Gov­er­nors Island Arts Announces Fall 2024 Season

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Gov­er­nors Island Arts today announced a sched­ule of free pro­gram­ming and exhi­bi­tions for the Island’s fall sea­son, includ­ing the con­tin­u­a­tion of the INTER­VEN­TIONS per­for­mance series with works by Inua Ellams and Lenio Kak­lea along with new exhi­bi­tions from the New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA), Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons, and oth­er NYC-based non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions. This fall also marks the last chance to vis­it Jen­ny Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl, pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil (NRDC), which is on view inside Fort Jay Fri­day-Sun­day through Novem­ber 3

There is so much to dis­cov­er on Gov­er­nors Island, whether you’re com­ing to see — and even par­tic­i­pate in — a per­for­mance that’s in direct con­ver­sa­tion with our land­scapes, to explore our his­toric hous­es and the incred­i­ble orga­ni­za­tions with­in them, or to dis­cov­er our col­lec­tion of one-of-a-kind pub­lic art­works,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. We are thrilled to con­tin­ue to spot­light our amaz­ing cul­tur­al com­mu­ni­ty as the sea­sons change and can’t wait to wel­come you to the Island this fall.”

INTER­VEN­TIONS Per­for­mance Series
Through this site-respon­sive, mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary annu­al per­for­mance series, Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents local, nation­al, and inter­na­tion­al artists and invites audi­ences to expe­ri­ence work made and adapt­ed for the out­doors. INTER­VEN­TIONS con­tin­ues this fall with Search Par­ty, award-win­ning poet and inter­na­tion­al­ly acclaimed play­wright Inua Ellams’s spon­ta­neous per­for­mance event, and Anal­phabètes, a dance piece by Lenio Kak­lea and co-pre­sent­ed with L’Alliance New York. 

SEARCH PAR­TY Inua Ellams
Sep­tem­ber 20, 7:30pm
Sep­tem­ber 21, 2:15 pm & 7:30pm
CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS »

Prompt­ed by audi­ence sug­ges­tion and open con­ver­sa­tion, Inua Ellams search­es through his archive, unearths refined or raw gold, and presents his trea­sure in this spon­ta­neous per­for­mance — an act of call and response that hear­kens back to the birth of sto­ry­telling. At this unique­ly futur­is­tic and espe­cial­ly chaot­ic inter­ac­tive event — its first ever out­door iter­a­tion — the artist could­n’t be more present.

ANAL­PHABÈTES Lenio Kak­lea
Octo­ber 5, 12pm, 2pm & 4pm
CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS »

Greek-born and Paris-based chore­o­g­ra­ph­er Lenio Kak­lea designed this piece as a response to phys­i­cal land­scape. Con­sist­ing of three dis­tinct lev­els of spec­ta­tor­ship — near, far, and very far away — the per­for­mance blends envi­ron­ment with chore­o­graph­ic image, cre­at­ing a struc­ture that orga­nizes the audience’s visu­al expe­ri­ence. On Gov­er­nors Island, the piece will be per­formed and reimag­ined by local dancers and built in direct response to its envi­ron­ment. Co-Pre­sent­ed with L’Alliance New York as part of Cross­ing the Line Festival

Pre­vi­ous per­for­mances pre­sent­ed as part of INTER­VEN­TIONS include works by Modesto Flako” Jimenez, Indige­nous Enter­prise, Dance Hegin­both­am, and Rena Anakwe. INTER­VEN­TIONS is curat­ed by Juan Pablo Siles, Asso­ciate Cura­tor and Pro­duc­er at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. 

Orga­ni­za­tions in Residence

Each year, two dozen arts, cul­ture, edu­ca­tion­al, and envi­ron­men­tal non­prof­its uti­lize space inside the his­toric hous­es of Nolan Park and Colonels Row to present a robust cal­en­dar of free pub­lic pro­grams, host artist res­i­den­cies, and engage vis­i­tors in spe­cial activ­i­ties for all ages through­out the sum­mer months. Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence are open every Fri­day, Sat­ur­day, and Sun­day from 11am to 5pm through the end of October. 

Orga­ni­za­tions join­ing the cur­rent group of non­prof­its in Nolan Park and Colonels Row for the fall sea­son include New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA) and Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons, along with sev­er­al new exhi­bi­tions and events from the cur­rent Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence. NADA will present the sixth edi­tion of NADA House, bring­ing togeth­er 17 exhibitors from around the world pre­sent­ing 21 artists, with par­tic­i­pants engag­ing the unique char­ac­ter of the house’s his­toric space and exhibit­ing work in a diverse range of medi­ums. Escap­ing Time will exhib­it and sell art­works cre­at­ed with­in prison walls nation­wide, work­ing to dis­rupt the stereo­type soci­ety imag­ines when think­ing about the incarcerated. 

CLICK HERE TO MEET ALL OF THIS YEAR’S ORGA­NI­ZA­TIONS IN RESIDENCE »

Pub­lic Art Commissions

Jen­ny Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl, pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC, will debut new fall hours begin­ning Sep­tem­ber 9, 2024 — the piece will be open Fri­day-Sun­day from 10am-5pm through Novem­ber 3, 2024. Locat­ed in the his­toric Fort Jay, Oth­er of Pearl fea­tures a series of sev­en inti­mate, del­i­cate works that con­front con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, cli­mate change and sea lev­el rise — while call­ing atten­tion to the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of our cli­mate crisis. 

There are cur­rent­ly sev­en addi­tion­al tem­po­rary and long-term pub­lic art­works on dis­play through­out Gov­er­nors Island’s park and his­toric land­scapes, includ­ing Sheila Berger’s BIRD MMXXI­II, Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, Shantell Martin’s Church, Rachel Whiteread’s Cab­in, and Mark Handforth’s Yan­kee Hang­er.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW ALL PUB­LIC ART COMMISSIONS »

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram­ming with the vision­ary sup­port of the Ford Foun­da­tion, as well the Mel­lon Foun­da­tion, the Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Don­ald R. Mullen Fam­i­ly Foun­da­tion, Stavros Niar­chos Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, The Gottes­man Fund, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Arts, and the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts with the sup­port of the Office of the Gov­er­nor and the New York State Legislature.

Pho­to cred­its, L to R: Inua Ellams by Myah Jef­fers, cour­tesy the artist; Whale Bells, 2023, by Andrew Bearnot & Jen­ny Kendler as fea­tured in Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl,” art­work cour­tesy the artist and the Tar­ble Arts Cen­ter and pho­to by Juli­enne Schaer; Anal­pha­betes, pho­to cour­tesy L’Al­liance New York; and Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons 2023 exhi­bi­tion, pho­to by Juli­enne Schaer.

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island & The New York Cli­mate Exchange Announce Cli­mate Week on Gov­er­nors Island

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Sean Jamar

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and The New York Cli­mate Exchange announced today a sched­ule of more than 35 Cli­mate Week activ­i­ties tak­ing place on Gov­er­nors Island. Fea­tured cli­mate-focused pro­grams include guid­ed sus­tain­abil­i­ty tours, film screen­ings, tech show­cas­es, writ­ing and sto­ry­telling work­shops, and more. Events announced today high­light Gov­er­nors Island’s trans­for­ma­tion as a grow­ing resource for research and inno­va­tion in equi­table cli­mate solu­tions for New York City and the world.

Our admin­is­tra­tion is set­ting the pace in the fight against cli­mate change, acti­vat­ing $725 mil­lion in pub­lic invest­ments to sup­port the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, build­ing out our work­force to host 400,000 green jobs by 2040, and launch­ing the Cli­mate Exchange on Gov­er­nors Island in the mid­dle of New York Har­bor,” said Deputy May­or for Hous­ing, Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment and Work­force Maria Tor­res-Springer. I am excit­ed to see this robust week of pro­gram­ming from the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and the New York Cli­mate Exchange to pre­view the inno­v­a­tive resources, events, and cur­ricu­lum that will be brought to the island through this once-in-a-gen­er­a­tion partnership.”

Each year, Cli­mate Week NYC offers a remark­able oppor­tu­ni­ty to wit­ness first­hand how New York City is lead­ing the fight against cli­mate change and build­ing a stronger, more equi­table, and more resilient city,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Our cal­en­dar of events — Gov­er­nors Island’s biggest Cli­mate Week offer­ing to date — high­lights pro­gram­ming from the Trust, the Exchange, and the vibrant com­mu­ni­ty of cli­mate-focused ten­ants and part­ners here on the Island, shin­ing a light on this extra­or­di­nary space’s evo­lu­tion as a hub for urban cli­mate solutions.” 

Cli­mate Week NYC attracts a glob­al audi­ence, and I’m excit­ed that this year we’re cre­at­ing a new go-to” loca­tion and cli­mate week expe­ri­ence,” said Stephen Ham­mer, CEO of The New York Cli­mate Exchange. Vis­i­tors can par­tic­i­pate in dis­cus­sions about the lat­est cli­mate pol­i­cy and finance dis­cus­sions, meet dozens of cli­mate tech entre­pre­neurs, and learn how inno­va­tors are try­ing to engage the pub­lic on cli­mate issues through an arts and cul­ture lens. Our pro­gram­ming will offer a sense of what we’ll do on a much big­ger scale once our full Gov­er­nors Island cam­pus is oper­a­tional in 2028.” 

In April 2023, May­or Eric Adams and the Trust announced The Exchange as the anchor research and edu­ca­tion­al part­ner for Gov­er­nors Island’s cli­mate ini­tia­tives. The Exchange, a new, 

non­prof­it ini­tia­tive estab­lished by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty and a con­sor­tium of uni­ver­si­ties, busi­ness­es, and non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions, will cre­ate a state-of-the-art, $700-mil­lion cam­pus on Gov­er­nors Island. This facil­i­ty will be ded­i­cat­ed to edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming, research, cli­mate tech incu­ba­tion, and pol­i­cy work aimed at advanc­ing cli­mate action in New York City and else­where around the world. The full cam­pus is sched­uled to open to the pub­lic in 2028, but Exchange pro­gram­ming has already launched on Gov­er­nors Island and around the city.

Cli­mate Week NYC 2024 events on Gov­er­nors Island are orga­nized by the Trust, the Island’s com­mu­ni­ty of part­ners and ten­ants, and The Exchange and its core part­ners. Events will take place across Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing at a new com­mu­ni­ty con­ven­ing space inside the for­mer Our Lady Star of the Sea — a decon­se­crat­ed for­mer mil­i­tary chapel locat­ed in the Island’s His­toric Dis­trict that fea­tures Church, Shantell Martin’s pop­u­lar pub­lic art­work com­mis­sioned through Gov­er­nors Island Arts, on its façade. This his­toric build­ing has recent­ly under­gone upgrades to cre­ate an acces­si­ble indoor space for com­mu­ni­ty events on Gov­er­nors Island.

A full sched­ule of events and pre­sent­ing orga­ni­za­tions can be found below and online at www​.gov​is​land​.org/​c​l​i​m​a​t​e​-week, with more to be announced in the com­ing weeks. 

Cli­mate Week NYC on Gov­er­nors Island Schedule:

ONGO­ING: Oth­er of Pearl, Jen­ny Kendler Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil) Open Wednes­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Fort Jay — Pub­lic art instal­la­tion that tells the sto­ry of the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of the cli­mate and envi­ron­men­tal cri­sis, while con­sid­er­ing the oys­ter and whale as cen­tral play­ers in an eco­log­i­cal entan­gle­ment between human and non­hu­man beings, water­ways, and flows of cap­i­tal. Through sev­en del­i­cate works, the artist con­fronts con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — cli­mate change, ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, bio­di­ver­si­ty loss, and sea lev­el rise — while point­ing towards the cul­tur­al struc­tures that have allowed these cat­a­stro­phes to occur.

ONGO­ING: Sari Carel: A More Per­fect Cir­cle, KODA Open Fri­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Colonels Row Build­ing 407B — Artist and activist Sari Carel presents a series of ceram­ic sculp­tures inspired by the sin­gle-use cof­fee cup, uncov­er­ing a sense of pow­er­less­ness and con­flict about a choice at the cen­ter of a dai­ly rou­tine. This pub­lic art instal­la­tion explores what hap­pens to this item when tossed into the trash can, and why we take it for granted.

ONGO­ING: [SUN] Flower Waves, Har­vest­works Open Fri­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Nolan Park Build­ing 10A — This dig­i­tal media instal­la­tion by Vic­to­ria Ves­na in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Wal­ter Gekel­man explores the har­mo­nious inter­ac­tion between sun­flow­ers and Alfvén waves, demon­strat­ing how art and sci­ence con­verge to reveal deep­er understandings.

Sep­tem­ber 21, 1 – 4PM: Play is Pow­er: Design Your Own Cli­mate Game, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — In this series of con­sec­u­tive, hour-long work­shops, par­tic­i­pants will be guid­ed step-by-step through the process of design­ing their very own Cli­mate Game: a table­top, role-play­ing, or out­door game that explores a cli­mate issue of their choosing. 

Sep­tem­ber 21, 10AM-12PM & 2 – 4PM: Melt­ing Metrop­o­lis & Com­mu­ni­ty Spon­sor Lab Walk, Well­come Trust & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 22, 1 – 3PM: Earth, Wind, and Water demon­stra­tion, Earth Mat­ter NY Urban Farm — Dis­cov­er the role organ­ic mat­ter plays in water reten­tion, ero­sion con­trol, and car­bon sequestration.

Sep­tem­ber 22, 1 – 4PM: Day of Action / Engage­ment, NYU & New York Cli­mate Exchange 

Sep­tem­ber 22, 2 – 2:30PM: Cli­mate Week Seed Col­lect­ing, The Bee Con­ser­van­cy Urban Farm — Col­lect seeds with the Bee Con­ser­van­cy at their Bee Sanc­tu­ary on Gov­er­nors Island’s Urban Farm — par­tic­i­pants will get seed col­lect­ing tips, learn about seed strat­i­fi­ca­tion and ger­mi­na­tion, and hear how cli­mate and its changes impact the bee and plant species on Gov­er­nors Island and beyond.

