NYC - Parks.Art - Lookbook FINAL
NYC - Parks.Art - Lookbook FINAL
NYC - Parks.Art - Lookbook FINAL
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Alejandro Diaz, A Can for All Seasons;
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Wide paved pathways traverse Joyce Kilmer Park’s vast lawns.
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Poe Park
Fordham, Bronx // Grand Concourse between East 192 St. and East Kingsbridge Rd.
Site Considerations
Open lawns and a spacious, paved plaza on the
south end of the park offer ideal locations for
larger work. The bandstand has been used for
performances in the past, but access makes it
difficult to place artwork within the structure.
The park is heavily used by the community and
their families so artwork should be durable
enough to withstand frequent interaction.
Park History
Poe Park is named after Poe Cottage, a historical
landmark in the park where Edgar Allan Poe
spent the last years of his life from 1846 to 1849.
The cottage was originally located near the
intersection of Kingsbridge Road and Valentine
Avenue, but was moved in 1913 about 450
feet north of its original location. The cottage
neighbors the Poe Park Visitor Center, which
holds regular community events, workshops,
exhibitions and open activity hours. To learn
more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
B or D trains to Kingsbridge Rd.
FROM TOP:
The Poe Park Visitor Center; Poe Cottage,
where celebrated author and poet Edgar Allan Poe
spent the last years of his life from 1846 to 1849.
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Van Cortlandt Park
NYC-Westchester County Line, Bronx // Van Cortlandt Park South between Broadway and Jerome Ave.
Site Considerations
Van Cortlandt features the borough’s largest
freshwater lake and the Van Cortlandt Mansion
and Museum, the borough’s oldest house.
Typically, past exhibitions have been placed in the
vicinity of subway stations for optimal viewing.
Pieces proposed for the Van Cortlandt Museum
grounds need to be approved by the Daughters of
the American Revolution, who maintain the home,
and the Historic House Trust.
Park History
The Weckquaesgeek Lenapes occupied this site
when, in 1639, the Dutch East India Company
brought the first Europeans to settle in the Bronx.
Jacobus Van Cortlandt bought the property in
1694 and the Van Cortlandt Mansion was built
in 1748 by his son, Frederick Van Cortlandt. At
the onset of the American Revolution, City Clerk
Augustus Van Cortlandt hid the city records
from the British Army at the family burial plot of
Vault Hill. Van Cortlandt Park is also home to the
country’s first public golf course, popular cross
country trails, and parade ground. To learn more, FROM TOP: Van Cortlandt House is the centerpiece of the 1,000-acre urban
visit the NYC Parks website. park that encompasses what was once the Van Cortlandt family’s estate; the
Flock House initiative examines questions of mobile, self-sufficient living units
becoming building blocks for future cities.
Who Has Exhibited Here
The park has exhibited several public artworks
by the Art Students League since 2010. Mary
Mattingly exhibited Flock House in 2012.
Getting Here
1 train to 242nd St.; 4 to Woodlawn.
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Site Considerations
The Brooklyn War Memorial, the massive
memorial in the center of the park, was designed
by Charles Keck and honors Brooklynites who
served in World War II. The area south of the
Memorial is predominantly recreational fields,
while the northern end has wider grassy lawns,
one of which includes a statue of William Jay
Gaynor, former mayor of New York City.
Park History
This park honors Reverend Dr. Samuel Parkes
Cadman (1864-1936), a Brooklyn Congregational
minister and radio preacher famed for his
oratory. Lenape Native Americans originally
inhabited the area until the Dutch arrived in the
1600s and gained control of the land they came
to call Breuckelen. Downtown Brooklyn and
Brooklyn Heights remained sparsely inhabited
until 1814, when Robert Fulton’s new steam
ferry began to offer an easy commute to and
from downtown Manhattan. Brooklyn Heights
became Manhattan’s first suburb, and Downtown
Brooklyn was on its way to becoming a center of
commerce and the heart of municipal Brooklyn.
To learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
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Public art installations work especially well at the cobblestone courtyard at the intersection of Myrtle Avenue and Washington Park.
