06 Feb Brownsville Matters, News 12
https://youtu.be/0w4DSJLELy4Brownsville Matters brings art to Langston Hughes Houses...
https://youtu.be/0w4DSJLELy4Brownsville Matters brings art to Langston Hughes Houses...
"Brownsville Matters" features artwork from local residents and people for whom Brownsville played an important role in their lives. BROWNSVILLE, BROOKLYN — In front of the Brownsville public housing complex of Langston Hughes Houses, there now stands an 8-foot-tall, 300-foot-long outdoor art exhibit, popping...
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Opening Reception Sunday, October 23rd from 1pm-4pm in the Lower East Side. About Exhibition Support local, emerging artists, chow down on free food and drinks, and enjoy fun activities for all ages!“Riders Galore” was produced in collaboration with the Lower East Side Partnership and will adorn 400 linear...
One does not often associate a walk in the park with experiencing contemporary art presented on security fences by way of large mesh tarps. But that’s just what you’ll find at Natural Disruptions, a collaborative mural-based project sponsored by public arts nonprofit...
The Prospect Park Alliance is teaming up with ArtBridge, a nonprofit that presents public art projects at construction sites, to turn the construction fencing around the historic Wellhouse — which the park is transforming into a public restroom featuring composting toilets — into an outdoor...
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“Another New York” is an ArtBridge exhibition of 56 photographs mounted outside the Barclays Center in what may be a Sisyphean mission: to convey the inner rhythm of Brooklyn to pedestrians whose senses are already overloaded with that beat. “We looked for those everyday moments that...
New York City has about 1 million feet of construction scaffolding at any given time, and some of it is turning into art. Artists submit their work to an expert panel that chooses which to showcase at construction sites around the city.“Art has the...
Even in the daylight, Kingston residents can look up and see the moon, waxing and waning, along the skyline. Stretched along one side of the Greenkill Avenue bridge is Emily Gui’s cyanotype print Moon Phases. On the opposite side—lush green against the concrete expanse—is Adie Russell’s...