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Playful, surreal narratives designed by artist Carla Torres have been painted onto 715 feet of concrete barrier in Tribeca along the Hudson River Greenway near Pier 25.

 

Torres’ design is inspired by silhouetted shadow puppets and a narrative based on the longing for spring and the playful energy of the cyclists and pedestrians who use the park on a daily basis.

  

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Carla Torres

Presented with New York Cares and Hudson River Park Trust

West St South between North Moore St and Laight St, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.carlatorres.com

 

MTA and NYCDOT announced the expansion of bus lane enforcement on Thursday, August 6.

 

Pictured: MTA Bus Company President and NYC Transit SVP of Buses Craig Cipriano and NYCDOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg.

 

Photo Credit: Marc Hermann / MTA NYC Transit

Summer Streets takes place on consecutive Saturdays in the summer (the 2011 dates are August 6, 13 and 20) from 7:00 am - 1:00 pm. The 2010 route connects the Brooklyn Bridge with Central Park with recommended connections along low-traffic streets to the Hudson River Greenway, Harlem and Governors Island allowing participants to plan a route as long or short as they wish.

 

This event takes a valuable public space - our City's streets - and opens them up to people to play, walk, bike, and breathe. Summer Streets provides more space for healthy recreation and is a part of NYC's greening initiative by encouraging New Yorkers to use more sustainable forms of transportation.

 

Modeled on other events from around the world including Bogotá, Colombia's Ciclovia, Paris, France's Paris Plage, and even New York's own Museum Mile, this event will be part bike tour, part block party, a great time for exercise, people watching, and just enjoying summer mornings.

 

Visit nyc.gov/summerstreets for more information.

The abstract sculpture, Aurora, fabricated by artist Diego Medina, was inspired by the Spanish poet Frederico Garcia Lorca. Medina interlocked geometric shapes, pillars an arch and a star, so that when the sculpture is viewed from various angles, it takes on different shapes and forms. Though NYCDOT, BRAC, and Medina worried that individuals might mark the sculpture with graffiti, it remained unscathed throughout the installation period. The sculpture created a focal point in what was once a barren plaza.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Aurora by Diego Medina

Presented with Bronx River Arts Center

East Tremont Avenue and Boston Road, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

diegomedina.com/

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

Playful, surreal narratives designed by artist Carla Torres have been painted onto 715 feet of concrete barrier in Tribeca along the Hudson River Greenway near Pier 25.

 

Torres’ design is inspired by silhouetted shadow puppets and a narrative based on the longing for spring and the playful energy of the cyclists and pedestrians who use the park on a daily basis.

  

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Carla Torres

Presented with New York Cares and Hudson River Park Trust

West St South between North Moore St and Laight St, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.carlatorres.com

 

"Each a specific bicycle; together a collective symbol of joyful empowerment."

 

Taliah Lempert’s designs of uniquely fashioned bicycles playfully ride alongside cyclists headed down the Greenway. The barriers, that separate cyclists and pedestrians from vehicular traffic, measure approximately 1400 feet in length.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Bike Stacks by Taliah Lempert

Presented with New York Cares

Barrier Site, Spring 2011-Spring 2012

Flushing Ave between Williamsburg St W and Washington Ave, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.bicyclepaintings.com/

 

In 1996, Ruth Lande Shuman founded Publicolor, a NYC-based youth development organization which uses color, collaboration, and design to engage at-risk students in their education and communities. The inspiration for this Publicolor project is the Fibonacci series, a math sequence in which each number is the sum of the two preceding numbers, expressing the synergetic relationship between time and motion.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Color and Collaboration: A Fibonacci Series by Ruth Lande Shuman

Presented with Publicolor

21st St between 47th and 49th Rds, Queens

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.publicolor.org/

 

Location: connecting City Island with Rodman's Neck in Pelham Bay Park, Bronx NYC

Carry: 3 road lanes of City Island Road, with sidewalks

Type: through truss (central swing section was converted to fixed spans in 1963)

Opened: 4 July 1901 (rehabilitated 1977)

Average daily traffic volumes (2008): 16,000

Note: Current bridge to be replaced by a cable-stayed bridge (project scheduled to start in 2011).

 

Approximately 600 feet of concrete wall along the Manhattan Bridge Ramp in Brooklyn will be brought to life with artist Abby Goldstein’s engaging play of color and pattern. Her design refers to both the natural world and the built environment with cast shadows of botanical forms and a background of repeated blues and greens in a staggered pattern resembling speed bumps.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Abby Goldstein

Presented with New York Cares

Sands Street and Jay Street, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.abbygoldstein.com

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

Playful, surreal narratives designed by artist Carla Torres have been painted onto 715 feet of concrete barrier in Tribeca along the Hudson River Greenway near Pier 25.

