The Public Art at BAT program is fundamentally rooted in honoring and integrating Brooklyn Army Terminal’s (BAT) rich military past, present role as a modern industrial and creative hub, and its potential future.

Today, BAT gets much of its character from its tenants and connection to New York City’s working waterfront. Most critically, the sheer number of tenants working within the complex—a diverse ecosystem of more than 3,500 visionaries, entrepreneurs, advanced manufacturers, makers, local workers, and artists —forms an engine of contemporary innovation.

Public Art at BAT celebrates this concentration of creative and entrepreneurial energy. It treats the space of the terminal and surrounding public spaces as a massive canvas that reflects this industrious spirit. By commissioning sixteen site-responsive works, the program uncovers, interprets, and celebrates layers of history, commerce, and creativity, embedding the arts as a vital, permanent part of the terminal’s ongoing narrative.

At first glance, the works represented In Plain Sight possess a distinct aesthetic, material, and narrative focus. However, the highly personal interpretations of the past, present, and future of both BAT and the Brooklyn waterfront unite the artwork. Each piece reflects the lived experience of the fourteen Brooklyn-based artists we have engaged across these sites, many of whom are current or former BAT tenants themselves.

As each artist's statement reveals, these works showcase the histories, emotions, perceptions, and the obscured processes of creation that define this campus.  Some works look to Brooklyn’s wilder, ecological past, while others take up the changing waterfront or the labor and materiality that have shaped BAT from 1918 to the present. In each case, the artist engages with the space between revelation and concealment. This tension, between the overt and the covert, the visible and the veiled, provides the profound and unifying context for In Plain Sight.

2026 Artwork

Columns

A person in a blue outfit stands in a spacious, modern indoor area with colorful abstract art on a column and wall. Tables, chairs, and people are visible in the background.

1. Echoes of the Current
Yuya Saito
yuyas.net
@smallbiglight
 

A woman stands beside a white column decorated with abstract, jagged blue and metallic shapes in a spacious room with tables and chairs in the background.

2. Undercurrents
Gabrielle Vitollo
gabriellevitollo.com
@glamgothgabo

A person stands confidently in a bright, modern indoor space decorated with colorful hanging ornaments and wall art, with tables and chairs in the background.

3. Movement in Nature
Avani Patel
avanirpatel.com
@Unique_Avani

A white column is wrapped in a colorful, intricate art installation with blue, yellow, and purple elements, weaving vines, flowers, and abstract shapes, located inside a modern building with glass doors and seating nearby.

4. We Are Swirling and Tethered
DB Lampman
dblampman.nyc
@swimrundance

A person sits on a curved green bench in front of a cylindrical display with photos, text, and colorful ropes hanging from above in a spacious, modern indoor area with large columns and hanging lights.

6 & 7. Work and Rest on Land and Sea
Sheila Pepe
sheilapepe.com
@pepestudionyc

A tall, colorful abstract art installation hangs from the ceiling inside a bright, spacious atrium with large windows, modern furniture, and industrial architecture visible outside.

5 & 8. Pillars of Society
Elana Herzog
elanaherzog.com
@elanaherzog

Train Car & Murals

A person wearing glasses and a white t-shirt stands in front of a brown wall with glass windows displaying rock-like objects. The person is looking at the camera and smiling slightly.

9. Still Lives
Zhidong Zhang
zhidongzhang.com
@zhangzhidong_

A man with gray hair and a beard, dressed in a blue shirt and pants, stands against a black backdrop with two landscape photographs displayed on either side of him.

10. Post Industrial Progression
Nathan Kensinger
nathankensinger.com
@nathankensinger

Hyesu Lee in colorful clothes stands smiling with arms crossed in front of a bright mural showing cartoon people eating and toasting with food and drinks. The mural features bold, cheerful colors and playful designs.

17. Shared Rhythms
Hyesu Lee
heyheysu.com
@heyheysu

Outdoor Sculptures

Large abstract sculptures resembling seashells and organic forms sit on a metal base beneath an archway outside Brooklyn Army Terminal building. A sign nearby reads “INNOVATING TODAY FOR A GREENER TOMORROW.”

11. Ancient Spat
Z Behl
zbehl.us
@zbehl

 

12. Tidal Crossing
Jean Shin
jeanshin.com
@jean.shin

Three children sit inside a bright red, semi-transparent outdoor art structure made of panels, set on a sunny day at Brooklyn Army Terminal, with greenery and buildings visible in the background.

15. In Praise of Shadows
LOT office for architecture
lot-arch.com
@lot_officeforarchitecture

2025 Artwork

Brooklyn artist Crys Yin stands with arms crossed on a sunlit plaza, featuring colorful her mural Full Form on low walls, outdoor seating, and a large industrial-style building in the background under a clear blue sky.

Full Form
Crys Yin

A green mural on a wall depicts colorful silhouettes of people walking and pushing strollers. A person in an orange outfit walks past in front of the mural. Behind the wall is a beige industrial building labeled “Building A.”.

In Transit
Dana Bell

A large industrial building with colorful abstract murals on its exterior walls, depicting geometric shapes and patterns. There are trees, grass, and several white picnic tables in the foreground.

BAT Glyphs
Ege Soyuer

PLAN YOUR VISIT

Situated on the waterfront, BAT is easily accessible—by ferry, train, bus, and car—from Manhattan and the other boroughs, and from major highways and metro-area airports.

LEARN MORE

CONTACT US

BROOKLYN ARMY TERMINAL
140 58th Street Brooklyn, NY 11220

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