It is only fitting that Cortlandt Street, the street where I live, should be the starting point of my hunt for yard art in the Heights.
I have lived on Cortlandt Street for almost three years now. My first apartment complex on Cortlandt was small, less than 20 units, centered around an ivy-covered courtyard. The residents decorated the courtyard with stone cherubs, a magenta garden orb, and even a small stone gargoyle. For me, that courtyard encapsulates what the "yard art ethos" is all about: the urge to personalize one's outdoor spaces, to make a house (or an apartment) a home.
Cortlandt Street is fertile ground for a wide variety of yard art, from contemporary metal sculptures to devotional statues to whimsical collections of found objects:
Have you seen any of these artworks during your strolls or bicycle rides through the Heights? Which one of these pieces is your favorite, and why?
I have lived on Cortlandt Street for almost three years now. My first apartment complex on Cortlandt was small, less than 20 units, centered around an ivy-covered courtyard. The residents decorated the courtyard with stone cherubs, a magenta garden orb, and even a small stone gargoyle. For me, that courtyard encapsulates what the "yard art ethos" is all about: the urge to personalize one's outdoor spaces, to make a house (or an apartment) a home.
Cortlandt Street is fertile ground for a wide variety of yard art, from contemporary metal sculptures to devotional statues to whimsical collections of found objects:
The Blessed Virgin greets visitors to this home, on the 1500 block |
St. Joseph the Worker, at All Saints Catholic church on the corner of 10th and Cortlandt. |
A disco ball glitters at dusk, on the 1800 block |
Glass bottles of all sizes are recycled as sculpture, on the 1800 block |
Pinwheels, potted plants, and an owl wearing sunglasses brighten up this yard just north of 20th Street. |
One of my favorite front-yard embellishments on Cortlandt, on the 1600 block |
The dog owners are also the proud owners of a penguin who accepts the mail! |
Bright red ribbons of metal are frozen in festive form, on the 1300 block |
This sculpture, on the 700 block, reminds me of an oversized sundial that has been rotated and unhinged. |
On the 800 block, a sphere composed of interlocking metal rings |
Another blue-cloaked Mother of God, on the 1400 block |
This pink flamingo has taken up residence near the Virgin Mary, above. |
An iron cactcus, live cactus plant, and what appears to be a venus fly trap create a playful homage to the Southwest, on the 1500 block. |
Have you seen any of these artworks during your strolls or bicycle rides through the Heights? Which one of these pieces is your favorite, and why?