Sep­tem­ber 22 – 25, 5 – 7PM: Cli­mate Week Walk­ing Tours, Bil­lion Oys­ter Project Nolan Park Build­ing 16 — Join a Cli­mate Week walk­ing tour to explore Bil­lion Oys­ter Project’s vibrant efforts in restor­ing New York Har­bor’s oys­ter reefs and their impact on com­bat­ing cli­mate change.

Sep­tem­ber 23, 9 – 11AM: New Rec­om­men­da­tions for Cli­mate Actions in Cities from ARC3.3, Urban Cli­mate Change Research Net­work & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 12 – 3PM: Extreme Heat Sur­vival Through a Pub­lic Health Lens: Intro­duc­ing Project HEAT­WAVE (Part1), NYU & The New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 3 – 4:30PM: Ready Set Act! An Eth­i­cal Frame­work for a Rapid­ly Chang­ing Cli­mate Com­mu­ni­ty, Amer­i­can Geo­phys­i­cal Union & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 5 – 7PM: Urban@UW’s Research to Action Col­lab­o­ra­to­ry, Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton & The New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 24, 10AM-1PM: Solu­tions to the Ener­gy Tran­si­tion Chal­lenges in the NYC Region, Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 24, 10AM-2PM: Adaptation(s) 2.0 Guid­ed Tours, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Nolan Park Build­ing 14 — Guid­ed tour of exhi­bi­tions that spot­light dif­fer­ent per­spec­tives on cli­mate adap­ta­tion and strate­gies in arch­i­pel­a­gos — com­mu­ni­ties at the great­est risk and in need of find­ing liv­able solu­tions for future cli­mate change. 

Sep­tem­ber 24, 3 – 5:30PM: Charg­ing Ahead: Glob­al Strate­gies for Bus Elec­tri­fi­ca­tion, Crux Alliance & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 24, 4 – 6PM: IA Island(ing) Adap­ta­tions Dis­cus­sion, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Admiral’s House — Pan­el dis­cus­sion bring­ing togeth­er rep­re­sen­ta­tion from high lev­el gov­ern­ment offi­cials, inno­v­a­tive design­ers, finan­cial lead­ers, and pol­i­cy mak­ers. Par­tic­i­pants will share their per­spec­tives and engage one anoth­er and the audi­ence in dis­cus­sion through a mod­er­at­ed dis­cus­sion and a Q&A.

Sep­tem­ber 24, 4 – 6PM: Adaptation(s) 2.0, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only) — Join for a guid­ed exhi­bi­tion tour and pan­el discussion.

Sep­tem­ber 25, 9AM-6PM: NYCE Cli­mate Tech Show­case, The New York Cli­mate Exchange 

Sep­tem­ber 26, 10 – 11:30 AM: Imag­in­ing Cli­mate Resilient and Thriv­ing Com­mu­ni­ties through Youth Edu­ca­tion Pro­grams, Geor­gia Tech & New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 26, Liv­ing Build­ings are Resilient Build­ings: Cli­mate Mit­i­ga­tion AND Adap­ta­tion, Geor­gia Tech & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 26, 6:30 – 8:30PM: Film Screen­ing and Pan­el: Get­ting Out­side the Cli­mate Bub­ble,” Well­come Trust & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 27, 1 – 3PM: Healthy Choic­es, Healthy Plan­et: Cli­mate Aware­ness in Health Edu­ca­tion, Pace Uni­ver­si­ty & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 27, 11AM-1PM: Sus­tain­able Sto­ry­telling: On and Off Cam­era, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and the Micro-Plas­ti­na­tion” film crew Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Learn what makes an impact­ful sto­ry that inspires change both on and off cam­era. This pan­el will include a mix­er with oth­er media-mak­ers and a pre­view of an upcom­ing short film: Micro-Plas­ti­na­tion.”

Sep­tem­ber 27, 1 – 4PM: Sus­tain­able Sto­ries: Cli­mate, Food, and Cul­ture through Diverse Voic­es, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and The Uproot Project Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — A keynote on the inter­sec­tion of diver­si­ty, cul­ture, and food as cli­mate solu­tions, fol­lowed by a pan­el dis­cus­sion and work­shop offer­ing sto­ry­telling tech­niques for envi­ron­men­tal jour­nal­ism and insights into high­light­ing these cru­cial intersections.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 10AM-5PM: Imag­i­nary Acoustic Visions of Cas­tle Williams, Har­vest­works & New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 28 & 29, 11AM-1PM: Cli­mate Fic­tion Work­shop with Author Susan Kaye Quinn, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and the NYC Cli­mate Writ­ers Col­lec­tive Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Write a sto­ry to build a bet­ter world! This event, orga­nized by the NYC Cli­mate Writ­ers Col­lec­tive, will spark cre­ativ­i­ty in every­one — no mat­ter their pre­vi­ous writ­ing experience.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 11AM-5PM: Flower Plas­ma by Vic­to­ria Ves­na in col­lab­o­ra­tion with plas­ma physi­cist Wal­ter Gekel­man and bio­med­ical engi­neer Haley Marks, Har­vest­works Nolan Park Build­ing 10A — Spe­cial instal­la­tion fea­tur­ing sound and images from UCLA’s Large Plas­ma Device, solar wind data from NASA’s Park­er Solar Probe, and nat­ur­al record­ings — offer­ing an immer­sive med­i­ta­tion on solar ener­gy and the cycle of cre­ation and destruction.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 1 – 3PM: Cli­mate Café at the Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — An uplift­ing after­noon of refresh­ments, med­i­ta­tion, and a mean­ing­ful con­ver­sa­tion on cli­mate emo­tions. Par­tic­i­pants can enjoy cof­fee and snacks with oth­ers in the cli­mate com­mu­ni­ty as they share their feel­ings and get to know oth­ers in the movement.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 2:30PM: Gar­den­ing for Cli­mate Change, GrowNYC Urban Farm —  This guid­ed tour will focus on how cli­mate change will impact gar­den­ing, what GrowNYC’s Teach­ing Gar­den on Gov­er­nors Island does to mit­i­gate its impact on cli­mate change, and how gar­dens can adapt to a chang­ing climate.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 3:30PM: Cli­mate Week Pol­li­na­tor Walk, The Bee Con­ser­van­cy Urban Farm — Learn about New York City’s pol­li­na­tors (and the habi­tats that sup­port them) and explore nature through a pollinator’s lens with an expe­ri­enced guide from the Bee Conservancy. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 3:30PM: Gov­er­nors Island Bird Tour, NYC Bird Alliance and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Colonels Row Build­ing 405B — Whether you’re an expert bird­er or a begin­ner, this guid­ed tour — led by an NYC Bird Alliance edu­ca­tor along with the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s arborist — will help you dis­cov­er all of the birdlife the Island has to offer, and how the Island’s trees pro­vide vital habitat. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2:30 – 3PM: Imag­ined Futures: Grief & Seeds, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and Holes in the Wall Col­lec­tive Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Vis­it the Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um for three embod­ied activ­i­ties to learn about alter­na­tive time scales — bear­ing wit­ness to our fear and our col­lec­tive respon­si­bil­i­ty to where we go from here. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 3 – 5PM: The Chase (EP) Release Par­ty: A Cli­mate Week Jam, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and Cre­dle Enter­tain­ment Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Cel­e­brate the close of Cli­mate Week with the release of CREDLE’s 5th stu­dio project, The Chase (EP), an Afropop, R&B, and House genre-focused music project.

Sep­tem­ber 29, 3 – 5PM: Grief & Seeds: Hon­or­ing the Past, Cre­at­ing the Future, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um, Holes in the Wall Col­lec­tive, Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Close out Cli­mate Week with inten­tion at this gath­er­ing to hon­or place and pos­si­bil­i­ty. Fea­tur­ing elder and activist Jk Canepa, youth orga­niz­er Anna Tso­mo with youth from 6th St. Com­mu­ni­ty Cli­mate Action group, a pop­up seed gath­er­ing with Next Epoch Seed Library, and a clos­ing rit­u­al led by Noelle Ghous­sai­ni of Sacred Space. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 3 – 6PM: Remem­ber Ida: A 3rd Anniver­sary Pod­cast Lis­ten­ing Ses­sion and Reflec­tion Cir­cle, Queens Mem­o­ry Project & New York Cli­mate Exchange

On View Dai­ly: Gov­er­nors Island Arts Pub­lic Artworks

Gov­er­nors Island Arts, the arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust, boasts a diverse col­lec­tion of pub­lic art pieces, sev­er­al of which engage direct­ly with issues of cli­mate and the environment: 

  • Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, locat­ed in The Hills with­in the Island’s award-win­ning park, takes the form of a vast pub­lic orchard of hybrid fruit trees, each con­tain­ing mul­ti­ple heir­loom vari­eties that were once found in abun­dance in the New York City area but have large­ly dis­ap­peared due to cli­mate change and the indus­tri­al­iza­tion of agriculture.
  • Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, locat­ed inside Build­ing 105 across from Fort Jay, trans­forms a his­toric for­mer arse­nal build­ing into an aban­doned research out­post that invites vis­i­tors to peer inside and imag­ine the life of a soli­tary researcher faced with the real­i­ties of a future marred by cli­mate change.
  • Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, locat­ed in the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing fer­ry ter­mi­nal at 10 South Street in Man­hat­tan, is a large-scale mur­al depict­ing vignettes from the Island’s his­to­ry con­tained with­in mod­ern-day sin­gle-use plas­tic con­tain­ers found float­ing in oceans world­wide in a play on the tra­di­tion­al ship in a bottle.”

Orga­nized by the Cli­mate Group, Cli­mate Week NYC runs Sep­tem­ber 22 – 29, 2024, and is the largest annu­al cli­mate event of its kind. With a unique water­front cam­pus envi­ron­ment, an award-win­ning park engi­neered for cli­mate change; a diverse and engaged audi­ence of near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors every year; cli­mate pilot­ing and edu­ca­tion oppor­tu­ni­ties; a col­lec­tion of pub­lic art com­mis­sions engag­ing direct­ly with cli­mate issues; and a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of edu­ca­tion­al, non­prof­it, and com­mer­cial ten­ants — includ­ing Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, Beam Cen­ter, Wind Sup­port NYC, the soon-to-open But­ter­milk Labs, and The New York Cli­mate Exchange — Gov­er­nors Island is at the fore­front of research­ing and demon­strat­ing cli­mate solu­tions built for cities. 

The Trust’s Gov­er­nors Island Cli­mate pro­grams are made pos­si­ble with the gen­er­ous sup­port of Ama­zon, Con Edi­son, Deutsche Bank, the Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, LISC, and the New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust.

About the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island is the non­prof­it cor­po­ra­tion cre­at­ed by the City of New York that is respon­si­ble for the rede­vel­op­ment and oper­a­tion of 150 acres of Gov­er­nors Island. The Trust’s mis­sion is to real­ize the full poten­tial of Gov­er­nors Island for the inspi­ra­tion and enjoy­ment of all New York­ers, demon­strat­ing a bold vision for pub­lic space. For more infor­ma­tion, vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org.

About The New York Cli­mate Exchange

The New York Cli­mate Exchange (The Exchange) is a new not-for-prof­it cli­mate solu­tions cen­ter designed to build com­mu­ni­ty, fos­ter col­lab­o­ra­tion, advance cli­mate knowl­edge, and empow­er mar­gin­al­ized com­mu­ni­ties through cross-dis­ci­pli­nary net­work­ing, impact­ful pro­gram­ming, and cut­ting-edge facil­i­ties. While The Exchange will have a phys­i­cal pres­ence on Gov­er­nors Island, its spir­it and influ­ence will extend beyond the Island into New York City and across the coun­try and world. Our diverse coali­tion of part­ners — com­mit­ted and pre­pared to col­lec­tive­ly dis­rupt the sta­tus quo — incor­po­rates local and glob­al per­spec­tives on cli­mate change from acad­e­mia, the pri­vate sec­tor, and com­mu­ni­ty-lev­el orga­ni­za­tions. As the first of its kind, The Exchange will unlock inte­grat­ed and scal­able approach­es to sus­tain­abil­i­ty, ulti­mate­ly serv­ing as a glob­al mod­el for sus­tain­able pos­i­tive change. 

Cli­mate Solu­tions in Action on Gov­er­nors Island

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Photo by Sean Jamar

Guest post by Col­by Dor­cé­ly, Cli­mate Pro­grams Intern at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island

In June 2023, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island launched its Cli­mate Solu­tions Pilot­ing Pro­gram, a call for pilot­ing and demon­stra­tion projects address­ing cli­mate mit­i­ga­tion, cli­mate adap­ta­tion, and envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice in New York City and cities around the world. One year lat­er, after select­ing the inau­gur­al cohort of pilot­ing projects, the Trust held its first cli­mate demo days fea­tur­ing projects includ­ing inno­va­tions relat­ed to liv­ing shore­lines, urban aqua­cul­ture, water and air qual­i­ty, and indoor agri­cul­ture. Through­out these two events, vis­i­tors had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to inter­act with these inno­v­a­tive projects and the pas­sion­ate indi­vid­u­als behind them. 

The work being show­cased on Gov­er­nors Island demon­strates the Trust’s efforts to cre­ate real-world oppor­tu­ni­ties for inno­va­tion, sup­port the growth of ear­ly-stage com­pa­nies, and engage New York­ers in the cli­mate solu­tions that are cre­at­ing the jobs of the future. Pilot­ing at Gov­er­nors Island sup­ports New York City’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, which address­es the chal­lenge of cli­mate change while cre­at­ing trans­for­ma­tive oppor­tu­ni­ties for com­pa­nies and New York­ers across the five boroughs. 

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Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer addressing the audience at the Climate Demo Day Preview event on Governors Island, July 11, 2024. Photo by Sean Jamar.


On Thurs­day, July 11, 2024, the Island wel­comed over 100 atten­dees from var­i­ous sec­tors of the cli­mate world for a Cli­mate Demo Day Pre­view event, includ­ing fun­ders, inno­va­tors, and pol­i­cy­mak­ers. The event opened with a wel­come by Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer, who has been a crit­i­cal cham­pi­on in sup­port­ing the growth of Gov­er­nors Island as a Cen­ter for Cli­mate Solu­tions. Her pres­ence under­scored the impor­tance of col­lab­o­ra­tive efforts in address­ing cli­mate chal­lenges and high­light­ed the city’s com­mit­ment to fos­ter­ing an inclu­sive and trans­for­ma­tive green economy.