 

Torres’ design is inspired by silhouetted shadow puppets and a narrative based on the longing for spring and the playful energy of the cyclists and pedestrians who use the park on a daily basis.

  

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Carla Torres

Presented with New York Cares and Hudson River Park Trust

West St South between North Moore St and Laight St, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.carlatorres.com

 

Made from galvanized, durable ductile iron, meter racks easily slide on to former parking meter posts that have had their heads removed following DOT’s installation of new, user-friendly muni meters. By taking advantage of already-installed infrastructure, the meter racks eliminate the cost of removing old posts combined with the cost of installing an entirely new bike rack.

 

The new meter rack’s design is based on the standard “Hoop” rack designed by Ian Mahaffy and Maarten De Greeve, which was selected as the winner of a DOT and Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum-sponsored competition in 2008.

 

6,000 racks will be installed at meters citywide to help meet the city's growing demand for public bike parking.

Pedestrian Safety Improvements completed at Broadway and West 96th Street in Manhattan.

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

“As we look ahead to a more prosperous future, [For Closure is] a beacon of hope constructed from the access point of homes lost: the front door.” –artist Gabriela Salazar

 

Assembled from locally salvaged doors, “For Closure” provides a sense of closure for those still reeling from the recent collapse of our unstable financial structure based on an inflated housing market. The playful concept of a house of cards acts as a monument to the rebuilding of our economy and our homes.

 

Gabriela Salazar’s work concerns our relationships with the constructed environment engaging architecture, text, sculpture, and drawing. This is Salazar’s second iteration of “For Closure.” It is also the second NYCDOT Urban Art installation programmed at West Farms Plaza which is a designated priority site for public art.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Arterventions

For Closure by Gabriela Salazar

Presented with Bronx River Art Center

East Tremont Avenue and Boston Road, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.gabrielasalazar.com

 

Council Member Karen Koslowitz

 

Read the Queens Pedestrian Safety Action Plan here: on.nyc.gov/1BjlGvU

Artist Andrea Legge received a BFA from the Ontario College of Art in Toronto and a MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York City. She was a member of The Rivington School of Manhattan’s Lower East Side during the 1980s and served as Art Production Editor of the American ELLE magazine for a decade. In 2000, Andrea Legge co-founded the collaborative studio Legge Lewis Legge that focuses on public art and architecture.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

In the Bike Lane by Andrea Legge

Presented with New York Cares

Fort Hamilton Parkway between E. 5th St and Park Circle, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

andrealegge.com/

 

Summer Streets takes place on consecutive Saturdays in the summer (the 2011 dates are August 6, 13 and 20) from 7:00 am - 1:00 pm. The 2010 route connects the Brooklyn Bridge with Central Park with recommended connections along low-traffic streets to the Hudson River Greenway, Harlem and Governors Island allowing participants to plan a route as long or short as they wish.

 

This event takes a valuable public space - our City's streets - and opens them up to people to play, walk, bike, and breathe. Summer Streets provides more space for healthy recreation and is a part of NYC's greening initiative by encouraging New Yorkers to use more sustainable forms of transportation.

 

Modeled on other events from around the world including Bogotá, Colombia's Ciclovia, Paris, France's Paris Plage, and even New York's own Museum Mile, this event will be part bike tour, part block party, a great time for exercise, people watching, and just enjoying summer mornings.

 

Visit nyc.gov/summerstreets for more information.

In 1996, Ruth Lande Shuman founded Publicolor, a NYC-based youth development organization which uses color, collaboration, and design to engage at-risk students in their education and communities. The inspiration for this Publicolor project is the Fibonacci series, a math sequence in which each number is the sum of the two preceding numbers, expressing the synergetic relationship between time and motion.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Color and Collaboration: A Fibonacci Series by Ruth Lande Shuman

Presented with Publicolor

21st St between 47th and 49th Rds, Queens

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.publicolor.org/

 

Swirling path rising

and falling

a ribbon of forest

passing by

 

Approximately 600 feet of concrete wall along the Manhattan Bridge Ramp in Brooklyn have been brought to life with artist Abby Goldstein’s engaging play of color and pattern. Her design refers to both the natural world and the built environment with cast shadows of botanical forms and a background of repeated blues and greens in a staggered pattern.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Abby Goldstein

Presented with New York Cares

Sands Street and Jay Street, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.abbygoldstein.com

 

For more than 15 years, Staten Island based artist, Victoria Munro has exhibited her photographic and sculptural works internationally, working between Auckland, New Zealand and the U.S. In the installation called Container Series, Munro focuses intently on color bringing vibrant colors to the Grand Staircase Plaza at Staten Island’s St. George Ferry Terminal.