Getting Here
A or C trains to Lafayette Ave.; G to Fulton St.;
Akihiro Ito, Tomorrow, 2012. D,H,N,Q or R to DeKalb Ave.; 2, 3, 4 or 5 to
Atlantic Ave. or Nevins St.
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Surrounded by turn of the century Brooklyn industrial buildings, this public park is a jewel along the otherwise inaccessible waterfront.
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Sunset Park
Sunset Park, Brooklyn // 41st St., 44th St., between 5th Ave. and 7th Ave.
Site Considerations
Though the apex of the park has the best views,
exhibitions will be most visible to the public if
placed along the 5th Avenue commercial corridor,
or on the lawns at 7th Avenue in front of the
Recreation Center/Pool House. In the summer
months, Sunset Park and its pool become home More Art installed Sari Carel’s Borrowed Light in Sunset Park in May 2015. The
project features abstract geometric architectural forms, incorporating field
to swimmers. With an active recreation center recorded sounds from the park’s local fauna.
and playground, Sunset Park has visitors even
in the colder months of the year.
Park History
The area surrounding the park was acquired
by the Dutch in the 1600s. The land remained
relatively undeveloped until the beginning of
the 19th century, when Irish immigrants settled
the area. The neo-classical/Art Deco Sunset
Park Pool and Play Center was opened in
1936 as part of a massive Works Progress
Administration (WPA) project. Sunset Pool
received an extensive restoration in the 1980s,
including reconstruction of the pool, bathhouse,
and comfort station, and expanded playground.
To learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
R train to 45th St.; D to 9th Ave.
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Chuck Ginnever, Medusa and
High Rise; Gus and Lina Ocamposilva,
Ahearn Park
Lower East Side, Manhattan // Grand St., East Broadway and Willett St.
Getting Here
Ahearn Park is a triangular paved plaza that
F train to East Broadway.
is surrounded by benches where visitors
rest, eat lunch and congregate—an ideal
location for a monumental sculpture.
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Marcus Garvey Park
Harlem, Manhattan // Madison Ave, East 120th St. to East 124th St.
Site Considerations
The sizable, 20-acre park is centered on the
spine of Fifth Avenue on a steep outcropping of
Manhattan schist surrounded by spacious, flat
lawns that are ideal for installations. Although
the park’s natural features have been preserved,
a number of architectural elements have been
added over time, including a landmarked fire
watchtower that is currently being conserved at
an offsite facility. The community would like to
reactivate the Acropolis, a bluestone plaza at
the apex of the park adjacent to the watchtower
site; however, there are logistical considerations
regarding installation and weight limitations
to preserve the integrity of the pavers, getting Cuban-American artist Florencio Gelabert presented Forest Door, three tilting
materials up to the site, and visibility. columns of stainless steel.
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Morningside Park
Harlem/Morningside Heights, Manhattan // W. 110th St. to W. 123rd St., Manhattan to Morningside Aves.
Site Considerations Morningside Park is a narrow strip built on a steep incline that stretches
13 blocks through the neighborhoods of Harlem and Morningside Heights.
The steep, rocky terrain limits installations to
the flatter southern and eastern portions of the
park. Public art has been successfully exhibited Who Has Exhibited Here
around the pond, as the surrounding lawns are Monuments installed in and around Morningside
open and level. include Lafayette and Washington (1900) by
Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, the Carl Schurz
Park History Memorial (1913) by Karl Bitter and Henry Bacon,
Morningside Park takes its name from the eastern and the Seligman (Bear and Faun) Fountain (1914)
side (where the sun rises) of the rugged cliff of by Edgar Walter. Barbara Segal exhibited Drawn to
Manhattan schist which separates Morningside Water as part of the Hallelujah Public Art Festival
Heights from the Harlem Plain. On September in 2006 and Boaz Vaadia exhibited a series of four
16, 1776, during the Revolutionary War Battle of sculptures in the park from 2007-2008.