The excite­ment from the Demo Day Pre­view car­ried over into the week­end with a fam­i­ly-friend­ly Cli­mate Pilot­ing Sum­mer Kick­off held on City of Water Day, July 13, 2024. The even­t’s cen­ter­piece fea­tured ground­break­ing projects from the win­ners of the Water Abun­dance Chal­lenge, the Trust’s first-ever themed chal­lenge, aim­ing to answer how water can help to pow­er cli­mate solu­tions that grow blue and green jobs and cre­ate health­i­er com­mu­ni­ties. Through­out City of Water Day, vis­i­tors had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to inter­act with these inno­v­a­tive projects and the pas­sion­ate indi­vid­u­als behind them. 

Isabelle Stin­nette, Restora­tion Man­ag­er for the New York-New Jer­sey Har­bor and Estu­ary Pro­gram at the Hud­son Riv­er Foun­da­tion, one of the orga­niz­ing bod­ies behind City of Water Day, expressed her admi­ra­tion for the event, stat­ing, I think it’s real­ly nice that this is a hotbed of inno­va­tion, espe­cial­ly cli­mate-focused inno­va­tion. There’s a safe space for these small com­pa­nies and non­prof­its to pilot their projects, share with the com­mu­ni­ty, and get input and help.” 

The fol­low­ing sec­tions detail spe­cif­ic projects that cap­ti­vat­ed atten­dees and show­cased the poten­tial for sus­tain­able urban development.

Air Qual­i­ty Mon­i­tor­ing with South Bronx Unite

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Leslie Vasquez of South Bronx Unite passionately engaging with the public about their air quality monitoring project designed to identify pollution sources and advocate for cleaner air. Photo by Sean Jamar.

South Bronx Unite show­cased an air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing ini­tia­tive aimed at iden­ti­fy­ing pol­lu­tion sources and their health impacts in the South Bronx. 

Air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing is not some­thing that every­body is famil­iar with,” said Leslie Vasquez, Clean Air Pro­gram Orga­niz­er. We need to advo­cate for pol­i­cy changes based on our data.” This project uti­lizes autonomous, solar-pow­ered mon­i­tors to pro­vide real-time data, help­ing to push for clean­er air and bet­ter health resources in dis­ad­van­taged com­mu­ni­ties. By involv­ing the com­mu­ni­ty in mon­i­tor­ing efforts, South Bronx Unite aims to raise aware­ness and dri­ve pol­i­cy changes that can sig­nif­i­cant­ly improve air qual­i­ty and pub­lic health outcomes.

Find South Bronx Unite’s air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor at the base of Out­look Hill.

Duro UAS: Real-Time Water Qual­i­ty Data

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Brian Wilson, CEO of Duro UAS, describing his sonde deployed around the Island’s water and equipped with innovative IoT water quality sensors that provide real-time data to protect our waterways. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Duro UAS, show­cased their Inter­net of Things (IoT) water qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing devices, which pro­vide real-time data to track water conditions. 

Engag­ing the pub­lic and show­ing them the amaz­ing cli­mate tech projects hap­pen­ing here is essen­tial,” empha­sized Bri­an Wil­son, Co-Founder and CEO. Duro UAS’s dig­i­tal sen­sors offer a prac­ti­cal solu­tion for mon­i­tor­ing water qual­i­ty, mak­ing it eas­i­er to man­age and improve water resources. Their tech­nol­o­gy not only helps in detect­ing pol­lu­tants but also in under­stand­ing broad­er envi­ron­men­tal trends, there­by enabling more informed deci­sion-mak­ing for water man­age­ment and con­ser­va­tion efforts.

Check out Duro UAS’s son­des in the waters off of Yan­kee Pier and Sois­sons Landing.

LAERO: Trans­form­ing Grey­wa­ter Treatment

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Noemi Florea from Laero engaging attendees with Cycleau's compact greywater treatment system, a decentralized system that empowers building owners and residents with a solution to urban wastewater management. Photo by Sean Jamar.

LAERO intro­duced Cycleau, a com­pact grey­wa­ter treat­ment sys­tem that can be installed under sinks, show­ers, and laun­dry units. 

By treat­ing grey­wa­ter where it’s gen­er­at­ed, we can reduce the num­ber of pol­lu­tants enter­ing our water­ways,” high­light­ed founder Noe­mi Flo­rea. This inno­v­a­tive sys­tem has the poten­tial to sig­nif­i­cant­ly decrease urban waste­water pol­lu­tion, pro­vid­ing a sus­tain­able solu­tion for res­i­den­tial and com­mer­cial use. LAERO’s approach to onsite water treat­ment rep­re­sents a shift towards decen­tral­ized water man­age­ment, which can alle­vi­ate the bur­den on munic­i­pal treat­ment facil­i­ties and con­tribute to health­i­er urban water­ways. The prod­uct oper­ates as a stand­alone piece of equip­ment and can also inte­grate into a household’s exist­ing sup­ply lines and drain­pipes, equip­ping res­i­dents and com­mu­ni­ties with an afford­able and scal­able option to improve their own water infrastructure.

Dis­cov­er the Cycleau device in action at the Parade Ground water sta­tion and inside the ADA bath­room at Yan­kee Pier.

Eco­log­i­cal Inno­va­tion by Object Territories

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Object Territories showcasing their visionary project to create sustainable microhabitats along urban shorelines. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Object Ter­ri­to­ries pre­sent­ed their project focused on cre­at­ing urban habi­tats along shorelines. 

Our goal is to fos­ter eco­log­i­cal stew­ard­ship and cre­ate sus­tain­able urban envi­ron­ments,” stat­ed Mar­cus Carter, Part­ner at Object Ter­ri­to­ries. Mar­cus is also an Assis­tant Pro­fes­sor at Rens­se­laer Poly­tech­nic Insti­tute, where his stu­dents work along­side experts to design and imple­ment urban micro­hab­i­tats along shore­lines. This hands-on involve­ment pro­vides them with prac­ti­cal expe­ri­ence in sus­tain­able urban plan­ning, prepar­ing them to con­tribute to future urban resilience initiatives. 

Their designs allow vis­i­tors to inter­act with and under­stand the impor­tance of urban eco­log­i­cal sys­tems, pro­mot­ing a deep­er con­nec­tion to nature with­in the city and were designed in col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Cen­ter for Archi­tec­ture, Sci­ence, and Ecol­o­gy (CASE) at Rens­se­laer Poly­tech­nic Insti­tute, after­NA­TURE, and Fort Miller Group. The Object Ter­ri­to­ries team aims to enhance bio­di­ver­si­ty and resilience in urban areas, mak­ing cities more liv­able and envi­ron­men­tal­ly friend­ly by inte­grat­ing green spaces and nat­ur­al habi­tats into urban planning.

Find Object Ter­ri­to­ries’ instal­la­tions along the shore­lines near Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

RETI Cen­ter: Water­front Resilience

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RETI Center inspiring visitors with their floating gardens, aiming to transform urban waterfronts into resilient ecosystems. Photo by Sean Jamar.

RETI Cen­ter dis­cussed their ini­tia­tives relat­ed to coastal activ­i­ties like kelp har­vest­ing and their float­ing Blue­Blocks Gardens. 

RETI Cen­ter pro­vides train­ing pro­grams for peo­ple involved in coastal activ­i­ties and work­force devel­op­ment for a more sus­tain­able city and urban envi­ron­ments,” explained project team mem­ber Greg Pucil­lo. I’m excit­ed to see the launch out into the water and also to engage with oth­er groups on Gov­er­nors Island who are pilot­ing new projects to envi­sion a future for New York City’s water­front. Our goal is to fos­ter a broad­er con­ver­sa­tion about sus­tain­abil­i­ty in con­nec­tion with the water.” 

New York City youth are active­ly involved in RETI Center’s projects. They par­tic­i­pate in hands-on learn­ing expe­ri­ences, help­ing to build and main­tain the Blue­Blocks Gar­dens and kelp har­vest­ing sys­tems. This engage­ment not only pro­vides valu­able work­force train­ing but also instills a deep­er under­stand­ing of sus­tain­able prac­tices and the impor­tance of eco­log­i­cal stewardship​. The Blue­Blocks Gar­dens allow marine habi­tat to thrive both in and above the water, sup­port­ing wildlife and build­ing a liv­ing shore­line. When deployed in large instal­la­tions, they are envi­sioned to absorb and slow down wave action in low-lying water­front communities. 

Find RETI Center’s Blue­Blocks Gar­dens float­ing off Yan­kee Pier.

GrowNYC: Hydro­pon­ics for Urban Agriculture

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The GrowNYC team highlighting the future of urban agriculture through hydroponic farming in a self-sustaining container farm. Photo by Sean Jamar.

GrowNYC high­light­ed the ben­e­fits of hydro­pon­ic farm­ing with their con­tain­er farm locat­ed on Gov­er­nors Island — a joint effort between the orga­ni­za­tion, Con Edi­son, the Elec­tric Pow­er Research Insti­tute (EPRI), and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island.

Hydro­pon­ics can mit­i­gate many chal­lenges faced by tra­di­tion­al agri­cul­ture, espe­cial­ly in a chang­ing cli­mate,” observed Bar­ry Roth­stein, Con­tain­er Farm Coor­di­na­tor. GrowNYC’s sys­tem uses sig­nif­i­cant­ly less water and space, mak­ing it a viable option for urban food pro­duc­tion and con­tribut­ing to food secu­ri­ty and sus­tain­abil­i­ty. This approach not only con­serves water resources but also pro­vides a scal­able mod­el for urban agri­cul­ture, which can be adopt­ed by com­mu­ni­ties to improve local food sys­tems and reduce their envi­ron­men­tal footprint. 

GrowNYC’s con­tain­er farm is locat­ed on the Parade Ground behind the Colonels Row houses.

Sea­weed City: Urban Sea­weed Farming

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Luke Eddins (left) and Shanjana Mahmud (center) of Seaweed City exploring the environmental benefits of urban seaweed farming for water quality improvement. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Sea­weed City explores the poten­tial of urban sea­weed farm­ing for envi­ron­men­tal remediation. 

Sea­weed farm­ing can help clean our water­ways and cre­ate marine habi­tats,” explained co-founder Luke Eddins. Their project aims to use sea­weed to extract excess nutri­ents from the water, com­bat ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion, and pro­vide raw mate­ri­als for sus­tain­able products. 

I’m excit­ed because my nephews are here, and I’m real­ly excit­ed to share some water activ­i­ty with them and see how much I love plants,” added co-founder Shan­jana Mah­mud. Grow­ing sea­weed through urban aqua­cul­ture cre­ates a small­er car­bon foot­print than land-based agri­cul­ture and presents an oppor­tu­ni­ty to engage New York­ers in farm­ing meth­ods for a sus­tain­able future. Through that, Sea­weed City hopes to pro­mote an eco­log­i­cal­ly, eco­nom­i­cal­ly, and cul­tur­al­ly pro­duc­tive shore­line. Sea­weed City’s pilot­ing project is fis­cal­ly spon­sored by New­town Creek Alliance.

Check out Sea­weed City’s Urban Sea­weed Nurs­ery in the waters off Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

Just EcoC­i­ties & Bio­hab­i­tats: Tidal Planters

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Jamie Ong and Kevin Dahms presenting their tidal planters that act as miniature onshore wetlands to filter water and support urban biodiversity.

Just EcoC­i­ties and Bio­hab­i­tats intro­duced their tidal planter project, a col­lab­o­ra­tion aimed at improv­ing water qual­i­ty and expand­ing wet­land habi­tats. We’re pilot­ing this project to address com­bined sew­er over­flows and enhance urban bio­di­ver­si­ty,” men­tioned Jamie Ong, Founder of Just EcoCities. 

It’s been real­ly excit­ing today to talk to dif­fer­ent peo­ple and see who knows about com­bined sew­er over­flows, who doesn’t, and then get input on what they think are rea­son­able solu­tions,” added Kevin Dahms, Water Resources Engi­neer at Biohabitats. 

Their tidal planters act as mini-wet­lands, fil­ter­ing water and pro­vid­ing habi­tat for wildlife. This tech­nol­o­gy pro­vides a mod­el for expand­ing marsh habi­tat through­out urban water­fronts with lim­it­ed space on land or with no nat­ur­al shore­lines. The project exem­pli­fies how design inno­va­tion and com­mu­ni­ty involve­ment can work togeth­er to estab­lish marsh habi­tat through­out urban water­fronts, clean up pol­lut­ed water, and increase con­nec­tion with local waterways.

Find Just EcoC­i­ties & Bio­hab­i­tats’ tidal planters near the water­front at Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

Vycarb

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Vycarb leading a workshop with the Urban Assembly New York Harbor School. Photo courtesy of Vycarb.

Brook­lyn-based start­up Vycarb has devel­oped a new sys­tem for mea­sur­ing and remov­ing green­house gas car­bon diox­ide (CO2) in water. CO2 is increas­ing in the atmos­phere, warm­ing the plan­et, and in the ocean, where it harms ocean life. In the East Riv­er, CO2 is excep­tion­al­ly high because of pol­lu­tion, con­tribut­ing to glob­al warm­ing and acid­i­fy­ing the water. Through car­bon cap­ture, cli­mate change impacts can be mit­i­gat­ed in water. With its first of its kind tech­nol­o­gy for cap­tur­ing and mea­sur­ing CO2 in water, Vycarb is able to reverse ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion and remove cli­mate-warm­ing CO2 in the waters just off this pier. Vycar­b’s mod­u­lar, scal­able mod­el opens up oppor­tu­ni­ties for all com­mu­ni­ties to inte­grate car­bon cap­ture tech­nolo­gies into urban envi­ron­ments to achieve envi­ron­men­tal and eco­nom­ic benefits. 

Vycar­b’s drop-in water treat­ment sys­tem can be seen at Pier 102.

