medal of Honor saving one of his Navy Seals. His father came out and put, and mother, and put their handprint in the mural. When they put their handprint in the mural, his father said, "The first phone call I got after my boy died was from Hillary Clinton and the second phone call was from the Paternos," and this really helped in the healing. So I, and they also sent us white roses. So I put a white rose with Michael, I had put a white rose with Joe and also one with Sue Paterno. The real healing started when I painted Dora McQuaid in the seat where Jerry Sandusky was. I removed the blue ribbon that was on his seat and I put it in her hair. Dora McQuaid is a Penn State grad, she taught at Penn State and she also, for the last 11 years, has helped thousands of victims become survivors. She, herself, was a victim. She's coming up next month and she's working with my daughter and other survivors and victims of sexual violence and they're going to do a poem together and through the blue ribbon in her hair, you're going to see that poem and when you're there with your iPhone and your iPad thanks to the 367 students at Penn State, you're going to hear them speaking a positive message and also the resources that are available. My favorite part of all the murals are handprints. Yuri and I have done thousands of them so right now I'd like to ask Sean to come up on stage and Yuri Karabosh to come out. Sean organized this event and is the director of this event [ applause ] and I found out last night [ applause ] and I found out last night from Sean's father that when he was a little boy, he came out and he put his handprint on the mural so this is full circle. This is a piece for the world mural which will actually be here in State College which all the artists on the world mural will be doing. Sean, what you're looking at within the murals are people from the past and the present and your handprint is the future. Everybody that Yuri and I meet, the inspirational people around the world the people that we paint, they have one thing in common. They're passionate about what they do and they surround themselves with passionate people. So if you find this, you can do anything in life, anything at all. And maybe one day we will paint you on our murals. Thank you. [ Applause ] >> Thank you. [ Applause ]