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.

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2023

Manhattan

Courtesy of the Fund for Park Avenue

Willie Cole, Willie Cole on Park Avenue
June 26, 2023 to November 10, 2023
Park Avenue at East 69th Street and East 70th Street, Manhattan
Park Avenue Malls, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

Titled 3000 Buddha Chandelier, Liberty Lantern, Soul Catcher and Dirt Devil these monumental sculptures take the form of four large-scale chandeliers made of thousands of plastic water bottles. Addressing the world-wide issue of the single use plastic bottle, the artist underscores the need for fresh drinking water while acknowledging the damage caused to the environment by its disposal.

This exhibition is presented by the Fund for Park Avenue, Alexander and Bonin and Express Newark.

Image courtesy of El Taller Latino Americano

Holly Wood and Fernand Brunschwig, Two Kinds of Nature
July 1, 2023 to November 9, 2023
Anibal Aviles Playground, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

Two Kinds of Nature refers to the fantasy world of Holly Wood and the ornithological world of Fernand Brunschwig. The exhibition is a display of two skilled artist as well as a display of two perspectives involving animals and local wildlife. It inspires one to remember that there are different points of view. And this is exactly what we turn to art for: to have us remember our fellow beings without losing ourselves.

This exhibition is presented by El Taller Latino Americano.

Image credit: Courtesy of the artist

Cheryl Wing-Zi Wong, AZIMUTH
November 29, 2022 to November 5, 2023
Pike Street Malls between East Broadway and Division Street, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

AZIMUTH is a recycled public artwork, previously installed in Washington DC as MERIDIAN. After over a year and a half outdoors, the modules were transported to New York City, rehabbed and transformed with a vibrantly colored makeover. Along with the final touches of a new ground mural, AZIMUTH provides a new community gathering spot on the Pike Street Mall. The pavilion activates this an empty and underused public park median, creating a new place to pause, frolic and play.

This exhibition is presented by the Chinatown Partnership.

Photo credit: Photo by Charles Roussel, courtesy of Nara Roesler Gallery

Raul Mourao, CAGE HEAD
March 20, 2023 to November 5, 2023
Park Avenue Malls, Manhattan
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Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:
With this sculpture, Brazilian artist Raul Mourão proposes a thoughtful intervention in the urban environment.  The sculpture’s mass, making use of gravity as a physical force, invites the audience to reflect on movement and fixity, weight and lightness; the delicate balance that binds society together and the potential repercussions when pressure is exerted upon it.

Image credit: Courtesy of the artists

Kevin Quiles Bonilla and Zaq Landsberg, For centuries, and ... (anticipated completion)
November 1, 2022 to October 31, 2023
Harlem Art Park, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

Thinking of both colonial Puerto Rican landscapes and the ubiquitous construction sites throughout New York City as thresholds and incomplete environments, this sculpture recreates a guard tower (or garita, in Spanish) from the historic fortresses of Old San Juan, built out of New York City construction fencing material. The work threads commonalities between two locations with long histories, and explores contemporary notions of colonialism as a precarious, never-ending project that affects anyone within it.

This exhibition is presented by Friends of Art Park Alliance and Art Lives Here.

Courtesy of the Fund for Park Avenue

Sophia Vari, Sophia Vari on Park Avenue
May 20, 2023 to October 31, 2023
East 52nd Street to East 63rd Street
Park Avenue Malls, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

This posthumous exhibition celebrates the monumental sculpture of Sophia Vari, an international visual artist known for polychrome sculptures, paintings, collage, and watercolors. Her exploration into form and balance has evolved into several stages. Vari pushed into the realm of dimensional space, as her nuanced geometric forms probe the relationship between the construction of physical space and the history of art. Her works are a permutation of shapes with a sense of lightness and suspension yet resolving space and structure with an imposing bearing.

This exhibition is presented by Nohra Haime Gallery and the Fund for Park Avenue Sculpture Committee.

Courtesy of NYC Parks

Elizabeth Knowles and Eric Laxman, Pond Blossoms
June 29, 2023 to October 18, 2023
Morningside Park, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

This collaborative work of Elizabeth Knowles and Eric Laxman includes three vibrant and dynamic floating sculptures, standing at an height of 60 inches, creating a mesmerizing visual experience for park visitors. These sculptures gracefully sway with the wind, providing an ever-changing display of color and movement.

Pond Blossoms and its companion piece Watching Over You both serve as tributes to the passionate Harlem residents who fought ardently for their park in 1968, contributing to the establishment of the pond and its significance in the community. It symbolizes the celebration of their efforts and the enduring appreciation for the pond's existence today.

This exhibition is presented by Sculptors Guild.

Image credit: Photo courtesy of the artist

Reuben Sinha, Breathing without fear
October 15, 2022 to October 14, 2023
Marcus Garvey Park, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

‘Breathing without fear’ is a site specific ceramic sculpture that depicts two life-size figures becoming one, and enjoying the community park post pandemic. The sculpture takes the form of ancient rock formations, but is recognizable as two figures together, happy and enjoying a moment of connection in Marcus Garvey Park. Though the figures are abstract, they represent all of us.

This exhibition is presented by Art Lives Here.

Image credit: Courtesy of Hudson Yards Hells Kitchen Alliance

Fanny Allié, Shadows
November 5, 2022 to October 5, 2023
Bella Abzug Park, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

The colorful sculptures comprising Shadows depict ten workers who maintain the park for the benefit of the public, through their outlines. To create the sculptures, Allié spent time with each person and asked them to pose in a manner that reflected themselves. She captured these poses on film, drew their outlines, and translated them into steel silhouettes. Each worker chose their sculpture’s color. Shadows also includes an audio component, in which Allié’s subjects sing songs, whistle, hum, laugh, and share stories about their work.

This exhibition is presented by Hudson Yards Hells Kitchen Alliance.

Photo courtesy of the artist

Naomi Lawrence, Tierra Fragil
September 25, 2022 to September 10, 2023
Morningside Park, Manhattan
Map/Directions (in Google Maps)

Please note: This is a past exhibit that is no longer installed in the park.

Description:

Tierra Fragil, depicts endangered insects and birds with the flowers and plants imperative to their survival. The mural informs and encourages the preservation of familiar species whose presence we may have taken for granted.

Tierra Fragil is made possible in part with public funds from Creative Engagement a regrant program supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with support of the office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, UMEZ Arts Engagement a regrant program supported by the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone Development Corporation and administered by LMCC. Additional funding was provided by the Friends of Morningside Park.

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