By bring­ing togeth­er diverse solu­tions and fos­ter­ing pub­lic engage­ment, the cli­mate pilot­ing projects on Gov­er­nors Island demon­strate one impor­tant step towards a sus­tain­able future by wel­com­ing all vis­i­tors to meet a diverse cohort of cli­mate inno­va­tors and to learn about cli­mate solu­tions in devel­op­ment today. The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s com­mit­ment to sup­port­ing such inno­v­a­tive projects under­scores the poten­tial for cities to become hubs of envi­ron­men­tal solu­tions and resilience. As these ini­tia­tives con­tin­ue to evolve, they hold the promise of mak­ing sig­nif­i­cant con­tri­bu­tions to urban sus­tain­abil­i­ty and cli­mate resilience, set­ting an inspir­ing exam­ple for oth­er cities around the world. The Trust is grate­ful to the sup­port­ers of Gov­er­nors Island’s cli­mate pro­grams, includ­ing ConEdi­son, Ama­zon, New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust, the Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, Deutsche Bank, and LISC.

House Fest Returns to Gov­er­nors Island August 16 – 19

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Evening program with Taiwanese American Arts Council at House Fest 2023. Photo by Lucas Van Cott.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts announced today the third annu­al House Fest, a free fes­ti­val cel­e­brat­ing the incred­i­ble range of works pre­sent­ed by the sea­son­al arts, cul­tur­al, edu­ca­tion­al, and envi­ron­men­tal Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence on Gov­er­nors Island. From August 16 – 19, 2024, Gov­er­nors Island Arts will bring togeth­er more than two dozen cul­tur­al part­ners for an annu­al cre­ative cel­e­bra­tion in and around the his­toric for­mer mil­i­tary hous­es of Nolan Park and Colonels Row on the Island, fea­tur­ing more than 50 free dance and music per­for­mances, out­door instal­la­tions, inter­ac­tive work­shops, open stu­dios, and more.

This year’s House Fest is our biggest yet, fea­tur­ing orga­ni­za­tions and artists from every sin­gle bor­ough in what is tru­ly a city­wide cel­e­bra­tion,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Gov­er­nors Island Arts is priv­i­leged to work along­side our part­ners and col­lab­o­ra­tors to con­tin­ue to bring trans­for­ma­tive per­for­mances and pro­grams to Island vis­i­tors and all New Yorkers.”

Each year, Nolan Park and Colonels Row come alive with cul­tur­al offer­ings in our city’s most unique set­ting, and we are so excit­ed to high­light this incred­i­ble artis­tic com­mu­ni­ty at House Fest for the third year in a row,” said Juan Pablo Siles, Asso­ciate Cura­tor and Pro­duc­er at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. We’re grate­ful to every­one that makes this pro­gram such a suc­cess year after year, and invite all New York­ers to hop on the fer­ry and make some last­ing cul­tur­al mem­o­ries at this year’s House Fest.” 

House Fest will fea­ture sev­er­al new pro­grams pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts, includ­ing a Pro­jec­tion Map­ping Par­ty curat­ed by Sal­ly Twin, a work­shop with NYC-based drum­line Fogo Azul, per­for­mances from Miri­am Elha­jli, Zoh Amba, and Eliana Glass and Eli Fola, and an inter­gen­er­a­tional social dance par­ty with Dance is Life NYC. These events will take place along­side pub­lic pro­grams and acti­va­tions from the program’s two dozen sea­son­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence that include Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House, Res­i­den­cy Unlim­it­ed, Art­Crawl Harlem, Flux Fac­to­ry, Stat­en Island Urban Cen­ter, Swale, Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons, Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts, the Muse­um of Con­tem­po­rary African Dias­po­ran Art (MoCA­DA), and many more. 

A full sched­ule of events and list of pre­sent­ing orga­ni­za­tions can be found at www.gov​is​land​.org/​h​o​u​s​e​-fest, with more events to be announced in the com­ing weeks. 

The 2024 Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence are:
Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House Man­hat­tan, AnkhLave Arts Alliance Man­hat­tan, Art­Crawl Harlem Man­hat­tan, BronxArt­Space The Bronx, Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts The Bronx, Bil­lion Oys­ter Project Man­hat­tan, caribBE­ING Brook­lyn, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Man­hat­tan, DuYe Moves Brook­lyn, Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons Man­hat­tan, Filmshop Man­hat­tan, Flux Fac­to­ry Queens, Foun­tain House Gallery Man­hat­tan, Har­vest­works Man­hat­tan, KODA Brook­lyn, The Muse­um of Con­tem­po­rary African Dias­po­ran Arts (MoCA­DA) Brook­lyn, New Art, Deal­ers Alliance (NADA) Man­hat­tan, New York Arts Pro­gram Man­hat­tan, New York Latin Amer­i­can Art Tri­en­ni­al Man­hat­tan, NYC Bird Alliance Man­hat­tan, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Brook­lyn, Red Hook Ini­tia­tive and Red Hook Art Project Brook­lyn, Res­i­den­cy Unlim­it­ed (RU) Brook­lyn, Stat­en Island Urban Cen­ter Stat­en Island, Swale Brook­lyn, Tai­wanese Amer­i­can Arts Coun­cil Queens, and the West Harlem Art Fund Man­hat­tan.

About Gov­er­nors Island Arts
Gov­er­nors Island Arts, the pub­lic arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, cre­ates trans­for­ma­tive encoun­ters with art for all New York­ers, invit­ing artists and researchers to engage with the issues of our time in the con­text of the Island’s lay­ered his­to­ries, envi­ron­ments, and archi­tec­ture. Gov­er­nors Island Arts achieves this mis­sion through tem­po­rary and long-term pub­lic art com­mis­sions, with works cur­rent­ly on view by Jen­ny Kendler, Sheila Berg­er, Sam Van Aken, Duke Riley, Shantell Mar­tin, Rachel Whiteread, and Mark Hand­forth; the annu­al Orga­ni­za­tion in Res­i­dence pro­gram in the Island’s his­toric hous­es; and free pub­lic pro­grams and events like the month­ly INTER­VEN­TIONS per­for­mance series, which has fea­tured Modesto Flako” Jimenez, Indige­nous Enter­prise, Dance Hegin­both­am, Rena Anakwe, and more to be announced. 

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram­ming with the vision­ary sup­port of the Ford Foun­da­tion, as well the Mel­lon Foun­da­tion, the Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Don­ald R. Mullen Fam­i­ly Foun­da­tion, Stavros Niar­chos Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, The Gottes­man Fund, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Arts, and the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts with the sup­port of the Office of the Gov­er­nor and the New York State Legislature.

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Des­ig­nates Oper­a­tors Behind Taco Vista to Devel­op New Restau­rant and Events Venue

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Rendering: OSD (Office of Strategy + Design)

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island today announced today that the team behind long-time Gov­er­nors Island ven­dor Taco Vista – includ­ing David Hitch­n­er and Zach Mack of Alpha­bet City Beer Co. and Miche­lin-Star Exec­u­tive Chef Eduard Frauned­er – will be expand­ing to devel­op a year-round, three-part din­ing and events con­cept with­in the water­front his­toric build­ing adja­cent to their exist­ing sea­son­al restau­rant. The team was award­ed the project fol­low­ing a Request for Pro­pos­als released in July 2022 invit­ing oper­a­tors of event, food and bev­er­age, and hos­pi­tal­i­ty venues to ground lease, rede­vel­op and oper­ate the build­ing. The project announced today builds upon the Trust’s recent mile­stone of open­ing Gov­er­nors Island to the pub­lic year-round and sup­ports the long-term vision to expand vis­i­tor ameni­ties while breath­ing new life into fifty land­marked for­mer mil­i­tary buildings.

Since open­ing to the pub­lic year-round in 2021, Gov­er­nors Island has grown into a des­ti­na­tion for all sea­sons for near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors each year,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. We are excit­ed to announce this new, expand­ed vision from the Taco Vista team that will increase deli­cious, afford­able year-round food offer­ings for vis­i­tors while restor­ing one of Gov­er­nors Island’s most trea­sured his­toric struc­tures at Sois­sons Landing.” 

Gov­er­nors Island con­tin­ues to be a unique des­ti­na­tion for inno­va­tion, open space, and art in the mid­dle of New York Habor, attract­ing near­ly a mil­lion vis­i­tors a year,” said Deputy May­or for Hous­ing, Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment and Work­force Maria Tor­res-Springer. Taco Vis­ta’s expan­sion into this his­toric space will be a won­der­ful asset for vis­i­tors year-round. The Adams admin­is­tra­tion is proud to sup­port the growth of this small busi­ness on the island with City cap­i­tal funding.”

Expand­ing food options while also restor­ing his­toric Build­ing 140 is what Gov­er­nors Island is all about: Find­ing new ways to wel­come vis­i­tors year-round and pre­serv­ing the island’s his­to­ry,” said Man­hat­tan Bor­ough Pres­i­dent Mark Levine. I’m thrilled for this new project and look for­ward to vis­it­ing when it opens.”

Gov­er­nors Island is a year-round des­ti­na­tion, so it should have great year-round food options,” said New York State Sen­a­tor Andrew Gounardes. By cre­at­ing this new venue while revi­tal­iz­ing a his­toric build­ing, the Trust con­tin­ues to expand the Island’s cul­tur­al offer­ings while pre­serv­ing and uplift­ing its past. Gov­er­nors Island is such a unique space for New York­ers to learn, explore, study our cli­mate and sim­ply enjoy the out­doors — these new food offer­ings make that already-rich expe­ri­ence even rich­er. I can’t wait to stop by to see the fin­ished project.”

Gov­er­nors Island is set to become an even more vibrant all-sea­son des­ti­na­tion with the addi­tion of these new din­ing options,” said New York State Assem­bly­man Charles Fall. The restora­tion of his­toric Build­ing 140 along­side these excit­ing food venues enhances the island’s cul­tur­al and recre­ation­al appeal. It’s a fan­tas­tic space for New York­ers to explore, learn, and enjoy out­door activ­i­ties. I look for­ward to expe­ri­enc­ing these new offer­ings and see­ing the revi­tal­ized land­mark come to life.”

Expand­ing beyond their sea­son­al water­front con­cept Taco Vista, which has oper­at­ed on Gov­er­nors Island since 2018, the team will be under­tak­ing a care­ful his­toric restora­tion neigh­bor­ing Build­ing 140, while com­plete­ly ren­o­vat­ing the inte­ri­or to cre­ate a mod­ern, mul­ti-use food and bev­er­age con­cept. The 10,000 SF project will include three dis­tinct venues: Priscil­la’s, a year-round café serv­ing cof­fee, pas­tries, and light lunch fare on a dai­ly basis, with an expand­ed menu on its water­front ter­race pair­ing care­ful­ly craft­ed cock­tails, local beers, and small pro­duc­tion wines with a coastal Mediter­ranean-inspired menu; The River­line, an indoor-out­door full-ser­vice restau­rant that will have the abil­i­ty to host spe­cial events; and a reimag­ined Taco Vista serv­ing fam­i­ly-friend­ly Mex­i­can fare and drinks. 

The build­ing is locat­ed adja­cent to Gov­er­nors Island’s pri­ma­ry fer­ry dock with 7‑minute ser­vice to Low­er Man­hat­tan, and fea­tures unob­struct­ed views of the Low­er Man­hat­tan sky­line, Brook­lyn Bridge, and New York Har­bor. Con­struc­tion is antic­i­pat­ed to begin in Win­ter 2024 and be com­plet­ed in Fall 2025.

The project will care­ful­ly restore his­toric Build­ing 140, orig­i­nal­ly con­struct­ed in the mid-1800s as a muni­tions ware­house and used over the years as a bank and a post office dur­ing the Island’s his­to­ry as a US Army and Coast Guard Base. The design team, led by SHoP Archi­tects, will pre­serve and restore the his­tor­i­cal detail of the building’s exte­ri­or, while cre­at­ing new ADA acces­si­bil­i­ty and improv­ing the adja­cent water­front land­scapes. The build­ing will be one of the first adap­tive reuse project on Gov­er­nors Island with 100% elec­tric oper­a­tions, includ­ing an elec­tri­fied com­mer­cial kitchen, and will include sev­er­al sus­tain­abil­i­ty and resilien­cy improve­ments with the poten­tial for gen­er­at­ing solar pow­er on the roof.

In July 2022, the Trust released a Request for Pro­pos­als seek­ing food devel­op­ers and oper­a­tors of food and bev­er­age con­cepts and event venues to ground lease, rede­vel­op, and oper­ate Build­ing 140. Pro­pos­als were eval­u­at­ed based on the Respondent’s pro­posed pro­gram and vision, includ­ing serv­ing a broad and diverse audi­ence and align­ing with the Trust’s cli­mate and sus­tain­abil­i­ty goals, team and fea­si­bil­i­ty, pro­posed terms, and qual­i­ty of design. 

Gov­er­nors Island has under­gone a tremen­dous trans­for­ma­tion over the last decade, includ­ing the cre­ation of a resilient 43-acre park, a grow­ing arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram, and remark­able growth in audi­ence. Since the Island’s trans­fer to local con­trol, the Trust has over­seen the ren­o­va­tion and leas­ing of more than 500,000 SF of his­toric build­ings. The Island is home to diverse num­ber of year-round ten­ants, includ­ing the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, the Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Coun­cil, the Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, Beam Cen­ter, the Insti­tute for Pub­lic Archi­tec­ture, and QC NY, as well as But­ter­milk Labs — a new mul­ti-ten­ant hub for coastal cli­mate solu­tions announced in Fall 2021. The New York Cli­mate Exchange, a research and edu­ca­tion­al insti­tu­tion led by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty and a cross-sec­tor con­sor­tium of uni­ver­si­ties, busi­ness­es, and non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions, was announced as the anchor part­ner for the Cen­ter for Cli­mate Solu­tions by May­or Eric Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island in April 2023

Now open to the pub­lic year-round, Gov­er­nors Island is home to a robust cal­en­dar of free pub­lic pro­grams and events, out­door recre­ation activ­i­ties, diverse arts and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences, and more to explore. Vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org/​t​h​i​n​g​s​-​to-do for more infor­ma­tion and to view all upcom­ing events and programs.

