
1. Ascend with Pride at FDR Four Freedoms Park
Rendering courtesy FDR Four Freedoms Park
2. The Manhattan Park Pool is Back
Photo by Max Touhey
3. Sing for Hope Pianos

4. Bowery Wall Mural by Queen Andrea

5. Felix Gonzalez-Torres Billboard Work to Honor 50th Anniversary of Stonewall Uprising
Felix Gonzalez-Torres, “Untitled”, 1989, Installation view of “Untitled” (Billboard). Sheridan Square, New York, NY. Mar – Sep. 1989. Organized by Public Art Fund. Photo courtesy of Public Art Fund, NY © Felix Gonzalez-Torres.
People With AIDS Coalition 1985 Police Harassment 1969 Oscar Wilde 1895 Supreme Court 1986 Harvey Milk 1977 March on Washington 1987 Stonewall Rebellion 1969Gonzalez-Torres’ work through the mid-1980s included many date pieces with a similar black and white aesthetic, but this was his first billboard. The intention of these dated works is to “disrupt the hierarchy of chronology as well as the perceived distinctions between public and private histories.” Describing the piece in 1989, Gonzalez-Torres wrote, “The letters running across the lower part of the billboard suggest a long caption, capable of sustaining the projection of many images. The size of the letters is rather small for such a large space. This is not an ad; I don’t expect it to be readable while speeding down Seventh Avenue to the Holland Tunnel. I hope the public will stop for an instant to reflect on the real and abstract relationships of the different dates.” Presented in collaboration with The Felix Gonzalez-Torres Foundation with lead support by Google, the billboard will be on view throughout the entire month of June.
7. NYBG Has Largest Exhibition Ever
Photo courtesy New York Botanical Garden
8. Simone Leigh: Brick House on The High Line
Simone Leigh, Brick House, 2019. A High Line Plinth commission. On view June 2019 – September 2020. Photo by Timothy Schenck. Courtesy the High Line
9. Fortified at Fort Totten Park

10. Shantell Martin Mural at Governors Island
Photo by Timothy Schenk courtesy Trust for Governors Island
11. Hórama Rama at MoMA PS1
Hórama Rama by Pedro & Juana, winner of the 2019 Young Architects Program. Ana Paula Ruiz Galindo & Mecky Reuss. Mexico City, Mexico
12. Lighthouse Beam on Roosevelt Island
Photograph by Tom Aellen, Courtesyof FIGMENT NYC
13. City in the Grass at Madison Square Park

14. Play:groundNYC on Governors Island
Courtesy of play:groundNYC
Hammers, saws and nails are usually not things you want to see on a children’s playground, but they are essential tools of play at this space on Governors Island. Play:groundNYC is a kids-only experimental adventure playground where parents aren’t allowed to interfere. Kids are given the freedom to play and create with the tools at hand, real tools that allow kids to experiment and take risks on their own.
Play:groundNYC is inspired by Danish landscape architect C. T. Sørenson’s proposed creation of “waste material playgrounds…where children would be able to play with old cars, boxes, and timber.” The first known playground of this type appeared in Denmark in the mid-1940s and several have popped up all over the world in the ensuing decades, including at least nineteen in New York City in the 1970s.15. Salvage Swings Pavilion
Photograph by James Lengs, Courtesy of FIGMENT NYC
16. Poetry Jukebox
Photograph by Ted Riederer
17. NYC Mural Arts Project for Mental Health
Feeling All Four Seasons, Bridging All Four Seasons” by artist Julia Cocuzza and members of Baltic Street, AEH, Inc., will be installed on PS 24K at 427 38th St. in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.
18. Endlings: The first, and last of their kind
19. Times Square Midnight Moment
Photo by Ka-Man Tse for times Square Arts
20. Children’s Museum of the Arts on Governors Island
Courtesy of the Children’s Museum of the Arts
21. Superstorm at Duarte Square Park

22. You Are Not Alone Murals
Photograph by Graham Burns, Mural art by Annica Lydenberg
23. Tom Fruin’s Glass House

24. #ILO100 Art Walk
Photograph Courtesy of Just_A_Spectator, Art by Jorge Geralda
25. Rockefeller Center Becomes Sculpture Garden for Frieze New York

