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Intersection, a colorful, site-specific mural was produced by three artists, Heidy Garay, Mikell Fine Isles and Sam Vernon, in partnership with the Dumbo Business Improvement District for a corrugated metal fence on Front Street in Dumbo. This mural symbolizes the constant movement of DUMBO. The curved lines, painted in seven distinct colors, play on the straight, unwavering lines of the corrugated metal fence. The piece is meant to brighten the landscape underneath the Manhattan Bridge, while referencing the New York City Subway map as well as the cross-sections of cultures in this neighborhood.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Intersection by Heidy Garay, Mikell Fine Isles, and Sam Vernon

Presented with DUMBO Business Improvement District

Front and Adams Streets, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

intersection-mural.tumblr.com/

 

"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/

 

NYC DOT crews were out late painting the blue line in preparation for the TCS NYC Marathon.

 

Working through the night, the Nightliner drove through Brooklyn painting the blue line up and down 4th Ave., off the Verrazano Bridge, all the way to the Queensboro Bridge in LIC.

 

Have you seen the blue line?

NYC DOT's latest awareness campaign, "Your Choices Matter," uses visceral, vivid images to drive the point home. Learn more here: bit.ly/YourChoicesMatter

A DOT worker helping to clear debris in Dongan Hills, Staten Island

 

Photo: NYC Department of Transportation / Stephen Mallon.

NYCDOT, The Center for Architecture, and Max Protetch Gallery worked together to bring the 24 Foot Fly’s Eye Dome to LaGuardia Place in conjunction with a Whitney Museum exhibition about R. Buckminster Fuller’s work as an architect, engineer, designer, and inventor. The central placement of the dome on the wide sidewalk invited pedestrians to interact freely with the form stepping in and out of the dome to take in the scale and complexity of the piece.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

24 Foot Fly’s Eye Dome by R. Buckminister Fuller

Presented with The Center for Architecture and Max Protetch Gallery

LaGuardia Place between W 3rd and Bleecker Streets, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

whitney.org/Exhibitions/BuckminsterFuller

www.aiany.org/blog/?tag=buckminster-fuller

 

Artist Ilona Granet worked with local domestic violence shelters in the creation of her street signs with the aim of aiding the community in its battle against domestic violence. The artist had originally installed a couple of the signs in the Village in the late 1980’s. With support from NYCDOT, they were reinstalled with a few additions to stimulate a discussion and raise awareness about gender and race issues. The signs were installed as part of Jamaica Center for the Arts and Learning’s “Jamaica Flux 2010: Workspaces and Windows."

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Safe Street by Ilona Garnet

Presented with Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning

Jamaica Avenue, Queens

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

ilonagranet.com/

 

Artist Marcie Paper constructs her paintings from short term memories derived from her immediate surroundings. Her abstract, delicate pattern serves to mirror the barrier’s surrounding environment while setting into motion an up-to-the-minute visual sensory cue for those that encounter the mural. Marcie Paper’s design has been 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

 

Artist Marcie Paper constructs her paintings from short term memories derived from her immediate surroundings. Her abstract, delicate pattern serves to mirror the barrier’s surrounding environment while setting into motion an up-to-the-minute visual sensory cue for those that encounter the mural. Marcie Paper’s design has been 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

 

Intersection, a colorful, site-specific mural was produced by three artists, Heidy Garay, Mikell Fine Isles and Sam Vernon, in partnership with the Dumbo Business Improvement District for a corrugated metal fence on Front Street in Dumbo. This mural symbolizes the constant movement of DUMBO. The curved lines, painted in seven distinct colors, play on the straight, unwavering lines of the corrugated metal fence. The piece is meant to brighten the landscape underneath the Manhattan Bridge, while referencing the New York City Subway map as well as the cross-sections of cultures in this neighborhood.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Intersection by Heidy Garay, Mikell Fine Isles, and Sam Vernon

Presented with DUMBO Business Improvement District

Front and Adams Streets, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

intersection-mural.tumblr.com/

 

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

NYC DOT kicks off Customer Service Week 2014 with an event on 10/3/14.

DOT's Queens Arterial Emergency Response Unit, based out of Harper Street Yard, picks up donations to bring to the Rockaways on November 17.

 

The donated food and goods were provided by the Auburndale Soccer Club.

 

Photo: Rafael Lopez Jr., NYC DOT

Choreographer Pavel Sustiak, together with Palissimo, broke boundaries addressing the complexity of public and private spaces showing that art can occur when and where you least expect it.

