Art in the Parks
Through collaborations with a diverse group of arts organizations and artists, Parks brings to the public both experimental and traditional art in many park locations. Please browse our list of current exhibits and our archives of past exhibits below. You can also see past grant opportunities or read more about the Art in the Parks Program.
Public Art Map and Guide
Find out which current exhibits are on display near you, and browse our permanent monument collection.
Search Current and Past Exhibits
2019
Bronx
Various artists, River Rising/Sube el Rio: An Exposition of Science, Art and Technology
June 30, 2018 to June 29, 2019
Starlight Park, Bronx
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
“River Rising/Sube el Rio: An Exposition of Science, Art and Technology” in Starlight Park consists of eight sculptures by 15 artists informed by the 1918 Bronx International Exposition of Science, Arts and Industries, which took place on this same site 100 years ago. This is the first major public art exhibition to be located in Starlight Park, a newly renovated park bound by the Bronx River and Sheridan Expressway.
Produced by the Bronx River Art Center with site curation by KaN Landscape Design.
Evan Bishop, Hip-Hop for Hope!
June 15, 2018 to June 14, 2019
Latinos Unidos Garden, Bronx
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
As an artist born and raised in the Bronx during the ’70s and ‘80s, Bishop was heavily influenced by the emergence of the Hip Hop culture. He worked alongside artists from ArTech, a Bronx-based art studio that is supported by AHRC, a family governed organization committed to finding ways for people with intellectual and other developmental disabilities to build full lives. The artists incorporated their artworks alongside the words: PEACE, UNITY, HOPE and LOVE.
This project is part of NYC Parks GreenThumb’s Art in the Gardens - Shed Murals project, an initiative that provides local artists with the opportunity to collaborate with community gardens as a platform to create and display their art.
Dionisio Cortes Ortega, Sitting Together
July 2, 2018 to June 1, 2019
Joyce Kilmer Park, Bronx
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
Inspired by the neighboring Bronx Supreme Courthouse, Sitting Together critiques the established proceedings of courtroom cases. The sculptures places the plaintiff and defendant within modified witness stands to encourage empathy and understanding, and redefine how we think of conflict resolution. Color and seating direction in each sculpture address the severity of the conflicts.
This exhibition was made possible by the Art in the Parks: UNIQLO Park Expressions Grant.
Brooklyn
ArtisticAfro, Together, We Will Grow
October 1, 2019 to October 31, 2020
Eden’s Community Garden, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
This mural’s inspiring design invites neighborhood children to want to learn about the benefits of growing their own food. Through that bond with gardening, the hope is that the garden will eventually become their safe space. Natural elements are matched with the garden's motto "Together, we will grow." The front of the shed carries this similar theme with an image of someone's hands holding a potted plant with a seedling inside. Through loving, nurturing, and growing plants, you love, nurture, and grow yourself.
This project is part of NYC Parks GreenThumb’s Art in the Gardens - Shed Murals project, an initiative that provides local artists with the opportunity to collaborate with community gardens as a platform to create and display their art.
Leonard Ursachi, Bunker Head
October 10, 2019 to October 9, 2020
University Place, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
Romanian artist Leonard Ursachi’s “Bunker Head” is a large, stylized human head – evocative of bunker embrasures- covered in stainless steel mirrors. .The sculpture “bandaged” in gauze, evokes not only the wounded, but also the healing. The highly stylized nature of its “face” will reference iconic heads from countless cultures, from shaman to soldier, from poet to prophet. The artist carved the sculpture in rigid foam and covered it with Styrocrete, a cement-like material that is used on top of foam in building construction. The “openings” will be shallow recesses covered with stainless steel mirrors.
Evan Rossell and Dee Rosse, Tune Squad Court
August 1, 2019 to July 31, 2020
Blue Playground, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
The mural features beloved Looney Tunes characters: Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Sylvester, Tweety, and Taz. This exhibition is presented by Warner Brothers.
Bill Soltis, Under the Sun
August 27, 2019 to July 31, 2020
Greenstreet on Flatbush Avenue between 7th Avenue and Park Place, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
Under the Sun is one of a series of sculptures by Brooklyn-based artist Bill Soltis about experimentation with the human form, positive and negative relationships and the interplay between the figure and a sculptural environment. The final piece is a marriage of these elements and the environment in which the sculpture rests. In his art, Soltis experiments with shapes, images, patterns, and lines, allowing the construction process to create the idea, rather than forcing a completely formed idea into becoming an object. As a subject, the human figure lends itself well to this open process. It can be left representational or made abstract. Its form can be smooth, angular, sharp, or curved, with active, passive, or emotive gestures. He often works with welded metal due to its versatility, permanence, and strength and ability to survive indoor, outdoors, in gardens, or urban settings equally well.
This exhibition is presented in partnership with North Flatbush Business Improvement District.
Patrice Payne, Pillar Murals
July 6, 2019 to July 5, 2020
Marion Hopkinson Playground, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
This exhibition repurposes six concrete pillars situated along the park’s pathways from the Chauncey Street entrance, which were recently scraped, cleaned, and repainted during an It's My Park project organized by the Marion Street Park Block Association, a local community organization. Local artist Patrice Payne has created six 20 by 20 inch mini-murals on the tops of each of the pillars, each depicting familiar neighborhood scenes or local floral and fauna. Nothin’ But Net depicts a group of basketball players who use the adjacent courts, while The Many Faces of Brooklyn show the diversity of the surrounding neighborhood. A colorful water hydrant in Brooklyn Summers evokes warmer weather, as does the shade of a tree in A Mulberry Tree Grows in Ocean Hill. The park’s unofficial bird can be seen in House Sparrow, and the ubiquitous Scarlet Runner Bean makes an appearance atop another pillar.
Funding for this exhibition has been provided by the Citizens Committee for New York City and Marion Street Park Block Association.
MADSTEEZ, Together As ONE
June 18, 2019 to June 17, 2020
Park Slope Playground, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
Mark Paul Deren, aka MADSTEEZ is known for his vivid, large-scale, multi-layered paintings, where strange and familiar figures are integrated into abstract landscapes. His artistic approach is influenced by being almost blind in one eye, where he sees only abstractions and lines of colors, most notably reds, purples, and oranges, which appear frequently in his work.
This exhibition is presented by EA Sports.
Fitzhugh Karol, Field's Jax I
April 29, 2019 to April 28, 2020
Clumber Corner, Brooklyn
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)
Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.
Field’s Jax, created by Brooklyn-based sculptor Fitzhugh Karol, is a series of four works created using steel recycled from a previous single large sculpture, now re-conceived as smaller and more interactive sculptures. Scattered throughout DUMBO, the sculptures’ lyrical arrangement encourages pedestrians to try to spot the next one and explore the neighborhood. For Field’s Jax, Karol worked with nine parts from his monumental sculpture Eyes, which was on view in Staten Island’s Tappen Park in 2017. The other two sculptures are located at Front Street at York Street, and in front of Bridge Street on the corner of Prospect and Jay Streets, and exhibited with the NYC DOT Art Program.
This exhibition is presented by the DUMBO BID.