Skip to main content
Between Tides - Public Art Fund
বাংলা (Bengali) 简体中文 (Chinese Simplified) 繁體中文 (Chinese Traditional) Nederlands (Dutch) English Français (French) Deutsch (German) Italiano (Italian) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) Português (Portuguese - Brazil) Español (Spanish) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
I am looking for…
Suggested searches:
Ai Weiwei
Talks
Between Tides Masthead
Rockaway Beach, Beach 67
Opens June 27

About the Exhibition

Between Tides brings together six artists—Moko Fukuyama, Ilana Harris-Babou, Las Hermanas Iglesias, Carlos H. Matos, Amalia Pica, and the collective SUPERFLEX—to rethink ping-pong tables as playable sculptures. These works invite beachgoers to approach the game in unexpected ways, transforming a familiar activity into a space for experimentation and new connections. Responding to the diverse cultural and ecological landscape of Rockaway Beach, the artists draw from sculpture, myth, and public engagement to expand the game’s symbolic and social dimensions.

Centered on community participation, Between Tides builds on the layered history of table tennis and offers fresh perspectives on play. Originally a parlor game for the elite in Victorian England, ping-pong later became a global pastime, a tool for diplomacy between the United States and China, and eventually an Olympic sport. The game’s simplicity allows it to transcend class, race, age, and gender, bringing people together across differences. Between Tides continues a tradition of artists who, since the 1970s, have embraced ping-pong as a platform for creative exchange, rule-breaking, and challenging expectations. Fostering shared encounters, this exhibition highlights how artists can enrich daily life in imaginative ways.

Between Tides is curated by Public Art Fund Associate Curator of Public Practice Gabriela López Dena.


Accessibility Information

This exhibition is sited directly on the sand. The NYC Parks Department has beach wheelchairs for visitors to borrow. Please get in touch at programs@publicartfund.org to book one so we can have it ready for you at the location of the exhibition upon your arrival.


About the Artists

Moko Fukuyama    View Profile

Moko Fukuyama (b. 1981) is a multidisciplinary artist whose practice spans large-scale sculptural installations, experimental film, and collaborative projects. Originally from Japan and now based in Brooklyn, Fukuyama has lived in various cities across the United States, where she closely observed how urban societies interact with nature. Her work addresses the environmental and cultural challenges shaping both American society and her personal experiences. Drawing from her interest in recreational sports fishing, Fukuyama incorporates the concept of “lures” into her sculptures, using them as metaphors for human manipulation of the natural world. Her work, often made from salvaged wood and painted with vibrant automotive finishes, explores the dynamics of attraction among diverse forms of life. Fukuyama’s sculptures reflect themes of overconsumption, consumerism, sustainability, and urbanization, as well as the tension between human desires and environmental impact.

Ilana Harris-Babou    View Profile

Ilana Harris-Babou (b. 1991) was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Through sculpture, installation, and video, she uses humor to question the aspirational language of consumer culture. By taking on roles such as celebrity chef, interior designer, or beauty vlogger in her artworks, she critiques the American Dream and challenges the notion that hard work leads to upward mobility and economic freedom. Harris-Babou investigates the messy moments when individuals cannot fully conform to social structures and explores how to subvert the status quo in generative ways. Recently, she has focused on community-based projects and public commissions examining love, transcendence, imperfection, and self-determination within the aesthetics of order. Her work highlights the persistence of human connection despite the influence of social systems she sees as oppressive.

Las Hermanas Iglesias    View Profile

Las Hermanas Iglesias (founded 2005) is an artist duo of sisters Lisa and Janelle Iglesias, who currently split their time between Queens, New York; Western Massachusetts; and Southern California. Their work draws from feminist histories and reflects their identity as children of Norwegian and Dominican immigrants born and raised in Queens, New York. Their collaborative practice disrupts geographical borders, engages absurdity, and underscores the power of collective making. Incorporating materials as diverse as music, beeswax, piñatas, and bubblegum, they produce playful work that takes the form of complex installations, sculptural textiles, and participatory performances. Their practice has evolved to include ongoing collaborations with their mother, Bodhild, as well as projects with their children, adding an intergenerational dimension to their work. Through this culturally hybrid practice, Las Hermanas Iglesias explores connections between family bonds and broader societal structures, linking personal experiences to larger social systems. 