 

Performances began with dancer Lindsey Dietz Marchant appearing to have missed her ferry and pressing her body to the closed doors in the boarding area at the ferry terminal. A small group of individuals then wandered over to scan the schedule that Lindsey was standing near – while they did, she stood frozen with one foot raised and spread her arms. Performers Gina Bashour and Jeff Kent Jacobs then morphed from civilians to contorted beings at which point most onlookers became confused not knowing whether to move or watch until it became clear a choreographed dance piece was being performed right in front of their eyes. To accompany the choreography, a sound bar was set up to which onlookers could plug in to hear different soundtracks thereby creating individualized unique experiences with the artwork.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

HALT! By Pavel Sustiak

Presented with Palissimo

Whitehall Ferry Terminal, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.palissimo.com/

 

On Wednesday, October 15, 2014 the New York City Department of Transportation Commissioner Polly Trottenberg, NYPD Transportation Chief Thomas Chan, Taxi & Limousine Commissioner Meera Joshi and elected officials unveiled the city's 25 Days to #25MPH public awareness campaign in advance of the new default speed limit lowering from 30 to 25 MPH, which takes effect Friday, November 7th.

Artist Steed Taylor transformed the Naples Terrace Step Street with The Bridge &The Devil. Two unique designs run up and down the staircase creating two separate pedestrian experiences. The installation draws reference to the 17th century Kingsbridge and the Spuyten Duyvil Creek it once crossed. Steed reminds New Yorkers of the tumultuous relationship that once existed at this site between man and nature. Much like the intertwining design, the mural draws attention to man’s enduring desire to tame and mold New York City’s geography to suit one’s needs. In shedding light on old New York, Taylor hopes to educate those who use this step street on a daily basis with his historically-based, site-responsive mural.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

The Bridge & The Devil by Steed Taylor

Visual Aids for the Arts

Step Street, Naples Terrace between Broadway and Goodwin Terrace, Bronx, NY

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.steedtaylor.com/

www.thebody.com/visualaids/

 

New York Cares and Community Roots Charter School coordinated a family painting day with support from the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project and Livable Streets Education to implement the first NYCDOT pavement mural. Brooklyn-based muralist Ellie Balk collaborated with art teacher Leslie Elvin and her students to design a colorful abstract map with a striped path that meanders through circle mandalas and reflects drawings made by the students after learning about street safety.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Artervention

Liveable Streets by Ellie Balk

Presented with Liveable Streets Education

Edwards Street, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

elliebalk.com/

 

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

Lincoln Road Serape is a 70-foot weaving of plastic ribbons installed on a chain link fence that creates a colorful swathe connecting two neighborhoods surrounding the Lincoln Road footbridge. The installation is based on the diamond shapes and patterns woven by Navajo craftspeople.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Lincoln Road Serape by Katherine Daniels

Presented with LinRoFORMA

Lincoln Rd between Flatbush and Ocean Aves, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.publicolor.org/

 

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.

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

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

 

A Collection of Local Memories interprets the history and culture of a small part of Brooklyn through the eyes of local senior citizens. Artist Gabriel “Specter” Reese spoke with this generation of Brooklynites and drew inspiration from photos, illustrations, and archival images to create a visual and narrative “mash up.” Located directly across from Prospect Park and adjacent to an MTA subway entrance, the sculptural installation created an icon for this community. The colorful lifelike imagery united the old and the new, reminding residents of the diversity both then and now.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

A Collection of Local Memories by Gabriel “Specter” Reese

Presented with International Studio and Curatorial Program

Ocean Avenue and Parkside Avenue, Brooklyn

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

specterart.com/

 

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

Christian Marche’s sculpture of found metal objects, welded in abstract form and painted a matte silver, sits directly above the Bronx’s busy Grand Concourse. The size of Marche’s sculpture – measuring 10 feet tall and 16 square feet at its base – complements the sheer size of this intersection. The found objects, collected locally throughout New York City, provide an opportunity to discuss recycling and the perception of refused versus reused. Among the found objects are a taxi cab door, a flattened shopping cart, a refrigerator, and various bicycle parts.

 

Christian Marche is a Bronx-based artist, welder, machinist, and educator. With this installation, Marche seeks to provide a physical image for the hopes and dreams that people associate with material goods, which inevitably find their way into our landfills.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

Silver by Christian Marche

Presented with Fordham Road Business Improvement District and Al Johnson Art

Fordham Road and Grand Concourse, Bronx

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

 

Artist Marcie Paper constructs her paintings from short term memories derived from her immediate surroundings. Her abstract, delicate pattern serves to mirror the barrier’s surrounding environment while setting into motion an up-to-the-minute visual sensory cue for those that encounter the mural. Marcie Paper’s design has been 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

 

“Heralding the gateway to and from St. George’s Staten Island, Doily marks the transition with a nod to all things domestic in sharp contrast to its surroundings.” –Jennifer Cecere

 

The work of artist Jennifer Cecere is influenced by traditional crafts, homemade crafts, embroidery, and needlepoint. Her doilies are made from a wide variety of materials and installed in a wide variety of places as a reference to both the architecture of both the natural world and the built environment.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, pARTners

St. George Doily by Jennifer Cecere

Presented with Garibaldi-Meucci Museum

St George Ferry Terminal, Staten Island

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.jennifercecere.com/

 

NYC DOT kicks off Customer Service Week 2014 with an event on 10/3/14.

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.

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