 

The aluminum strips, affixed securely to the vertical elevations of the stairs leading up to the Plaza, are meant to mirror the shapes and colors of the shipping containers that pass through the NY waterways. Munro believes color is inextricably linked to structures and materials and her work seeks to highlight this relationship. Container Series broadens this investigation to include an exploration of geometric form and function. The artist goes on to describe that “the context and histories of transporting cargo create shifting meaning in the work, suggesting models of other ways of being, cultural blending, and future possibilities and destinations, which are yet to be discovered.”

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Container Series by Victoria Munro

Presented with Council on the Arts and Humanities for Staten Island

Grand Staircase Plaza, St. George Ferry Terminal, Staten Island

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

victoriamunro.wordpress.com/

 

Mall-terations is a temporary art installation created to activate three pedestrian malls and celebrate the history of immigration on the Lower East Side. It also honored the co-naming of Allen Street as the Avenue of the Immigrants. Elements of the installation include five colorful benches that turn on wheels like compasses, neighborhood maps and historical timelines about immigration to both the Lower East Side and Chinatown along with the development of the Allen Street Corridor.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Mall-terations by Carolina Cisneros, Marcelo Ertorteguy, Mateo Pinto and Sara Valente

Presented with Hester Street Collaborative

Allen Street between Houston and Delancey Streets, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

mallterations.blogspot.com/

 

Made from galvanized, durable ductile iron, meter racks easily slide on to former parking meter posts that have had their heads removed following DOT’s installation of new, user-friendly muni meters. By taking advantage of already-installed infrastructure, the meter racks eliminate the cost of removing old posts combined with the cost of installing an entirely new bike rack.

 

The new meter rack’s design is based on the standard “Hoop” rack designed by Ian Mahaffy and Maarten De Greeve, which was selected as the winner of a DOT and Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum-sponsored competition in 2008.

 

6,000 racks will be installed at meters citywide to help meet the city's growing demand for public bike parking.

Location: connecting Bergen Beach to Canarsie Beach Park

Carry: Shore Parkway - 6 road lanes with sidewalks over Paerdegat Inlet

Opened: 1940 (replacement reconstruction started in October 2009 and is expected to be complete in fall 2014)

 

"With splashing brushes, for the city to bloom. And when it was done, for her kinfolk, signed – in green, the Mississippi flowed through Gotham."

 

Julia Whitney Barnes’ design of intertwining roots weaves in and out along a curved path leading to the Harlem River Drive. The barriers, that protect cyclists and pedestrians from vehicular traffic, measure approximately 2000 feet in length.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Roots/Routes by Julia Whitney Barnes

Presented with New York Cares

West 155th St between Edgecombe Ave and Harlem River Dr, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

juliawhitneybarnes.com/

 

Summer Streets takes place on consecutive Saturdays in the summer (the 2011 dates are August 6, 13 and 20) from 7:00 am - 1:00 pm. The 2010 route connects the Brooklyn Bridge with Central Park with recommended connections along low-traffic streets to the Hudson River Greenway, Harlem and Governors Island allowing participants to plan a route as long or short as they wish.

 

This event takes a valuable public space - our City's streets - and opens them up to people to play, walk, bike, and breathe. Summer Streets provides more space for healthy recreation and is a part of NYC's greening initiative by encouraging New Yorkers to use more sustainable forms of transportation.

 

Modeled on other events from around the world including Bogotá, Colombia's Ciclovia, Paris, France's Paris Plage, and even New York's own Museum Mile, this event will be part bike tour, part block party, a great time for exercise, people watching, and just enjoying summer mornings.

 

Visit nyc.gov/summerstreets for more information.

Summer Streets takes place on consecutive Saturdays in the summer (the 2011 dates are August 6, 13 and 20) from 7:00 am - 1:00 pm. The 2010 route connects the Brooklyn Bridge with Central Park with recommended connections along low-traffic streets to the Hudson River Greenway, Harlem and Governors Island allowing participants to plan a route as long or short as they wish.

 

This event takes a valuable public space - our City's streets - and opens them up to people to play, walk, bike, and breathe. Summer Streets provides more space for healthy recreation and is a part of NYC's greening initiative by encouraging New Yorkers to use more sustainable forms of transportation.

 

Modeled on other events from around the world including Bogotá, Colombia's Ciclovia, Paris, France's Paris Plage, and even New York's own Museum Mile, this event will be part bike tour, part block party, a great time for exercise, people watching, and just enjoying summer mornings.

 

Visit nyc.gov/summerstreets for more information.

"A water work for Ozone Park."

