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.
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.
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. INTERVENTIONSis 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.
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 BIRDMMXXIII, 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.
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.
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 NYC2024 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.govisland.org/climate-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, KODAOpen 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 ImaginariumColonels 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 NYUrban 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 ConservancyUrban 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 ProjectNolan 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 AdaptationNolan 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 AdaptationAdmiral’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 – 11:30AM: 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 crewColonels 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 ProjectColonels 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 Imaginariumand 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, HarvestworksNolan 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 ImaginariumColonels 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 ConservancyUrban 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 EntertainmentColonels 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 HouseColonels 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 TheField 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.govisland.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.
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.
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.
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.govisland.org/house-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, KODABrooklyn, 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.
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 10,000SF 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 500,000SF 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 QCNY, 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.govisland.org/things-to-do for more information and to view all upcoming events and programs.
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 STIHLRZA760 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.stihlusa.com.
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.govisland.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.”
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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 QCNY is open daily with two heated outdoor pools alongside saunas, steam rooms, relaxation treatments, massages, and more. QCNY 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.
OPENSPACEANDRECREATION
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.
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
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
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.
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 Goldmansaid. “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.reservation.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.”
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.govisland.org/things-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 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.”
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.
ORGANIZATIONSINRESIDENCE
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.
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 AllianceManhattan*
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.
BronxArtSpaceThe 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 ArtsThe 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.
caribBEINGBrooklyn
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 ImaginariumManhattan*
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 MovesBrooklyn*
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.
FilmshopManhattan*
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.
KODABrooklyn
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 ProgramManhattan*
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 18, 2024
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 – 19, 2024
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
PUBLICART
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-ROUNDTENANTS
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. 70NYC 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 (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 govisland.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 govisland.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 govisland.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.)