Harlem Heights, colonial forces retreated on a road
through the area. Three blockhouse fortifications Getting Here
were built here and put to use during the War of B or C trains to Cathedral Parkway (110th St.),
1812. Originally designed by Frederick Law Olmsted Bor C trains to 116th St., A, B, C, or D trains to
and Calvert Vaux in 1873, their park plans were 125th St.
initially rejected, and later reworked by Jacob
Wrey Mould before Olmsted and Vaux were rehired
to finish the construction. In 1968 student and
community protests halted construction of a large
gymnasium by Columbia University in the park and
the excavated foundation crater was converted
into an ornamental pond and waterfall in 1989-90.
To learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
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Finn Square, a highly trafficked intersection, is adjacent to a subway station and just blocks south of the Holland Tunnel.
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St. Nicholas Park
Harlem, Manhattan // St. Nicholas Terrace between West 128 St. and West 141 St.
Site Considerations
The steep, rocky terrain limits installations to
several locations in the park. The plaza at the
135th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue entrance
provides a prominent, grand location for public
art. Note that pavers must be replaced at the
exhibitor’s expense if anchoring into them is The plaza at 135th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue entrance provides a
necessary. The rolling lawn west of the plaza has prominent, grand location for public art.
successfully exhibited several artworks.
Park History
A Native American path passed along what is
now St. Nicholas Avenue and connected Spuyten
Duyvil to the tip of Manhattan. General George
Washington positioned himself in the park
(originally settled by Dutch farmers in the late
1600s) during the Battle of Harlem Heights in 1776
during the American Revolution. Hamilton Grange,
home of founding father Alexander Hamilton, is
located on the northern end of the park and is
under the authority of the National Parks Service.
To learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
A, B, or C trains to 135th St.
FROM TOP:
Katherine Daniels’ St. Nicholas Park Mesh
was a series of weavings on basketball court
fences; made of twisted steel and wood,
Kristin Campbell’s Moving Between appears
frozen, as if caught in a slow dance.
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Bundith Phunsombatlert, Wayfinding: 100 NYC Public
Sculptures; Mary Miss, SUNSWICK CREEK: Reflecting
The Long Island City Courthouse overlooks the park and the central ornamental fountain.
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MoMA PS 1 Greenstreet
Long Island City, Queens // 46th Ave. and Jackson Ave.
Site Considerations
Sculpture must be limited to the circular
concrete pad that measures 78.5” in diameter.
Park History
This landscaped greenstreet is located across
Rebecca Hackemann’s The Public Utteraton Machine installation at the MoMa
the street from MoMA P.S.1. The site is regularly
PS1 Greenstreet.
visited by art enthusiasts and is visible from the
Court Square subway station and busy Jackson
Avenue. The site contains a small planting bed
that has a short cobble path that leads to a
circular concrete pad. Work can be anchored
to the pad, but it must be patched at the end
of the exhibition.
Getting Here
E or M trains to Court Sq./23rd St.;
G or 7 to Court Sq.
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Rockaway Beach
Rockaway, Queens // Beach 3rd St. to Beach 153rd St. and Shore Front Parkway
Site Considerations
The boardwalk and the plaza on the eastern
side of beachfront parking at 94th Street is ideal
for public art. This circular plaza is central to
Shorefront Parkway, the Cross Bay Bridge access
and the drop-off for beach visitors. The concrete
has been painted with a blue decorative design,
which will need to be patched and restored after
an installation if anchoring is necessary. Artwork
cannot be exhibited on the beach proper.
Sculpture materials should be able to withstand
high winds, high humidity and salty conditions.
Park History
Improvements in transportation in the early
1900s provided the general public with access
to the peninsula, which had previously been
reserved for wealthy New Yorkers and exclusive
beach clubs. Subway access also stimulated
Rockaway’s transition from a vacation area
to neighborhoods with permanent residents.
Rockaway Beach totals 7 miles of beachfront—
making it the country’s largest urban beach. To
learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: In 2013, three artists created murals along the protective barriers on Shore Front Parkway, which are still on view; MoMA A or S trains to Beach 90th St., Q53 bus to Beach
PS1’s VW Dome 2, located at 94th Street, acted as a community center that offered arts and neighborhood programming after Hurricane Sandy; Situ 96th St. and Rockaway Blvd.