STIHL Pow­ers-up Sus­tain­abil­i­ty Efforts on Gov­er­nors Island with Bat­tery-Pow­ered Equipment

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Julienne Schaer

Today, STIHL donat­ed $45,000 worth of pro­fes­sion­al bat­tery-pow­ered out­door equip­ment to The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island in New York City. The dona­tion will enable the island’s hor­ti­cul­tur­al team to main­tain 120+ acres of open space at the pop­u­lar pub­lic des­ti­na­tion. In addi­tion, STIHL donat­ed $10,000 to fur­ther The Trust’s mis­sion to edu­cate the pub­lic about urban cli­mate solu­tions and the impacts of cli­mate change on our nat­ur­al surroundings. 

At STIHL, we believe that as a leader in the out­door pow­er equip­ment indus­try, it is our duty to set the exam­ple in sus­tain­abil­i­ty and con­tin­ue to invest time, ener­gy and resources in inno­v­a­tive tech­nolo­gies, pro­grams and part­ner­ships that pro­mote respon­si­ble envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship,“ said Dr. Niko­las Stihl, Chair­man of the Advi­so­ry and Super­vi­so­ry Board of STIHL. Our val­ues align close­ly with those of The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, and we’re excit­ed to see STIHL bat­tery pow­er in action here in New York.”

The STIHL dona­tion includes the new STIHL RZA 760 bat­tery-pow­ered zero-turn mow­er, pro­fes­sion­al bat­tery-pow­ered trim­mers, blow­ers and Kom­biSys­tems, as well as bat­tery charg­ing solu­tions. The tools will be used to main­tain a mix of his­toric and new­er, man­made land­scapes — many of which were cre­at­ed to mit­i­gate the impacts of cli­mate change. 

We are so thank­ful for the STIHL dona­tion as Gov­er­nors Island con­tin­ues to grow as an acces­si­ble, year-round des­ti­na­tion for our near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Using equip­ment that pro­duces zero exhaust emis­sions while elim­i­nat­ing the need for fuel will enable us to care for the more than 120 acres of open space for our vis­i­tors to enjoy in a qui­et, sus­tain­able manner.”

Over the past decade, STIHL made sig­nif­i­cant invest­ments in research and devel­op­ment to address its envi­ron­men­tal foot­print. The com­pa­ny is ded­i­cat­ed to devel­op­ing prod­ucts that are envi­ron­men­tal­ly respon­si­ble and will con­tin­ue to work toward social­ly respon­si­ble envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship both in oper­a­tion and man­u­fac­tur­ing, includ­ing bat­tery-equip­ment in their Vir­ginia Beach man­u­fac­tur­ing facil­i­ty cel­e­brat­ing 50 years of oper­a­tions in the Unit­ed States.

For more infor­ma­tion about STIHL bat­tery prod­ucts, vis­it www​.stih​lusa​.com.

Sum­mer 2024 on Gov­er­nors Island: What You Need to Know

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Frisbee at Picnic Point. Photo by Sean Jamar

May 212024

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island today announced a robust cal­en­dar of excit­ing and wide-rang­ing pro­grams on the Island for this sum­mer that promise to offer excit­ing expe­ri­ences for New York­ers of all ages and vis­i­tors from around the world. This year’s pro­gram­ming high­lights the breadth of activ­i­ties, events, and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences that can be enjoyed dur­ing the warmer months on Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing live music, food trucks, and pub­lic art installations.

Gov­er­nors Island has long been the epi­cen­ter of arts, cul­ture, and sum­mer fun in New York Har­bor,” said New York City May­or Eric Adams. As we pre­pare for warmer weath­er in the months ahead, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island has got New York­ers cov­ered for free events and pro­grams, expand­ed hours, open space, and icon­ic views. Vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org for more infor­ma­tion, or grab a fer­ry tick­et and head over to Gov­er­nors Island for fun activ­i­ties and deli­cious food this summer.”

Gov­er­nors Island con­tin­ues to offer unique cul­tur­al, edu­ca­tion­al, and recre­ation­al resources on 172 acres in the heart of New York Har­bor, and this sum­mer sea­son hosts even more excit­ing pro­gram­ming than ever before,” said Deputy May­or for Hous­ing, Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment and Work­force Maria Tor­res-Springer. We encour­age New York­ers and vis­i­tors alike to enjoy the attrac­tions on the Island — from gor­geous views of the city sky­line to unique music and shop­ping expe­ri­ences to ath­let­ic events in beau­ti­ful open space — before the end of warm weath­er this year.”

Gov­er­nors Island con­tin­ues to grow as an acces­si­ble, year-round des­ti­na­tion — offer­ing unpar­al­leled open space, thought-pro­vok­ing arts and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences, some of our city’s best culi­nary offer­ings, a diverse com­mu­ni­ty of ten­ants and ameni­ties, and more for our near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. It’s going to be an excit­ing sum­mer on the Island, and we encour­age all New York­ers to hop on the fer­ry and check out every­thing we have to offer this year.” 

VIS­I­TOR AMENI­TIES AND ATTRACTIONS

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island will once again offer wheel­chair-acces­si­ble tram ser­vice, free and avail­able to all guests. These all-elec­tric acces­si­bil­i­ty vehi­cles will depart from Sois­sons Land­ing and Yan­kee Pier Fri­day through Sun­day from Memo­r­i­al Day to Labor Day, stop­ping at key loca­tions through­out the Island. 

The Urban Farm — home to GrowNYC’s teach­ing gar­den, Earth Mat­ter NY’s Com­post Learn­ing Cen­ter and Soil Start Farm, and the Bee Conservancy’s bee sanc­tu­ary — is open week­ends from 12 – 4pm with free tours the first Sat­ur­day of every month. play:groundNYC’s Adven­ture Play­ground, a unique kids-only space imag­i­na­tion and explo­ration, is open every week­end from 12 – 4pm. Gov­er­nors Island Nation­al Mon­u­ment, includ­ing Fort Jay and Cas­tle Williams, is open Wednes­day-Sun­day and all Fed­er­al Hol­i­days from 10am-5pm start­ing Memo­r­i­al Day week­end for both Ranger-led and self-guid­ed tours. 

Col­lec­tive Retreats is open dai­ly for overnight stays, and QC NY is open dai­ly with two heat­ed out­door pools along­side saunas, steam rooms, relax­ation treat­ments, mas­sages, and more. QC NY will also debut expand­ed ameni­ties this July, includ­ing a new bistro, sen­so­ry saunas, a salt room, and more. 

Vis­i­tors can expect to wit­ness inno­v­a­tive cli­mate solu­tions in action on Gov­er­nors Island this sea­son, includ­ing Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Manufacturing’s solar-pow­ered Micro­Fac­to­ry, Pulse Grids’ unique solar POW­ER­DOME, Vycarb’s car­bon mon­i­tor­ing tech­nol­o­gy in New York Har­bor, and the inau­gur­al cohort of the Trust’s annu­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge win­ners, announced in March 2024. Pilot projects will be open for live demon­stra­tions and work­shops most week­ends dur­ing the sum­mer months, with com­mu­ni­ty demon­stra­tion days to be announced. The New York Cli­mate Exchange will also offer tours and info ses­sions, with dates to be announced. 

OPEN SPACE AND RECREATION

Vis­i­tors can enjoy Gov­er­nors Island’s 120+ acres of open space dai­ly. The Island’s award-win­ning, cli­mate resilient park offers rolling lawns and plen­ty of room for New York­ers to spread out for pic­nick­ing and recre­ation, includ­ing over sev­en miles of car-free bike paths. Ham­mock Grove’s 40+ pub­lic ham­mocks and path­ways nes­tled into the foliage of this young urban for­est pro­vide a relax­ing retreat. The Hills fea­ture unpar­al­leled views of the har­bor and land­marks, like the Stat­ue of Lib­er­ty and the sur­round­ing Low­er Man­hat­tan and Brook­lyn skylines. 

Pop­u­lar year-round activ­i­ties — like bike rentals with Blaz­ing Sad­dles, includ­ing Free Bike Morn­ings every week­day between 10am-12pm and CitiBike; self-guid­ed dig­i­tal walk­ing tours with Urban Archive, Ges­so, and the Black Gotham Expe­ri­ence; free dig­i­tal guides on the Bloomberg Con­nects arts and cul­ture app; and more — will con­tin­ue to be offered to Island vis­i­tors, along with pre­vi­ous­ly announced edu­ca­tion­al pro­grams with Gov­er­nors Island Nature. 

EVENTS

Gov­er­nors Island remains one of New York City’s most unique loca­tions for events of all kinds. See below for a selec­tion of upcom­ing events in May, June, and July, and click here for a full event cal­en­dar.

  • We Belong Here – May 24 – 26, May 31-June 2
  • NYC Footy Gov Cup soc­cer tour­na­ment – June 1 – 2
  • Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Council’s city­wide Riv­er to Riv­er Fes­ti­val – June 7 – 23
  • Jazz Age Lawn Par­ty – June 8 – 9, August 10 – 11
  • New York City Laven­der Fes­ti­val – June 8 – 9 
  • Porch Stomp folk music fes­ti­val – June 15
  • Gov­er­nors Island Arts THIRD Sat­ur­days – June 15, July 20, Sep­tem­ber 21, Octo­ber 19
  • FAD Mar­ket – June 15 – 16, July 20 – 21, August 17 – 18, Sep­tem­ber 21 – 22, Octo­ber 19 – 20
  • Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix – June 22 – 23
  • NYCRUNS Fire­crack­er 5K & 10K – June 29 
  • NYC Poet­ry Fes­ti­val – July 13 – 14

FOOD VEN­DORS

Gov­er­nors Island is a true culi­nary des­ti­na­tion with a diverse mix of cuisines avail­able to vis­i­tors dai­ly. New ven­dors this year include Spec­tro, a fast-casu­al burg­er shack also locat­ed at Jacob Riis Park, and On Tea Road, a boba tea cart that has pre­vi­ous­ly popped up at sev­er­al loca­tions around New York City. 

Return­ing ven­dors includ­ing Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny, Lit­tle Eva’s, Taco Vista, Fauzia’s Heav­en­ly Delights, Island Oys­ter, Threes Brew­ing, Piz­za Yard, Sea Bis­cuit, Car­reau Club, Tokyo Drum­stick, La Newyork­i­na, Mak­i­na Café, Wheeler’s BBQ, and more. The Food­ie Spot — a part­ner­ship with the New York City Hous­ing Author­i­ty (NYCHA)’s Office of Res­i­dent Eco­nom­ic Empow­er­ment and Sus­tain­abil­i­ty — will return to Liggett Ter­race for the fourth year in a row, spot­light­ing small busi­ness­es owned by grad­u­ates of NYCHA’s Food Busi­ness Path­ways program. 

Open Dai­ly

  • Gitano Island – Dai­ly, 11am-10pm, Sois­sons Landing
  • Island Oys­ter – Mon­day-Fri­day, 11am-8pm; Sat­ur­day-Sun­day, 10am-8pm
  • Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny in the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing fer­ry ter­mi­nal – Dai­ly, 7am-2pm
  • Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny at Liggett Ter­race – Dai­ly (begin­ning Memo­r­i­al Day Week­end), 10am-6pm
  • Lit­tle Eva’s – Dai­ly, 11am-5pm, Liggett Terrace
  • Mak­i­na Café – Week­days, 10am‑3:30pm; week­ends, 10am‑4:30pm, Colonels Row
  • Piz­za Yard – Dai­ly, 12 – 5pm, Colonels Row
  • Taco Vista – Dai­ly, 12 – 6pm, Sois­sons Landing
  • Three Peaks Lodge at Col­lec­tive Retreats – Dai­ly for Hap­py Hour, din­ner, and bar ser­vice, West­ern Promenade

Open Week­ends and Select Weekdays

  • Brigs Sweet Shop – Week­ends, 12 – 4pm, Liggett Ter­race (Open Wednes­day-Sun­day begin­ning Memo­r­i­al Day Weekend)
  • Car­reau Club – Fri­day-Sun­day, 11am-6pm, King Ave
  • Fauzia’s Heav­en­ly Delights – Week­ends, 11am-6pm, Liggett Terrace
  • The Food­ie Spot – Fri­day-Sun­day, 11am-5pm, Liggett Terrace
  • La Newyork­i­na – Week­ends, 12 – 5 pm, Colonels Row 
  • On Tea Road – Week­ends, 12 – 5pm, Colonels Row
  • Sea Bis­cuit – Week­ends, 10am-6pm, West­ern Promenade
  • Spec­tro – Week­ends, 11am-6pm, Liggett Terrace
  • Threes Brew­ing – Week­ends, 12 – 6pm, Liggett Terrace 
  • Tokyo Drum­stick – Fri­day-Sun­day, 11am-4pm, Liggett Ter­race (Open dai­ly July 1‑September 3)
  • Yed­i­nadas – Week­ends begin­ning mid-June, 12 – 5pm, Liggett Terrace 
  • Wheeler’s – Week­ends, 12 – 6pm, Colonels Row

GOV­ER­NORS ISLAND ARTS

Through pub­lic art com­mis­sions, the annu­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence pro­gram, and pub­lic events and pro­grams, Gov­er­nors Island Arts — the arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust — cre­ates trans­for­ma­tive encoun­ters with art for all New York­ers, invit­ing artists and researchers to engage with the Island’s lay­ered his­to­ries, envi­ron­ments, and archi­tec­ture. Click here to view the program’s pre­vi­ous­ly announced sum­mer sea­son of free cul­tur­al offer­ings includ­ing per­for­mances, work­shops, pub­lic art­works, and more. 

VIS­I­TOR INFOR­MA­TION

Gov­er­nors Island’s sum­mer hours will return begin­ning May 25, 2024. From Memo­r­i­al Day through Labor Day, the Island will remain open until 10pm Sun­day-Thurs­day and 11pm Fri­day-Sat­ur­day, with the South Island Park — includ­ing areas like the Hills, Ham­mock Grove, and Pic­nic Point — open until 6pm dai­ly. From Labor Day through Memo­r­i­al Day, the Island is open dai­ly from 7am to 6pm. 