26. TWA Hotel’s Airplane Cocktail Lounge at JFK
27. Alicja Kwade: Parapivot at the MET Roof Garden
28. En Plein Air at the High Line
29. Park Avenue Malls’ Tension Sculptures

30. Chronos Cosmos at the Socrates Sculpture Park
Photograph courtesy of Sara Morgan
31. Ruth Ewan’s Silent Agitator on the High Line

32. El-Space in Long Island City
Rendering courtesy NYCDOT
33. Subliminal Standard by Harold Ancart at Cadman Plaza Park
Harold Ancart, Subliminal Standard at Cadman Plaza Park presented by Public Art Fund, 2019. Photo: Nicholas Knight, Courtesy of Public Art Fund, NY
34. Leander Knust’s Re-Material Wall at West 111th Street People’s Garden
Photograph courtesy the Artist and Socrates Sculpture Park
35. Nicolas Holiber: Birds on Broadway, Audubon Sculpture Project

36. Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory: Visions of the Afterlife in the Catholic Tradition in the Fort Hamilton Gatehouse
Image courtesy Mathew Jensen.
Angel with Charrasca, Equine Jawbone Instrument, 2017, Phyllis Galembo, taken in Mochitlán, Mexico; Collection of Joanna Ebenstein
37. A Portrait of Contemporary Travel by Holger Keifel at La Guardia Airport
Photo courtesy Port Authority of New York & New Jersey
38. Bridge Over Tree at Brooklyn Bridge Park
Siah Armajani, Bridge Over Tree, 2019, photograph by Timothy Schenck, courtesy Public Art Fund, NY
39. The Shed at Hudson Yards

40. Holocaust-era Freight Car Installation at Museum of Jewish Heritage

41. Mark Manders: Tilted Head

42. Lost and Found at Snark Park
Photograph by Noah Kalina courtesy of Snark Park/Team Camron
43. Art in Concrete Plant Park
Photo courtesy Sohhee Oh, via NYC Parks
44. Shed Murals at the World Trade Center
Vesey mural by Chinon Maria and Sebastian Mitre

45. El-Space Installation in Sunset Park

46. Sonic Gates Sound Sculpture Walk on Staten Island
Photograph courtesy of Design Trust for Public Space
47. Zaq Landsberg: ‘Islands of the Unisphere’

Photo courtesy Zaq Landsberg via NYC Parks
Around the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Corona Park sit the sculptures that comprise Zaq Landberg’s Islands of the Unisphere (yet another of the UNIQLO Parks Expressions Grant program). The Unisphere monument, a fixture of the park, is a large sculptural globe with recognizable land masses, but without labels and borders. Landberg expanded on this famed monument by choosing islands off of the Unisphere, recreating them at scale, and placing them horizontally on the grass. The islands act as seating, stages, and meeting places, community spaces that encourage people to forge connections and reflect on the tremendous diversity of Queens. Unisphere will be on view until June 10, 2019.48. James and Karla Murray’s ‘Moms-and-Pops of the L.E.S.’

Image courtesy of James and Karla Murray
James and Karla Murray’s exhibit Moms-and-Pops of the L.E.S. is part of 10 Uniqlo Park Expressions that are on view across the city. This piece is a pop-up that debuted July of 2018 in Seward Park on the Lower East Side. Moms-and-Pops is a life-sized structure that displays four large photographs of mom-and-pop ships that have closed in the Lower East Side, such as Cup & Saucer and Chung’s Candy & Soda Stand.The installation seeks to highlight the disappearance of small businesses like bodegas, coffee shops, luncheonettes, delis, and newsstands that used to be numerous in the Lower East Side. The artists state that the piece seeks to represent the “small businesses that were common in the Lower East Side and helped bring the community together through people’s daily interactions.”A combination of metal and wooden materials makes the sculpture weather-proof and capable of lasting the entire year, perhaps a nod to the legacy of these now extinct businesses of the Lower East Side. Moms-and-Pops of the L.E.S will be on view until June 19, 2019.49. “River Rising/Sube el Rio” at Starlight Park

50. Rebecca Manson in Tribeca Park
Photo by Alexander Atkins, courtesy of the artist
51. Rose DeSiano: ‘Absent Monuments’
Photo by Rose DeSiano Courtesy of New York City Department of Parks & Recreation
52. OY-YO at Brooklyn Museum

53. Viewfinding in Riverside Park
Photo courtesy Sarah E. Brook