 

Artist Corinne Ulmann’s design of delicate-looking lily pads floats amongst a sea of blues. Painted on barriers separating two-way traffic, the mural measures approximately 100 feet in length. Corinne Ulmann worked alongside 30 volunteers to implement this design on both sides of the barrier site creating a sculptural landscape for the residents of Ozone Park.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Reflecting Pond by Corinne Ulmann

Presented with New York Cares

97th and Centreville Streets, Queens

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.corinneulmann.com/

 

Swirling path rising

and falling

a ribbon of forest

passing by

 

Approximately 600 feet of concrete wall along the Manhattan Bridge Ramp in Brooklyn have been brought to life with artist Abby Goldstein’s engaging play of color and pattern. Her design refers to both the natural world and the built environment with cast shadows of botanical forms and a background of repeated blues and greens in a staggered pattern.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Abby Goldstein

Presented with New York Cares

Sands Street and Jay Street, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.abbygoldstein.com

 

In 1996, Ruth Shuman founded Publicolor, a New York City based youth development organization, to engage at-risk students in their education and communities with color, design and collaboration. In doing so, Publicolor aims to build self-confidence in all areas of their student's lives and assist in bettering a struggling community through art and design. For the project Color and Collaboration, Shuman drew inspiration from the Fibonacci series, a math sequence in which each number is the sum of the two preceding numbers, to express the synergistic relationship between time and motion. Over the course of one day, Publicolor students and local volunteers transformed a concrete wall with the Fibonacci series inspired design along 49th Avenue between 21st Street and Skillman Avenue in Queens.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Color and Collaboration by Ruth Lande Shuman and Publicolor students

Bridge, 49th Avenue between 21st Street and Skillman Avenue, Queens

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.publicolor.org/index.php

 

Sam Holleran’s design evokes a fanciful picture-book impression of nature. Nature and man-made intertwine; trees resemble spherical street lighting while rocky outcroppings resemble chunks of baking chocolate. The artist’s design covers 660 feet of concrete barrier along Columbia Street near Brooklyn Bridge Park, Van Voorhees Park, and the Brooklyn Queens Expressway.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Sam Holleran

Presented with New York Cares

Columbia St between Atlantic Ave and Congress St, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

People and birds were invited to relax with one another in the art installation entitled Welcomed Guests. Ten functional seats, with attached birdhouses, were placed in Red Hook by artist Atom Cianfarani. He used locally found materials, such as burgundy barrels and recycled plastic lunch trays, to create the unique birdhouses. The North Fork Vineyard and Winery provided the wine barrels and Added Value provided access to water via the Red Hook Community Farm. The artwork transformed the public space into a seating area between IKEA, the community farm, and a local park.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Welcomed Guests by Atom Cianfarani

Presented with Lower East Side Ecology Center and Added Value

Columbia Street and Halleck Street, Red Hook, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.atomsdream.com/

 

Stop, Look, Listen was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural, created at the request of Brooklyn Community Board 7, focuses on traffic and pedestrian safety education, as well as site-specific themes and cultural diversity. The mural’s bold colors and graphic design make it a welcome addition to the neighborhood. At over 200 feet in length, the SLI team’s quick, careful, and detailed execution of this mural was a great accomplishment!

 

The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project

Stop, Look, Listen by Conor McGrady and Amy Mahnik

Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project

7th Ave between 62nd and 64th St, Sunset Park, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.conormcgrady.com/

 

“Undulating planes of pattern and color that drift back and forth creating a syncopated rhythm with the traffic rushing by.”

 

Artist Almond Zigmund’s work strives to sharpen our perceptions of space while exploring the nature of opposition. Combining crisp geometry, vivid color, and intricate patterns, her drawings, sculptures, and installations reference aspects of the built environment.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Planes A-Way by Almond Zigmund

Presented with New York Cares

21st Williamsburg St W between Kent and Flushing Aves, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.almondzigmund.com

 

Mall-terations is a temporary art installation created to activate three pedestrian malls and celebrate the history of immigration on the Lower East Side. It also honored the co-naming of Allen Street as the Avenue of the Immigrants. Elements of the installation include five colorful benches that turn on wheels like compasses, neighborhood maps and historical timelines about immigration to both the Lower East Side and Chinatown along with the development of the Allen Street Corridor.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Mall-terations by Carolina Cisneros, Marcelo Ertorteguy, Mateo Pinto and Sara Valente

Presented with Hester Street Collaborative

Allen Street between Houston and Delancey Streets, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

mallterations.blogspot.com/

 

Artist Marcie Paper constructs her paintings from short term memories derived from her immediate surroundings. Her abstract, delicate pattern serves to both mirror the barrier’s surrounding environment, while setting into motion an up-to-the-minute visual sensory cue for those that encounter the mural. Her design will be implemented on barriers running along a vital bike lane located near both the Brooklyn War Memorial and the Korean War Veteran’s Plaza.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Barrier Beautification

Design submission by Marcie Paper

Presented with New York Cares

Tillary St between Cadman Plaza West and Adams St, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.marciepaper.com

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