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Public Art

Public art installations surround the Museum, highlighting the roles of art and public space in creating healthy communities.
View from above, a white, purple, orange, and blue geometric mural turns a parking lot into a play space

OOPS & HOOPcycle

Conceptualized by artist Marisa Morán Jahn and architect Rafi Segal, the mobile art installation HOOPcycle offers a reimagined sports experience that challenges norms and unites communities through play.

Workers on a lift hang a large mural on the facade of a brick building

Invitation Wall

Invitation Wall is the museum’s 40-foot outdoor public art exhibition space that reflects the museum’s commitment to radical hospitality.

Taylor Street Memories

As you walk down Taylor Street, meet one of our founders, Commissioner Deverra Beverly and learn about the changing neighborhood through the stories of past residents. These exhibits are accessible from the outside of the museum.

A black and white image from the 1940s shows a courtyard surrounded by brick buildings. In the courtyard, children in swimsuits play in water spraying out from the concrete and climb on stone animal statues surrounding the fountain.

Animal Court

Experience the enchanting seven-piece sculpture Animal Court by Edgar Miller, which has been lovingly restored and placed in our courtyard. The sculpture garden is free and open to the public during museum hours…

Archival photos of Black gymnasts standing and tumbling are collaged onto a field of blue and a layer of repeating leaf-like daubs of gold, red, purple, and green paint.

ReCreation

ReCreation is a monumental floor to ceiling mural by Marisa Morán Jahn that celebrates energetic, ground-up civic initiatives.

A close up of several paint chips of different colors–red, yellow, blue, orange–stacked on top of each other.

Resilient Hues

This vividly colored installation by Amanda Williams and Olalekan Jeyifous welcomes visitors to the National Public Housing Museum