Carlos H. Matos    View Profile

Carlos H. Matos (b. 1983) blends architecture and sculpture to probe the boundaries of function, scale, and materiality within the built environment. Based in Mexico City, his practice examines the intersection of abstract forms and architectural elements, stripping them of their traditional contexts to challenge their purpose and meaning. Drawing inspiration from Mesoamerican cultures, Mexico’s pre-Hispanic heritage, and mid-20th-century modernist architecture, Matos creates works that evoke quasi-fictional worlds where ruins, rituals, and routines unfold. He utilizes materials such as volcanic stone, concrete, and aluminum, collaborating with artisans skilled in traditional construction methods like hand-chiseling and sand casting. Far from offering a nostalgic look at the past, these techniques allow him to investigate new aspects of form and space.

Amalia Pica    View Profile

Amalia Pica (b. 1978) is an Argentinian artist exploring the social dynamics of communication, especially the desire to be understood and what brings people together. Using simple materials and found objects like chalk, plexiglass, and flags, she inquires into human modes of interaction. Pica considers shared visual codes associated with verbal and nonverbal language systems, often incorporating playful signifiers of collective expression, such as bunting and confetti. By doing so, she delves into themes of cultural intimacy and the political potential of joy, proposing celebration and happiness as forms of resistance and political action. Her work possesses a lightness of touch and a collective aspect that invites viewers to share experiences. 

SUPERFLEX    View Profile

SUPERFLEX (founded 1993) is a Copenhagen-based collective by Bjørnstjerne Christiansen, Jakob Fenger, and Rasmus Rosengren Nielsen. With a focus on alternative models of social and economic organization, their projects have taken diverse forms: energy systems, beverages, sculptures, replicas, hypnosis sessions, infrastructure, paintings, plant nurseries, contracts, and public spaces. SUPERFLEX was conceived as an expanded artistic practice, consistently involving a wide range of collaborators – from gardeners and engineers to audience members – and exploring new ways of engaging local communities, specialists, and children. Recently, SUPERFLEX has taken the idea of collaboration even further by incorporating the participation of plants and animals to develop a new kind of urbanism centering interspecies living. For SUPERFLEX, the best idea might come from a fish.


Location

Rockaway Beach, Beach 67
Rockaway Beach, Beach 67

Bloomberg Philanthropies is the presenting sponsor of Between Tides

Leadership support for Between Tides is provided by the KHR McNeely Family Foundation | Kevin, Rosemary, and Hannah Rose McNeely, the Abrams Foundation, Elizabeth Fearon Pepperman & Richard C. Pepperman II, and Jennifer Harris, with champion support from Elise & Andrew Brownstein, Andrea Krantz & Harvey M. Sawikin, and Allison & Paul Russo. 

Special thanks to NYC Parks.

Public Art Fund is supported by the generosity of individuals, corporations, and private foundations including lead support from Bloomberg Philanthropies, along with major support from the Abrams Foundation, the Charina Endowment Fund, The Cowles Charitable Trust, the Joseph and Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, the Ford Foundation, The Fuhrman Family Foundation, Kenneth C. Griffin and Griffin Catalyst, Agnes Gund, The Marc Haas Foundation, Hartfield Foundation, KHR McNeely Family Foundation | Kevin, Rosemary, and Hannah Rose McNeely, the Donald A. Pels Charitable Trust, Red Crane Foundation, the Meyer and Deanne Sharlin Foundation, and The Silverweed Foundation.

Public Art Fund exhibitions and programs are also supported in part with public funds from government agencies, including the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

bloomberg-logo_Web
KCG_GriffinCatalyst_Lockup_Stacked_BK
Abrams Web Logo Template
Nyc Dcla Web
NYSCA Black
Nycparks Web Logo Template Copy

Related Exhibitions