Studio’s Heartwalk created a sculpture made from salvaged pieces from the storm-damaged boardwalk; Far Rockaway resident Ethan Long created a
rammed-earth sculpture that resembled a minimal cube during the day, but at night a series of fiber-optic lights dotting the structure’s surface were
revealed; barrier painting along Shore Front Parkway in 2013.
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Rufus King Park
Jamaica, Queens // Jamaica Avenue, 89th Ave. between 150th St. and 153rd St.
Site Considerations
The lawns along Jamaica Avenue are preferable
for installations, as they have greater visibility Rufus King Park houses King Manor Museum, once the home of Rufus King
than the north end of the park, which is (1755-1827), a distinguished lawyer, statesman, and gentleman farmer.
predominantly recreational fields. Any artwork
proposed for the fenced lawn directly in front
of the Manor needs approval from the Museum
and the Historic House Trust.
Park History
Rufus King Park houses King Manor Museum,
once the home of Rufus King (1755-1827),
Jamaica Flux challenged
a framer and signer of the constitution,
traditional ideas about where
art should be displayed and distinguished lawyer, statesman, and
explored the relationship ambassador to Great Britain. King Manor has
between art, commerce, urban operated as a museum since 1900 under the care
renewal, and community. of the King Manor Association of Long Island,
Inc. The house is listed on the National Register
of Historic Places, and the house and park are
designated New York City landmarks. In 1915, a
bandstand was constructed in the center of the
park, which continues to host events. To learn
more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
E or J trains to Jamaica Center;
E or F to Parsons Blvd.
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DB Lampman, The Dance;
Site Considerations
This park offers picturesque landscapes and
backdrops for public artworks; however, due to
its scale, some of the most striking locations are
passive locales isolated from heavy foot traffic.
The most active area is the southeast corner of
the park near Victory Boulevard and Clove Road.
Several baseball diamonds, a soccer field, ice
rink, basketball court, playgrounds, and football
field dot the park’s landscape. Clove Lakes Park in Staten Island has a rich natural history and is flush with
valuable ecological assets.
Park History
By 1683 Governor Thomas Dongan owned many
acres in the northern section of Staten Island
where he hunted bears. Subsequent owner
Abraham Britton built a dam and a grist mill at
the east end of Britton’s Pond in 1825, which
created Clove Lake. Staten Islanders considered
making this area a park as early as 1897, one year
before the consolidation of New York City. Leading
Islanders William T. Davis, Charles Leng, and
Frederick Law Olmsted spoke out for the need to
preserve this area’s natural beauty. In 1921 and
Ann Marie McDonnell’s permanent work 1923 the land around and including Crystal Lake
A Bird Named Goldilocks is sly homage to and Brooks Dam was acquired as a city park. To
the classic children’s story Goldilocks and
the Three Bears.
learn more, visit the NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
X42 bus to Victory Blvd.-Slosson Av;
S61 to Victory Blvd.-Little Clove Rd.
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The Conference House, a grand stone manor house built in 1680, is named for the unsuccessful Revolutionary War peace conference that was held
here on September 11, 1776, between the Americans and the English.
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Tappen Park
Stapleton, Staten Island // Canal St., Water St., Bay St.
Site Considerations
All areas of the park can be used except for the
Village Hall building and the red brick roadway
that runs between the Village Hall platform and
the Park House. Please note that regular concerts
and performances take place on the center lawns
during the summer. These activities should be
taken into consideration when drafting proposals
for this park.
Park History
Tappen Park is located in the neighborhood of
Stapleton, which still contains brick row houses
from the 19th century that refer to a time when
the town was a popular tourist destination and
famous for its breweries. The Edgewater Village
Hall, a Romanesque-revival town hall built in
1889, is a notable landmark in the park that
served as a civic hub. The park has undergone
several restorations in past decades, adding
acreage and an ornamental fountain to the park.
For more information on Tappen Park, visit the
NYC Parks website.
Getting Here
Accessible by the Staten Island Railway,
Stapleton Station and the S76 bus via the Staten
Island Ferry Terminal.
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This park is a short walk from the St. George Ferry Terminal.
Tompkinsville Park
Tompkinsville, Staten Island // Bay St. and Victory Blvd.
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To learn more or apply, visit our guidelines page.