When Kelsey Montague painted her 2014, larger-than-life butterfly mural in New York City with the hashtag #WhatLiftsYou, she didn’t expect her career to get a lift from one of the Big Apple’s most famous residents: Taylor Swift.
“Like a week in, Taylor Swift stood with [the mural],” Montague told Know Your Value contributor and Weekend TODAY’s Joelle Garguilo. “She put up the [Instagram] post and it was literally like one of those ‘Oh my gosh’ [moments]. It created a buzz and it kind of gave me hope.”
Montague, whose style is colorful, bright and positive, was even commissioned by the singer this year to do another massive butterfly mural in Nashville to celebrate “Me,” the first single off Swift’s new album “Lover.” It featured Swift’s beloved cats along with rainbows, hearts and flowers.
“It’s amazing. I’m so grateful that she likes my work,” Montague said. It’s such a compliment having another creative do that.”
With her popularity on the rise, Montague is close to completing her 300th mural in five years. Her creations, including a five-story burst of hearts along Manhattan’s High Line, a peach tree with a swing and ladder in Georgia and a bunch of balloons in Boston, are posted on social media by some of her 137,000 followers with the hashtag #WhatLiftsYou.
“With #WhatLiftsYou, I wanted to create something that was part of the art but also use social media in a positive way,” Montague said. Her signature butterflies, hot air balloons, and dragonflies and more can be found on six continents.
A signature aspect of Montague’s work is the way she invites passerbys to make themselves part of her art. People often pose in flight as the center of a butterfly, on a rope swing, or smile atop a mermaid tail, alongside a multi-story giraffe, or under a wave. Then, her artwork lives a second interactive life online, as people post their photos with her hashtag.
“If it’s used in the right way, it’s life-changing,” Montague said of social media. “I can say, I have a voice and I’m here as an artist because of the community and the support I have gotten from people I don’t know.” She said her fans’ praise on social media has given her “courage and a voice as an artist” – something she’ll always be grateful for.
While her artwork is uplifted by strangers, Montague’s business partner is her closest friend and relative: Her sister Courtney Montague works as the operations director and manages the company’s public relations, clients and logistics on worksites.
“We’re on a lift and we’re still running our business,” Montague says of the sisters’ day-to-day, where she paints from a forklift. “We’re a two-woman shop. We’ll, you know, stop the lift and I’ll start drawing and my sister’s on, like, five phone calls and that’s for the next three months of projects.”
The two are aware that street art is traditionally male-dominated field. She issued a call-to-action to all female artists: “Go for it.”