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island-oper­at­ed fer­ries run dai­ly between the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing at 10 South Street in Low­er Man­hat­tan and Sois­sons Land­ing on the Island. Trust-oper­at­ed fer­ries also serve two Brook­lyn loca­tions dur­ing the sum­mer months — Pier Six in Brook­lyn Bridge Park and Atlantic Basin in Red Hook. These routes run direct­ly to Yan­kee Pier on Gov­er­nors Island from each loca­tion every Sat­ur­day, Sun­day, and hol­i­day Mon­day from May 25 through Sep­tem­ber 2. For sched­ules and tick­et­ing infor­ma­tion, click here.

Vis­i­tors are encour­aged to reserve fer­ry tick­ets in advance of their trip on the Gov­er­nors Island web­site. Round-trip fer­ry tick­ets cost $5 for adults. Fer­ries oper­at­ed by the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island are always free for chil­dren 12 and under, old­er adults 65 and up, res­i­dents of NYCHA, IDNYC hold­ers, cur­rent and for­mer mil­i­tary ser­vice mem­bers, and Gov­er­nors Island mem­bers. Fer­ries before 11am on Sat­ur­days and Sun­days are free for all. There is no sur­charge for bicy­cles or strollers on Trust-oper­at­ed fer­ries at any time.

The Trust also offers free fer­ry fares for non­prof­it and com­mu­ni­ty-based orga­ni­za­tions, youth camps, and senior cen­ters through­out New York City. To inquire about group vis­its, orga­ni­za­tions may email groupvisits@​govisland.​org.

NYC Fer­ry ser­vice to Gov­er­nors Island on the South Brook­lyn route oper­ates week­days and non-sum­mer week­ends. On sum­mer week­ends dur­ing the high­est rid­er­ship sea­son, NYC Fer­ry will con­tin­ue to oper­ate its ded­i­cat­ed sea­son­al shut­tle from Pier 11/​Wall Street in Low­er Man­hat­tan. NYC Fer­ry rid­ers may take any route to Pier 11 and trans­fer to the shut­tle for free, or NYC Fer­ry rid­ers may trans­fer for free at either Atlantic Ave/​Pier 6 or Red Hook/​Atlantic Basin to Trust-oper­at­ed Brook­lyn fer­ries. For tick­et­ing infor­ma­tion and full sched­ules for NYC Fer­ry, vis­it the NYC Fer­ry web­site, www.ferry.nyc.

As we get ready to swing into Sum­mer, I’m excit­ed to see the roll out of Gov­er­nors Island’s sum­mer pro­gram­ming,” Con­gress­man Dan Gold­man said. Fam­i­lies across our City should take the time this sum­mer to vis­it Gov­er­nors Island, one of the attrac­tions that makes NY-10 the coolest con­gres­sion­al dis­trict in America.” 

Gov­er­nors Island is the per­fect warm-weath­er escape for New York­ers and tourists – there’s more than 120 acres of open space, recre­ation­al activ­i­ties, arts and cul­ture, fam­i­ly pro­gram­ming, and local his­to­ry,” said Man­hat­tan Bor­ough Pres­i­dent Mark Levine. With a five-minute fer­ry ride, you can escape the con­crete jun­gle for a day. I encour­age every­one to take advan­tage of this unique get­away and bask in all that Gov­er­nors Island has to offer.” 

I can’t wait to enjoy Gov­er­nors Island with my con­stituents dur­ing this peak sea­son. As the biggest park in our dis­trict, Gov­er­nors Island is an oasis for fresh air and for Low­er Man­hat­tan­ites, and peo­ple across the city, to enjoy nature,” said New York City Coun­cilmem­ber Christo­pher Marte. There are so many great stew­ards of the Island who will be run­ning pro­grams for the entire fam­i­ly, and I encour­age every­one to take the quick fer­ry ride as much as they can this summer.”

Gov­er­nors Island is a New York gem: a get­away with­in the city, a cul­ture hub for New York­ers to cre­ate and cel­e­brate local artists, a cli­mate edu­ca­tion cen­ter, and a refuge to sim­ply relax and enjoy the weath­er,” said State Sen­a­tor Andrew Gounardes. I’m excit­ed for the slate of pro­gram­ming the Trust has put togeth­er, and I’m look­ing for­ward to spend­ing qual­i­ty time on Gov­er­nors Island with my own fam­i­ly this sum­mer. I’ll see you there!”

I am thrilled to wel­come every­one to Gov­er­nors Island for the start of the peak sea­son this Memo­r­i­al Day week­end. With extend­ed hours, excit­ing new pro­grams, and addi­tion­al fer­ry ser­vices, there’s no bet­ter way to kick off the sum­mer. Come enjoy the stun­ning views, diverse food offer­ings, and the vibrant com­mu­ni­ty spir­it that makes Gov­er­nors Island a unique and cher­ished des­ti­na­tion in New York City,” said New York State Assem­bly­man Charles D. Fall.

Gov­er­nors Island is one of the most beau­ti­ful spots in New York City. I hope Brook­lynites take advan­tage of the easy fer­ry access to come out and enjoy extend­ed evening hours and excit­ing sum­mer pro­gram­ming!” said New York City Coun­cilmem­ber Lin­coln Restler.

Com­ing off a cold win­ter, head­ing into the Spring and Sum­mer sea­sons, Man­hat­tan Com­mu­ni­ty Board 1 (CB1) is look­ing for­ward to the beau­ti­ful weath­er, bucol­ic open spaces and diverse pro­gram­ming avail­able on Gov­er­nors Island. CB1 is look­ing for­ward to the dozens of arts, cul­ture and edu­ca­tion Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence around Nolan Park and Colonel Row as much as relax­ing in the Ham­mock Grove and din­ing with friends at Pic­nic Point. We are so excit­ed to enjoy the 120 acres of nat­ur­al and built open spaces through the free guid­ed walk­ing tours, pub­lic art and fab­u­lous park­land,” said Tam­my Meltzer, Chair of Man­hat­tan Com­mu­ni­ty Board One. We encour­age all New York­ers to hop on the fer­ry and enjoy the Island’s nature and amaz­ing unfet­tered har­bor and sky­line views.”

I’m pleased to wel­come vis­i­tors back to Gov­er­nors Island Nation­al Mon­u­ment start­ing Fri­day, May 24, 2024, Memo­r­i­al Day Week­end,” said Shirley McK­in­ney, Man­hat­tan sites super­in­ten­dent, Nation­al Park Ser­vice. This year, we will offer Park Ranger led tours at 11:00am and 2:00pm by reser­va­tion at www​.reser​va​tion​.gov. Self-guid­ed pub­lic tours of the his­toric forts are also avail­able from 10:00am‑5:00pm, with our park rangers on site to answer ques­tions and pro­vide infor­ma­tion on the Island’s unique his­to­ry to our visitors.”

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Wel­comes the Return of its Icon­ic Sheep Land­scap­ing Squad

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Julienne Schaer

For the fourth con­sec­u­tive year the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island is wel­com­ing baaaaack a team of upstate sheep to stroll the Island’s grounds to eat inva­sive species of plants and pre­serve its ecosystem’s het­ero­gene­ity. The five sheep – Evening, Chad, Philip Aries, Bowie and Jupiter – returned to the Island this week from their home at Friends of Tivoli Lake Pre­serve and Farm in Albany. They will spend the spring and sum­mer in Ham­mock Grove, munch­ing away on inva­sive plant species like phrag­mites, bindweed and mugwort.

Since this pro­gram first start­ed in 2021 the sheep have eat­en rough­ly 14.5 acres worth of inva­sive plant species, start­ing with a whop­ping 8.26 acres that first year. The sheep ate three acres of plants in 2022 and 3.22 acres in 2023.

This work freed up thou­sands of work hours for the human beings that make up the Gov­er­nors Island hor­ti­cul­ture team, allow­ing them to focus on more impor­tant tasks. That includ­ed build­ing and land­scap­ing new path­ways in Ham­mock Grove that vis­i­tors to the Island can enjoy, among oth­er items.

Every year we are excit­ed to wel­come our sheep friends to their sum­mer home on Gov­er­nors Island, not only because they are amaz­ing crea­tures and beloved by our vis­i­tors but also because they put in the hard work that allows our hor­ti­cul­ture team to focus on more impor­tant tasks than mow­ing lawns and pulling weeds,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. We encour­age New York­ers and vis­i­tors from all over the world to take a quick fer­ry ride to Gov­er­nors Island, see the sheep in action, enjoy the best view in New York City and take in every­thing this won­der­ful place has to offer.”

We are thrilled to con­tin­ue to part­ner with Gov­er­nors Island, and our flock is hap­py to be back at work in Ham­mock Grove,” said Kim Tateo, Exec­u­tive Direc­tor and Farm Man­ag­er of Friends of Tivoli Lake Pre­serve and Farm. It has been incred­i­ble to wit­ness how, over the past four years, the sheep have been able to improve the plant diver­si­ty in Ham­mock Grove and help cre­ate a health­i­er habi­tat for all vis­i­tors to Gov­er­nors Island. We are excit­ed to offer more pub­lic engage­ment with the sheep this year, allow­ing them to edu­cate New York­ers on the inno­v­a­tive ser­vices they pro­vide both here on the Island and at their home upstate.” 

The sheep issued a joint state­ment express­ing their ela­tion on return­ing to Gov­er­nors Island for the fourth year.

Baaaaaaa, baaaaaa, baaaaaa,” they bleat­ed. Baaaaa, baaaaaa!”

Mug­wort, phrag­mites, bindweed and oth­er inva­sive plant species have a com­pet­i­tive nature and crowd oth­er plant­i­ngs on Gov­er­nors Island, essen­tial­ly cre­at­ing a mono­cul­ture. The sheep eat­ing these herba­ceous plants helps to break down and weak­en them, pre­vent­ing them from flow­er­ing and the seeds spreading.

Sheep are also unique­ly suit­ed to the work on Gov­er­nors Island, more so than goats or oth­er ani­mals, since their culi­nary tastes do not include tree bark. The sheep will eat around the young trees in Ham­mock Grove and focus on phrag­mites and oth­er del­i­ca­cies, while goats would devour vir­tu­al­ly any plant life they could get their hooves on — inva­sive or not.

Sev­er­al pub­lic engage­ment events will be held on Gov­er­nors Island in part­ner­ship with Friends of Tivoli Lake Pre­serve and Farm, fea­tur­ing live sheep herd­ing, Q&A’s with our shep­herds, and hands-on wool activ­i­ties, with dates to be announced on www​.gov​is​land​.org/​t​h​i​n​g​s​-​to-do.

In Novem­ber 2023, the Trust launched the Gov­er­nors Island Nature pro­gram, which fos­ters vis­i­tor engage­ment with Gov­er­nors Island’s 120 acres of nat­ur­al and built open spaces and pro­motes hor­ti­cul­ture prac­tices employed by the Trust’s team that sup­port bio­di­ver­si­ty — of which the land­scap­ing sheep are an ide­al exam­ple. In addi­tion to help­ing main­tain healthy, bio­di­verse habi­tats in Ham­mock Grove, the sheep allow our team to min­i­mize use of her­bi­cide along with mow­ers and oth­er tools pow­ered by fos­sil fuels. 

Through learn­ing, pub­lic pro­grams, and stew­ard­ship projects, Gov­er­nors Island Nature aims to edu­cate New York­ers about hor­ti­cul­ture and the impacts of cli­mate change on our nat­ur­al sur­round­ings, while pro­mot­ing Gov­er­nors Island as a sanc­tu­ary for all beings. In-per­son events and activ­i­ties are accom­pa­nied by a suite of dig­i­tal resources that includes an inter­ac­tive tree map, a Plant Watch” page, and more.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts Announces Spring and Sum­mer Arts Season

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ArtCrawl Harlem 2023 Artist in Residence Sandy Clafford in the studio during House Fest 2023. Photo by Lucas Van Cott

Gov­er­nors Island Arts today announced a sched­ule of free pro­gram­ming and exhi­bi­tions for the Island’s Spring and Sum­mer arts sea­son, includ­ing a new per­for­mance series titled Inter­ven­tions, and 28 New York City-based non-prof­it cul­tur­al orga­ni­za­tions who will present pro­grams span­ning visu­al arts, per­for­mance, envi­ron­men­tal edu­ca­tion and more. Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC will also co-present Oth­er of Pearl, a new series of pub­lic art­works by artist and envi­ron­men­tal activist Jen­ny Kendler open­ing on June 14.

The bur­geon­ing arts and cul­ture scene that has grown on Gov­er­nors Island dur­ing the past few years has become the home to some of the most antic­i­pat­ed exhi­bi­tions and per­for­mances not only in New York City but across the world, and this year is no excep­tion,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor and Vice Pres­i­dent for Arts and Cul­ture at Gov­er­nors Island Arts. We encour­age art lovers from all walks of life to vis­it Gov­er­nors Island this sea­son and take in the many var­ied pro­grams and exhibits on offer from our numer­ous cul­tur­al partners.” 

INAU­GUR­AL SUM­MER PER­FOR­MANCE SERIES: INTER­VEN­TIONS

Gov­er­nors Island Arts will present Inter­ven­tions, a site-respon­sive, mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary free annu­al per­for­mance series that presents local, nation­al, and inter­na­tion­al artists and invites audi­ences to expe­ri­ence work made and adapt­ed for the out­doors. Pre­sent­ed between June and Sep­tem­ber, Inter­ven­tions will present per­for­mances in dance, sound art, and the­ater that include: an invit­ed open rehearsal by Dance Hegin­both­am of their newest work, You Look Like a Fun Guy on Fri­day, June 7 and Sat­ur­day, June 8 and a per­for­mance by inter­dis­ci­pli­nary artist Rena Anakwe on Fri­day, July 19, and Sat­ur­day, July 20

Addi­tion­al per­for­mances as part of Inter­ven­tions will be announced through­out the sum­mer. Inter­ven­tions is curat­ed by Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Asso­ciate Cura­tor and Pro­duc­er Juan Pablo Siles.

ORGA­NI­ZA­TIONS IN RESIDENCE

Each year, over two dozen arts, cul­ture, edu­ca­tion­al, and envi­ron­men­tal non-prof­its uti­lize space inside the his­toric hous­es of Nolan Park and Colonels Row to present a robust cal­en­dar of free pub­lic pro­grams, host artist res­i­den­cies, and engage vis­i­tors in spe­cial activ­i­ties for all ages through­out the sum­mer months. Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence will open for the sea­son with a spe­cial cel­e­bra­tion on Fri­day, May 17 and will be open every Fri­day, Sat­ur­day, and Sun­day from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. through the end of October. 

