You are reading

Looking For Great Art? Head to Terminal B at LaGuardia Airport

All Your Wishes, courtesy of the Jeppe Hein and the Public Art Fund.

June 11, 2020 Staff Report

For years, LaGuardia Airport has been derided for traffic, noise, delays, and bad architecture, but the Queens transit hub is currently undergoing an $8 billion renovation that also includes filling Terminal B with public art.

Thanks in large part to LaGuardia Gateway Partners, the Public Art Fund, and the Port Authority of NY & NJ, four permanent installations are now on view in the facility that serves Air Canada, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, and United Airlines. Three are accessible without a boarding pass.

The selected artists—Jeppe Hein, Sabine Horning, Laura Owens, and Sarah Sze—drew on their personal experiences in New York City while creating their works, which pay homage to the Big Apple’s creative energy, democratic spirit, diversity, and openness. Each huge piece has a “lightness of being” in form and content, adapting to Terminal B’s monumental size.

Here’s a look at the artists and their creations.

Jeppe Hein was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1974, but he’s based in Berlin. He created “All Your Wishes,” with 70 Mirror Balloons (PVD coated stainless steel) and three Modified Social Benches (powder coated aluminum). His dozens of colorful, reflective, balloon-shaped steel sculptures are dispersed around every corner like a fairytale breadcrumb trail. At the floor level, three bright red benches curve, loop, and twist to provide travelers with whimsical resting places.

LaGuardia Vistas, courtesy of Sabine Hornig and the Public Art Fund

Sabine Hornig was born in Pforzheim, West Germany, in 1964, but she’s based in Berlin. In the Connector, she displays “LaGuardia Vistas” from latex ink and vinyl mounted on glass. With more than 1,100 merged photographs of NYC, this huge, transparent collage fills an even larger glass façade, allowing sunlight to create temporary kaleidoscopes of color, image, and text.

ILoveNY, courtesy of Laura Owens and the Public Art Fund

Laura Owens was born in Euclid, Ohio, in 1970, but she’s based in Los Angeles, California. Her “ILoveNY” is a mosaic mural made of handmade glazed ceramic tiles and grout. Against a brilliant blue sky filled with illustrative clouds, she created dozens of iconic images in a motif that evokes the potential NYC conjures in the public imagination. (If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.)

Shorter than the Day, courtesy of Sarah Sze and the Public Art Fund.

Sarah Sze was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1969, but she lives in NYC now. Her “Shorter than the Day” consists of powder-coated aluminum and steel. (Its title comes from an Emily Dickinson poem.) Hundreds of images form a mirage-like sphere that appears to float in midair. Each one captures a snapshot of the sky above NYC taken over the course of a day. They chart a cyclical path from the pale yellow to bright blues to dusky orange to violet.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Spring blooms bright in Queens: your guide to cherry blossom hotspots around the borough

Apr. 1, 2025 By Jessica Militello

Cherry blossoms are already blooming across Queens, marking the arrival of spring. The sight of the delicate pink flowers marks the start of the special season in Queens, letting admirers take photos or simply appreciate the cherry blossoms’ beauty. The season, while brief, offers a chance to slow down and enjoy nature’s beauty and appreciate its fleeting nature. The cherry blossom isn’t just pretty to look at; the flower has tons of symbolism and history to learn about to make you enjoy them even more this Spring.