Manhattan’s Madison Sq. Park is now dwelling to a vibrant monument to Puerto Rican excellence within the type of a 20ft-tall urn, its panels that includes portraits of the reggaeton famous person Dangerous Bunny, the US supreme courtroom justice Sonia Sotomayor, the actor Lin-Manuel Miranda, the baseball legend Roberto Clemente and others. Among the many well-known figures are two much less recognisable topics, Gilberto and Maribel Lugo, the dad and mom of artist Roberto Lugo.
“We come from a historical past of being enslaved and being colonised, and this set up is a visible illustration of Puerto Rican overcoming,” Lugo mentioned throughout a gap occasion on 20 Could. “With out my mom and father, I wouldn’t have gotten thus far.”
Element of Roberto Lugo’s Capicú de Cariño (I Heard It Each Methods) in Alfarero del Barrio (Village Potter) at Madison Sq. Park, 2026 Courtesy of the artist and R & Firm. Commissioned by Madison Sq. Park Conservancy. Photograph by Timothy Schenck
Greatest recognized for his ceramic works that meld iconography from graffiti, hip-hop tradition and historic decorative-arts traditions from Europe and Asia, Lugo has created the monumental urn, Capicú de Cariño (I Heard It Each Methods) (2026) for the Madison Sq. Park Conservancy’s newest exhibition fee, Alfarero del Barrio (Village Potter).
Along with the portraits on its exterior, Capicú de Cariño encompasses a passageway that guests can stroll by way of and pose in—the “215” on its ceiling refers back to the space code of Lugo’s hometown of Philadelphia—including an interactive ingredient to the work. As a part of the exhibition, Lugo additionally put in a number of planters comprised of automotive tyres that maintain crops native to Puerto Rico and 4 hand-painted domino tables across the park’s reflecting pool.
“For me, artwork is a celebration, and it’s for the viewer to interpret and interact with, and take what they’ll from it,” Lugo mentioned. “Artwork creates a way of empathy and humanity, and that openness is so essential proper now.”
On the park’s east aspect, Lugo has put in a 15ft-tall orange fireplace hydrant, Para Los Días Caliente (This Is For The Sizzling Ones) (2026), which he tagged with the phrase “se vende” (on the market), seemingly inviting others to tag the sculpture in one more gesture of openness and interplay. Inside a day of the sculpture’s set up, members of the general public had already obliged, including their very own tags and stickers.

Set up view of Roberto Lugo’s Para Los Días Caliente (This Is For The Sizzling Ones) in Alfarero del Barrio (Village Potter) at Madison Sq. Park, 2026 Courtesy of the artist and R & Firm. Commissioned by Madison Sq. Park Conservancy. Photograph by Timothy Schenck
The exhibition’s two large-scale sculptures had been created on the Johnson Atelier, a studio and fabrication facility in Hamilton, New Jersey, which is known as for the general public sculptor Seward Johnson and next-door to the Grounds for Sculpture museum and arboretum. Lugo made his first monument-scaled sculpture throughout a residency there in 2022, and it grew to become the centrepiece of his solo exhibition The Village Potter (2022-23).
“This exhibition’s title, Alfarero del Barrio or Village Potter, displays simply how essential neighborhood is to Roberto,” Denise Markonish, the Madison Sq. Park Conservancy’s chief curator, mentioned. “Madison Sq. Park capabilities as its personal sort of neighborhood and neighbourhood.”

Roberto Lugo with Capicú de Cariño (I Heard It Each Methods) at Madison Sq. Park, 2026 Photograph by Timothy Schenck
Whereas the message of his monument to essential Puerto Ricans is pretty unambiguous, the artist resisted committing to a singular which means behind the enormous fireplace hydrant. It was impressed partially by his childhood in Philadelphia’s Puerto Rican neighborhood, the place his father possessed the one wrench on the block able to opening fireplace hydrants and offering aid on sweltering summer time days.
However, he mentioned sincerely, he seems to be ahead to native residents photographing their elegant canine in entrance of the sculpture. He additionally steered interpretations linking the sculpture to the hearth hoses used on protesters in the course of the Civil Rights period wouldn’t be incorrect, nor would a basic sense that it would convey a need to douse the heated tone of political rhetoric and division within the US.
“I’ve been considering of this venture within the context of the 250th anniversary of the nation,” Lugo mentioned. “We’re so segregated in how we take into consideration completely different cultures and communities within the US, we are inclined to overlook all of the synergies.”
Roberto Lugo: Alfarero del Barrio (Village Potter), till 7 December, Madison Sq. Park, New York