Pro­gram­ming high­lights from the 2024 Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence include:

Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House Man­hat­tan

Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House is a com­mu­ni­ty-based orga­ni­za­tion with a mis­sion to improve and pro­mote the well-being of the Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty and to increase the vis­i­bil­i­ty of Amer­i­can Indi­an cul­tures in an urban set­ting. Their space on Gov­er­nors Island is used to present exhi­bi­tions, per­for­mances, and oth­er cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al pro­grams, as well as to host artists in residence. 

AnkhLave Arts Alliance Man­hat­tan*

AnkhLave Arts Alliance is a NYC-based non-prof­it ded­i­cat­ed to advanc­ing BIPOC artists in the con­tem­po­rary art realm. Through annu­al pro­gram­ming includ­ing the AnkhLave Gar­den Project Fel­low­ship, Cura­tor in Res­i­dence, and Pub­lic Artist in Res­i­dence, they pro­vide plat­forms for artis­tic expres­sion and exchange. On Gov­er­nors Island, they will present artist res­i­den­cies, open stu­dios, and out­door sculp­tur­al installations. 

Art­Crawl Harlem Man­hat­tan

Art­Crawl Harlem’s Bound­aries & Con­nec­tions pro­gram will pro­vide space for artists to explore, inno­vate, and cre­ate under the theme Games Peo­ple Play.” The pro­gram will fea­ture 12 res­i­dent artists, three poets in res­i­dence, and a pho­tog­ra­phy exhibit. 

BronxArt­Space The Bronx

BronxArt­Space will hold artist res­i­den­cies and indoor and out­door instal­la­tions fea­tur­ing a range of Bronx based artists. From May – Octo­ber, join BronxArt­Space in 410A Colonels Row Fri­days through Sun­days to meet their artists and learn more about their artis­tic practice. 

Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts The Bronx*

Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts will present Long­wood @ Gov­er­nors Island, a res­i­den­cy pro­gram that will serve a cohort of five Bronx artists, pro­vid­ing them with free stu­dio space, expo­sure through open stu­dios, and oth­er oppor­tu­ni­ties. Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts will also present sev­er­al per­for­mances and oth­er pro­grams through­out the season. 

Bil­lion Oys­ter Project Man­hat­tan

Based on Gov­er­nors Island, Bil­lion Oys­ter Project is restor­ing oys­ter pop­u­la­tions to New York Har­bor in col­lab­o­ra­tion with NYC com­mu­ni­ties and through pub­lic edu­ca­tion ini­tia­tives, in turn improv­ing water qual­i­ty, fos­ter­ing new marine habi­tats, and cre­at­ing greater coastal resilience. Each week­end this sea­son, Bil­lion Oys­ter Project’s house will hold an oys­ter dis­play, invit­ing vis­i­tors to learn more about ecosys­tems and these engi­neers, their impor­tance to New York Har­bor, and how every­one can get involved.

caribBE­ING Brook­lyn

I AM CaribBE­ING brings their unique and inspired upcy­cled solar-pow­ered mobile art + cul­tur­al + mar­ket space reflect­ing the cul­tur­al her­itage of NYC’s Caribbean Dias­po­ra to Colonels Row on Gov­er­nors Island for the sec­ond year in a row. This year’s pro­gram will open with par­tic­i­pa­to­ry teacher project Teach­ers in Focus” fol­lowed by a site-spe­cif­ic graf­fi­ti inter­ven­tion by Guade­lou­pean graf­fi­ti col­lec­tive 4KG, res­i­den­cy in part­ner­ship with Cal­abar Gallery and month­ly Caribbean-themed pic­nics fea­tur­ing Lit­tle Caribbean arti­sans and small businesses. 

Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Man­hat­tan*

The Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um is a new con­sor­tium of cli­mate orga­ni­za­tions debut­ing their cen­ter for the arts on Gov­er­nors Island. Their space will serve as a com­mu­ni­ty cen­ter for cli­mate and cul­ture, with gal­leries and spaces for exhi­bi­tions, per­for­mances, film screen­ings, and events that respond to the cli­mate cri­sis with visions for hope and justice.

DuYe Moves Brook­lyn*

DuYe Moves will present a vari­ety of free dance and move­ment class­es along­side art work­shops out­doors on Gov­er­nors Island. Fea­tured class­es include tra­di­tion­al African, Sam­ba and yoga with live drum­ming, Hula, Afro Dance, Qigong and Tai Chi. They will also hold inti­mate out­door per­for­mances from emerg­ing choreographers. 

Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons Man­hat­tan

Escap­ing Time will exhib­it art cre­at­ed in pris­ons across the Unit­ed States, high­light­ing the cre­ativ­i­ty and tal­ent that exists in places of con­fine­ment while also inform­ing vis­i­tors about the myr­i­ad issues that exist with­in the carcer­al sys­tem. The exhi­bi­tion, open­ing in the fall, includes paint­ings, draw­ings, sculp­tures, and quilts made with tra­di­tion­al mate­ri­als, as well as pieces made with impro­vised mate­ri­als. Their sea­son will also fea­ture sev­er­al art workshops.

Filmshop Man­hat­tan*

The Filmshop House will host film screen­ings, film­mak­er Q&As, and hands-on work­shops on the craft of film­mak­ing led by mem­bers of our com­mu­ni­ty. Filmshop is cel­e­brat­ing its 15th anniver­sary, and the house will also high­light a ret­ro­spec­tive exhi­bi­tion hon­or­ing their evo­lu­tion over the years.

Flux Fac­to­ry Queens

Flux Fac­to­ry returns to Gov­er­nors Island with Flux Island 2024. A col­lec­tive of alum­ni from Flux Fac­to­ry’s res­i­den­cy pro­gram will pro­duce month­ly Flux Sat­ur­day” salons open to the pub­lic, as well as three group exhi­bi­tions tak­ing place in the spring, sum­mer, and fall, respectively.

Foun­tain House Gallery Man­hat­ta

Foun­tain House Gallery and Stu­dio will present a com­mu­ni­ty-pow­ered, site-spe­cif­ic instal­la­tion co-led by Foun­tain House mem­bers and staff. They will host col­lab­o­ra­tive Open Stu­dio Art Mak­ing with mem­bers of the pub­lic and artists to help con­tribute to this instal­la­tion. All artists are mem­bers of Foun­tain House, found­ed in New York City in 1948 with the belief that peo­ple liv­ing with men­tal ill­ness can be active par­tic­i­pants in their own and each other’s recovery. 

Har­vest­works Man­hat­tan

Har­vest­works will present their Art and Tech­nol­o­gy Pro­gram on Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing a group show study­ing human per­cep­tion, work­shops, and oth­er pro­grams from Live­Code NYC, and more. 

KODA Brook­lyn

KODA House will present a sea­son that spot­lights the theme of Men­tal Health, fea­tur­ing sev­er­al res­i­dent artists. KODA will also present the 5th Annu­al Pro­fes­sion­al Devel­op­ment for Artists Sym­po­sium, explor­ing the future of artist res­i­den­cies and ways to bet­ter sup­port artists.

The Muse­um of Con­tem­po­rary African Dias­po­ran Arts (MoCA­DA) Brook­lyn

Com­mit­ted to giv­ing wings to artists by bring­ing dynam­ic, con­tem­po­rary art to a broad audi­ence, MoCA­DA con­tin­ues its lega­cy on Gov­er­nors Island with a high­ly antic­i­pat­ed exhi­bi­tion along with spe­cial art instal­la­tions, work­shops, film screen­ings, and oth­er gath­er­ings. Their 2024 sea­son will include a mul­ti­me­dia group exhi­bi­tion with works made by artists explor­ing the Black Trans­gen­der, Non-Bina­ry, and Gen­der-Non­con­form­ing (TGNC) expe­ri­ence; an exper­i­men­tal immer­sive archive inspired by Temescal cer­e­mo­ni­al prac­tices; and much more. 

New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA) Man­hat­tan

NADA will present their annu­al col­lab­o­ra­tive NADA House pro­gram, where more than two dozen art gal­leries and spaces from around the coun­try present pieces from a large cohort of artists, in the fall.

New York Arts Pro­gram Man­hat­tan*

For the 2024 sea­son, the New York Arts Pro­gram will invite artists to par­tic­i­pate in a net­work of per­for­mances titled Four­teen Porch­es that will fos­ter col­lab­o­ra­tion, explore the way the Island’s struc­tures can break out of their tra­di­tion­al domains and con­nect to each oth­er both lit­er­al­ly and metaphor­i­cal­ly. They will also present an incu­ba­tor pro­gram for artists dur­ing the sum­mer months. 

New York Latin Amer­i­can Art Tri­en­ni­al Man­hat­tan

NYLAAT moves to Nolan Park in 2024 and will host an artist and cura­tor in res­i­dence pro­gram. This year’s pro­gram will kick off with Body and Iden­ti­ty” Print­mak­ers and Writ­ers from the Domini­can Repub­lic, one of sev­en exhi­bi­tions each curat­ed by their cura­tors in residence. 

NYC Audubon Man­hat­tan

NYC Audubon’s sea­son­al envi­ron­men­tal cen­ter on Gov­er­nors Island will engage vis­i­tors in wildlife con­ser­va­tion and urban bio­di­ver­si­ty through week­ly bird out­ings, an artist-in-res­i­dence pro­gram, con­ser­va­tion work­shops, and a dis­play of bird-friend­ly glass options.

Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Brook­lyn

Adap­ta­tions 2.0, Pratt Institute’s 2024 sea­son, will fea­ture projects by lead­ing artists, archi­tects and stu­dents work­ing on cli­mate adap­ta­tion and with a focus on arch­i­pel­a­gos around the world — includ­ing New York City. Events will occur month­ly and with vary­ing fre­quen­cy with expand­ed events and walk­ing tours dur­ing NYC Cli­mate Week in Sep­tem­ber 2024.

Red Hook Ini­tia­tive and Red Hook Art Project Brook­lyn*

Red Hook Art Project (RHAP) and Red Hook Initiative’s Art Saves Lives” sum­mer pro­gram will offer diverse class­es cov­er­ing media, com­put­er build­ing, game design, audio pro­duc­tion, dig­i­tal art, port­fo­lio prepa­ra­tion, sketch­ing, ceram­ics, and more. Led by pas­sion­ate instruc­tors and vol­un­teers, the pro­gram encour­ages stu­dents to explore their artis­tic abil­i­ties freely and think creatively. 

Res­i­den­cy Unlim­it­ed (RU) Brook­lyn

RU will present a group show fea­tur­ing artists from Aus­tralia, Turkey, Hun­gary, Japan, Croa­t­ia and Switzer­land, along with mul­ti­ple open stu­dio events, curat­ed exhi­bi­tions, and per­for­mances along with work­shops led by local BIPOC artists par­tic­i­pat­ing in the Voic­es of Mul­ti­plic­i­ty (VoM) Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice Artist Res­i­den­cy Pro­gram, tack­ling issues relat­ed to air, land, and water pollution.

Stat­en Island Urban Cen­ter Stat­en Island

Stat­en Island Urban Cen­ter will present We Are a Water­front: Water Into Land, a mul­ti-media, envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice exhi­bi­tion born out of the work of the organization’s activists and inde­pen­dent film­mak­ers of Lost Hori­zon Films. The exhi­bi­tion cen­ters on select scenes from the films, cur­rent­ly in pro­duc­tion, accom­pa­nied by visu­al art that shares neigh­bor­hood sto­ry­telling from var­i­ous Stat­en Island artists and activists. 

Swale Brook­lyn

Swale’s 2024 sea­son focus­es on art and cli­mate, with a series of exhi­bi­tions each month from sev­er­al dif­fer­ent artists. Through­out the sea­son, Swale House pro­motes com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment with free soil work­shops and Pub­lic Food stew­ard­ship meet­ings, advo­cat­ing for envi­ron­men­tal stewardship.

Tai­wanese Amer­i­can Arts Coun­cil Queens

Island Sun­rise, Tai­wanese Amer­i­can Arts Council’s 2024 pro­gram on Gov­er­nors Island, will com­pare com­mon­al­i­ties between dif­fer­ent islands — includ­ing Tai­wan and its var­i­ous island ter­ri­to­ries — and Gov­er­nors Island, fea­tur­ing exhi­bi­tions from a broad range of artists. 

West Harlem Art Fund Man­hat­tan

The West Harlem Art Fund will present a fiber art show with per­for­mances in the spring that delves deep in Amer­i­can land­scape, his­to­ry, and water. Dur­ing the sum­mer, the orga­ni­za­tion will once again bring back their artist res­i­den­cy pro­gram with mul­ti­ple work­shops for the pub­lic to engage and their con­cert series with exper­i­men­tal and fusion jazz. They will end the sea­son with an Afro-futur­ism show in part­ner­ship with sev­er­al artists across the city.

*Orga­ni­za­tions with an aster­isk rep­re­sent first time Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence participants.

In cel­e­bra­tion of this diverse com­mu­ni­ty of cul­tur­al orga­ni­za­tions, Gov­er­nors Island Arts will present the pop­u­lar THIRD Sat­ur­days, a spe­cial pro­gram held on the third Sat­ur­day of each month through Octo­ber, and the annu­al House Fest from August 16 – 19. These free events will include a line­up of per­for­mances and work­shops, with more to be announced in the com­ing months. Pro­grams announced today include:

THIRD Sat­ur­day: May 182024

  • Fogo Azul: New York City-based all-women, trans, and non-bina­ry Brazil­ian Sam­ba Reg­gae drum line, Fogo Azul, will offer an Open Rehearsal and work­shop in Nolan Park. 11am, Nolan Park
  • Rue­da de Oro: Rue­da de Oro is a NYC based musi­cal ini­tia­tive; a non-phys­i­cal space of gath­er­ing around the Afro-Indige­nous tra­di­tion­al rhythms, drums, and dances from the Caribbean region of Colom­bia. The col­lec­tive will hold a Rue­da on Gov­er­nors Island to con­tin­ue their month­ly gath­er­ings and learn, teach, and prac­tice a rich cat­a­log of tra­di­tion­al music. 12pm, Colonels Row
  • The Isado­ra Dun­can Dance Foun­da­tion: Found­ed in New York City in 1980 to extend the dream, dance, and indomitable spir­it of the moth­er of mod­ern dance, Isado­ra Dun­can, the Isado­ra Dun­can Dance Foun­da­tion will offer a free open class in Nolan Park led by com­pa­ny mem­ber Emi­ly D’An­ge­lo. 1pm, Nolan Park
  • Film Screen­ing – In a Vio­lent Nature, co-pre­sent­ed with Rooftop Films: Don’t miss the New York pre­mière of this ambi­ent slash­er film direct­ed by Chris Nash that fol­lows John­ny, a venge­ful undead brute, as he method­i­cal­ly slaugh­ters a group of campers in the wilder­ness after they remove a pen­dant from his rest­ing grounds. Live Q&A to fol­low. Click here to RSVP. 6pm, Nolan Park

House Fest: August 16 – 192024

  • After­noon Per­for­mance with Miri­am Elha­jli, Zoh Amba, and Eliana Glass: Eliana Colachis Glass is a singer, pianist, and visu­al artist born in Aus­tralia and raised in Seat­tle. She is a grad­u­ate of the jazz pro­gram at The New School where she stud­ied with such men­tors as Andrew Cyrille, Ben Street, Kris Davis, and Jay Clay­ton. Zoh Amba is a com­pos­er, sax­o­phon­ist, and flutist from Ten­nessee. Her music blends avant-garde, noise, and devo­tion­al hymns. Her pow­er­ful­ly unique avant-garde music is full of folk melodies, mes­mer­iz­ing refrains, and repeat­ed incan­ta­tions. Miri­am Elha­jli is a Venezue­lan Moroc­can Amer­i­can com­pos­er and vocal­ist whose work is influ­enced strong­ly by the folk­loric musics of South and North Amer­i­ca, mod­ern jazz, and con­tem­po­rary clas­si­cal music. August 17, 3pm, Out­look Hill
  • After­noon Per­for­mance with Eli Fola: Eli Fola is a Niger­ian Amer­i­can mul­ti-dis­ci­pli­nary sound artist, sax­o­phon­ist, DJ, and pro­duc­er. He is the cre­ator and pio­neer of the live hybrid set Yoru­ba Tech Soul”, an inno­v­a­tive fusion of Afro­House, tech­no, jazz, and clas­si­cal music. He is often regard­ed as a sax­o­phone genius and brand­ed with the visu­al art world due to his pow­er­ful imagery that high­lights Afro­house and spir­i­tu­al­i­ty in a mod­ern con­text. August 18, 3pm, Out­look Hill
  • Dance is Life: Abdiel Jacob­sen and Natasha Dig­gs bring their social dance par­ty to Gov­er­nors Island dur­ing House Fest. Cre­at­ed as a pub­lic com­mu­ni­ty ser­vice to pro­vide the vital force that dance and music ignites with­in humans, this event unites peo­ple of all walks of life through com­mu­nal heal­ing and cel­e­bra­tion. Inspired by the lega­cy of Hus­tle being danced in Cen­tral Park for over 50 years, Dance Is Life revi­tal­izes cul­tur­al his­tor­i­cal spaces and incites inter­per­son­al con­nec­tions, expres­sions, and play among mul­ti-gen­er­a­tional com­mu­ni­ties around the globe. August 19, 7:30pm, Liggett Archway

PUB­LIC ART 

The 2024 sea­son fea­tures a new work co-pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil) titled Oth­er of Pearl, a site-spe­cif­ic pub­lic art exhi­bi­tion by Jen­ny Kendler telling the sto­ry of our planet’s chang­ing cli­mate. Locat­ed in the his­toric Fort Jay on Gov­er­nors Island, Oth­er of Pearl con­sid­ers the oys­ter and whale as cen­tral play­ers in the eco­log­i­cal and eco­nom­ic entan­gle­ment between human and non­hu­man beings. The artist con­fronts con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, cli­mate change and sea lev­el rise — while point­ing to the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of our cli­mate cri­sis. Oth­er of Pearl opens to the pub­lic on Fri­day, June 14 and will remain on view every Wednes­day through Sun­day through the end of October.

Addi­tion­al works com­mis­sioned through Gov­er­nors Island Arts can be found through­out the Island’s park and his­toric dis­trict and are on view dai­ly, includ­ing Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, Rachel Whiteread’s Cab­in, Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, Shantell Martin’s Church, Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, Sheila Berger’s Bird MMXXI­II, and Mark Handforth’s Yan­kee Hanger.

YEAR-ROUND TEN­ANTS

Gov­er­nors Island is also home to a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of edu­ca­tion­al and cul­tur­al ten­ants who will present free cul­tur­al pro­grams through­out the spring and sum­mer. High­lights include:

Beam Cen­ter

Beam Cen­ter will present The Oth­er­worlds Fair, a brand-new youth-led cul­tur­al fes­ti­val, on August 17, 2024. 70 NYC high school stu­dents will work in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Beam Cen­ter through­out the sum­mer to design and pro­duce per­for­mances, art projects, and work­shops that express the world they envi­sion build­ing for them­selves. At the August event, the youth-pro­duc­ers will invite the pub­lic to learn and engage in these expe­ri­ences through the cul­tur­al lens­es of fash­ion, food, design, music, and storytelling.

Insti­tute for Pub­lic Architecture

The Insti­tute for Pub­lic Archi­tec­ture (IPA), which runs the only overnight res­i­den­cy pro­gram on Gov­er­nors Island, is host­ing an exhi­bi­tion of work by IPA Spring Fel­lows, open on week­ends 12 – 4pm through May 26 in the Block House at 9 Nolan Park. On June 1st, six Sum­mer Fel­lows from dis­ci­plines includ­ing archi­tec­ture, ecol­o­gy, com­mu­ni­ca­tions design, sculp­ture, indus­tri­al design, and urban design will arrive for an eleven-week res­i­den­cy. Through­out the sum­mer, the IPA will host a series of events – free and open to the pub­lic – includ­ing open stu­dios, work­shops, and screen­ings of The Sto­ry of the BQE, a doc­u­men­tary about the Brook­lyn-Queens Express­way and its impact on peo­ple who live in its midst.

Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Coun­cil (LMCC)’s Arts Cen­ter at Gov­er­nors Island

LMCC will present month­ly events and pro­grams at the Arts Cen­ter at Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing open stu­dios and a par­tic­i­pa­to­ry Par­ty as Practice cel­e­bra­tion on May 18; the annu­al Riv­er to Riv­er Fes­ti­val June 7 – 23; exhi­bi­tions curat­ed by LMCC cura­to­r­i­al fel­lows Kiara Cristi­na Ven­tu­ra and Meghan Karnik, and more pub­lic pro­grams to be announced. 

This sum­mer, Bloomberg Con­nects — a free app focused on arts and cul­ture from Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies — will include an exten­sive guide for the pub­lic art on view, new inter­views with artists, and fea­tures on oth­er key aspects of the Gov­er­nors Island expe­ri­ence. The guide will pro­vide infor­ma­tion for vis­i­tors onsite and is acces­si­ble from any­where in the world.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram­ming with the vision­ary sup­port of the Ford Foun­da­tion, as well the Mel­lon Foun­da­tion, the Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Don­ald R. Mullen Fam­i­ly Foun­da­tion, Stavros Niar­chos Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, The Gottes­man Fund, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Arts, and the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts with the sup­port of the Office of the Gover­nor and the New York State Legislature.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC Present Jen­ny Kendler: Oth­er of Pearl

...

Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil) today announced a part­ner­ship to present Oth­er of Pearl, a site-spe­cif­ic pub­lic art exhi­bi­tion by Jen­ny Kendler telling the sto­ry of our planet’s chang­ing cli­mate. Locat­ed in the his­toric Fort Jay on Gov­er­nors Island, Oth­er of Pearl con­sid­ers the oys­ter and whale as cen­tral play­ers in the eco­log­i­cal and eco­nom­ic entan­gle­ment between human and non­hu­man beings. The artist con­fronts con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, cli­mate change and sea lev­el rise — while point­ing to the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of our cli­mate crisis.

Oth­er of Pearl opens to the pub­lic on Fri­day, June 14, and will be open Wednes­day to Sun­day through the end of Octo­ber at his­toric Fort Jay, part of the Gov­er­nors Island Nation­al Mon­u­ment. The exhib­it marks the first pub­lic art exhi­bi­tion open­ing on Gov­er­nors Island fol­low­ing the March 2024 announce­ment of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s new Head Cura­tor and Vice Pres­i­dent for Arts and Cul­ture, Lau­ren Haynes, who joined in March 2024.

I am thrilled that Oth­er of Pearl is the cen­ter­piece of our 2024 Gov­er­nors Island Arts pro­gram­ming,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor and Vice Pres­i­dent for Arts and Cul­ture at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Work­ing with Jen­ny, NRDC, and the Gov­er­nors Island team on a project that touch­es on many of the pil­lars of our pro­gram­ming has been a delight and we look for­ward to wel­com­ing vis­i­tors to the Island this sum­mer to expe­ri­ence it.”

Kendler’s first solo exhi­bi­tion in New York City, Oth­er of Pearl fea­tures a series of sev­en inti­mate, del­i­cate works — all dis­played in the cav­ernous, sub­ter­ranean mag­a­zine of his­toric Fort Jay, a star-shaped for­ti­fi­ca­tion built on Gov­er­nors Island between 1775 and 1776. In dark­ened rooms that echo with whale song, vis­i­tors will encounter pearl sculp­tures grown inside oys­ters, bells rung by fos­silized whale ear bones, a crys­talline whale eye cast of sea salt and human tears, glass vials filled with oil from long-dead whales, and a human ner­vous sys­tem metic­u­lous­ly strung from thou­sands of tiny pearls. In the adjoin­ing gal­leries, two large hand­blown glass instru­ments evoke the organs hump­back and sperm whales use to com­mu­ni­cate, invit­ing vis­i­tors’ son­ic acti­va­tion. David Gru­ber of Project CETI has pro­vid­ed the whale record­ings that become part of these sound works. After the con­clu­sion of the exhi­bi­tion, pearl sculp­tures from the show will be auc­tioned to raise funds to help cre­ate a new oys­ter reef along­side project part­ner Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, redis­trib­ut­ing resources in a ges­ture of eco­log­i­cal restora­tion. A full descrip­tion of indi­vid­ual works fea­tured as part of the exhi­bi­tion can be found at gov​is​land​.org.

While cli­mate change can be over­whelm­ing, con­fus­ing and polar­iz­ing — art has a unique abil­i­ty to reach peo­ple and help us process the chal­lenge,” said Kristin Wil­son-Palmer, Chief Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Offi­cer for NRDC. This beau­ti­ful and pow­er­ful new exhib­it from Jen­ny Kendler brings peo­ple togeth­er for reflec­tion and con­ver­sa­tion on the most sig­nif­i­cant envi­ron­men­tal chal­lenge of our time — and, hope­ful­ly, will inspire them to act.” 

An inter­dis­ci­pli­nary eco­log­i­cal artist, envi­ron­men­tal activist, nat­u­ral­ist and wild for­ager whose work has been exhib­it­ed nation­al­ly and inter­na­tion­al­ly at muse­ums, bien­ni­als, pub­lic spaces and nat­ur­al areas, Jen­ny Kendler’s work focus­es on cli­mate change and bio­di­ver­si­ty loss. Her prac­tice seeks to decen­ter humans and re-enchant our rela­tion­ship to the more-than-human human world. Since 2014, she has been the first Artist-in-Res­i­dence with NRDC, a co-pre­sen­ter of Oth­er of Pearl. Recent exhi­bi­tions of Kendler’s work include Dear Earth at Hay­ward Gallery in Lon­don, UK, Water After All at the MCA Chica­go, Music for Ele­phants at the Smith­son­ian Muse­um of Nat­ur­al His­to­ry, and Indi­ca­tors: Artists on Cli­mate Change at Storm King Art Center.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram with the vision­ary sup­port of the Ford Foun­da­tion, as well the Mel­lon Foun­da­tion, the Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Don­ald R. Mullen Fam­i­ly Foun­da­tion, Stavros Niar­chos Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, The Gottes­man Fund, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Arts, and the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts with the sup­port of the Office of the Gov­er­nor and the New York State Leg­is­la­ture. Addi­tion­al sup­port for Oth­er of Pearl is pro­vid­ed by the Rip­ple Foun­da­tion as well as Roseate Jewelry.

Addi­tion­al pro­grams will be announced in the com­ing months. For vis­i­tor hours and more infor­ma­tion, vis­it gov​is​land​.org.

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About Gov­er­nors Island Arts

Gov­er­nors Island Arts, the pub­lic arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, cre­ates trans­for­ma­tive encoun­ters with art for all New York­ers, invit­ing artists and researchers to engage with the issues of our time in the con­text of the Island’s lay­ered his­to­ries, envi­ron­ments, and archi­tec­ture. Gov­er­nors Island Arts achieves this mis­sion through tem­po­rary and long-term pub­lic art com­mis­sions, an annu­al Orga­ni­za­tion in Res­i­dence pro­gram in the Island’s his­toric hous­es, and free pub­lic pro­grams and events in part­ner­ship with a wide range of cross-dis­ci­pli­nary NYC cul­tur­al orga­ni­za­tions. Recent art­works com­mis­sioned by Gov­er­nors Island Arts include projects by Charles Gaines, Sam Van Aken, Duke Riley, Shantell Mar­tin, and Mark Dion; for more infor­ma­tion, vis­it gov​is​land​.org.

About NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Council)

NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil) is an inter­na­tion­al non­prof­it envi­ron­men­tal orga­ni­za­tion with more than 3 mil­lion mem­bers and online activists. Estab­lished in 1970, NRDC uses sci­ence, pol­i­cy, law, and peo­ple pow­er to con­front the cli­mate cri­sis, pro­tect pub­lic health and safe­guard nature. NRDC has offices in New York City, Wash­ing­ton, D.C., Los Ange­les, San Fran­cis­co, Chica­go, Boze­man, MT, Bei­jing, and Del­hi (an office of NRDC India Pvt. Ltd.)


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