Provincetown Public Art Summer 2025
A Summer Long Festival of Murals & Sculpture curated by the Provincetown Public Art Foundation.
Building on the success of last year’s inaugural program, the Provincetown Public Art Foundation proudly presents the second annual summer-long festival of murals & sculpture. In 2025, eleven local and regional artists bring new energy and imagination to the streets of Provincetown, expanding the town’s open-air gallery with vibrant works installed along MacMillan Pier, Commercial Street, and other public spaces.
Each installation offers a unique perspective on Provincetown’s culture and character, infusing the environment with artistic expression. Curated and funded by the Provincetown Public Art Foundation with support from the Town of Provincetown Department of Public Works and Office of the Pier Manager, and our generous sponsors: Bay State Cruise Company, Boston Harbor City Cruises, McLaughlin Upholstery, Provincetown Brewing Company, Provincetown Business Guild, and the Yingling Family.

This program is supported in part by a grant from the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.


Additional support from the Provincetown Economic Development Committee (EDC)
We invite you to explore the works, meet the artists, and celebrate the evolving story of public art in Provincetown.

If you’re fond of sand dunes and salty air…
By Naya Bricher
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Naya Bricher is an artist based year-round in Provincetown, MA. Originally South Kent, CT, she is an alumna of Miss Porter’s School and Smith College, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with highest honors in studio art. In 2013, she was a resident at the Vermont Studio Center. In 2014, she joined the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown as staff-in-residence. She is represented by Four Eleven in Provincetown, MA.
This mural by the artist is a joyful tribute to the indulgences of summer. Set against the backdrop of the beach, a playful still life unfolds across a patterned tablecloth: a pistachio-almond pudding topped with cherry and cream, a radiant peony, a bowl of ice cream, and a sugar-dusted donut. A gemstone catches the sunlight, a cocktail invites celebration, and a hovering bubble adds a note of magic. Together, these vibrant details capture the spirit of summer in Provincetown, inviting viewers to pause, enjoy a treat, and savor the moment. Listen to a special spotify playlist inspired by the art.

The Cold Warmth
By Jay Critchley
Located at Angel Foods Site & The Cook Bryant Saltworks Art Site
Jay Critchley is a conceptual, multidisciplinary performance artist and writer whose visual work and environmental activism have gained international recognition. His projects, exhibitions, and performances have been presented across the United States, as well as in Argentina, Japan, England, Holland, Germany, and Colombia. Known for his provocative public interventions and proposals, Jay has received extensive media coverage for the way his art intersects with social and political issues. In 2018, he delivered a TEDx Talk titled Portrait of the Artist as a Corporation. Jay lives and works in Provincetown, Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
For the 2025 Summer Festival of Public Art, Jay Critchley presents The Cold Warmth, a summerlong installation series on Provincetown Harbor. Drawing on the unique light that has inspired artists on the Cape tip for over a century, Critchley combines the U.S. flag with the flags of other nations to comment on the shifting global alignments and authoritarian trends in U.S. geopolitics. The inaugural installation features the U.S./Russia and U.S./Turkey flags and poses timely questions such as, What does it mean to be an American? A patriot? A world leader? The installation will remain on view through October, with a series of performances, readings, music, and ceremonies happening July 31, August 28, September 18 and October 9.

Sunset at Herring Cove
By Joe Diggs
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Joe Diggs is a practicing artist, curator, and educator with generational roots on Cape Cod. His paintings range from realist depictions of African American history and personal family memories to gestural plein-air landscapes and geometric abstractions, and they span in scale from large, wall-sized murals to small, intimate works on cardboard. Joe Diggs’ expansive artistic vision is unified by dynamic textures, perspectives, colors, and forms. Although anchored in his local Cape Cod community, Diggs’ paintings are in many national and international private collections.
Joe Diggs is represented by the Berta Walker Gallery in Provincetown, MA.

Outer/Under Cape
By Yvette Drury Dubinsky
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Yvette Drury Dubinsky is a multimedia artist based in Truro, MA, New York, NY, and St. Louis, MO. Her work spans printmaking, painting, alternative photography, and mixed media, often exploring themes of housing, migration, and transformation through repurposed materials. She exhibits regularly at Farm Projects in Wellfleet, AIR Gallery in New York, and Bruno David Gallery in St. Louis. Dubinsky’s work has been shown across the U.S., Europe, and Japan, and is included in the collections of the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, the Saint Louis Art Museum, the Nevada Museum of Art, the New York Public Library, and Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, among others. She has participated in the U.S. Department of State’s Art in Embassies program and held a residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris. She holds an MFA from the Sam Fox School at Washington University in St. Louis, where she also earned an MA in Sociology.
This piece is a digital reproduction of a large-scale collage constructed from painted, printed, and manipulated boxes, along with other made and found detritus. The layered composition brings together Dubinsky’s signature use of repurposed materials to explore place, memory, and the shifting structures of home.

Vibrating Horizons
By Sam Fields
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier.
Sam Fields is a sculptor and educator whose work uses textiles to explore themes of power, identity, and community. Rooted in craft as both philosophy and practice, her work spans sculpture, performance, and participatory installations. Sam holds an MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University, where she currently teaches sculpture. Her work has been supported by grants from the City of Boston, Now + There, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, among others. She is the founder of Cloth Collaborative, a studio and workshop dedicated to textile-based artmaking and community engagement.

Musicians, Muses and Mentors
By Jerome Greene
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Jerome Greene is a Provincetown-based painter whose work reflects the enduring legacy of the Provincetown Art Colony. Drawing inspiration from the rich landscapes and vibrant artistic community of the Outer Cape, Jerome works primarily in a plein air style, capturing the beauty and atmosphere of Provincetown through figures, landscapes, and studio paintings. Influenced by the Provincetown masters and shaped by years of study and collaboration with fellow artists, his work is included in numerous private and corporate collections. He lives and maintains his studio in Provincetown, Massachusetts.
The 2025 mural by Jerome Greene features Captain Jack’s Wharf in the background, anchoring the composition in Provincetown’s iconic waterfront. In the foreground, pages from Jerome’s sketchbook—drawings of local figures from his life—appear to scatter across the scene as if caught in a gust of wind. The mural blends personal history with a sense of place, honoring both the people and the landscape that inspire Greene’s work.

Be Calmed
(Great Green Wave)
By Bob Henry
Located at Court & Commercial St
Bob Henry is a celebrated figure painter whose work focuses on groups of figures and the dynamic relationships between them, often explored through drawing. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1933, Henry studied with Hans Hofmann in New York and Provincetown, as well as with Ad Reinhardt and Kurt Seligmann at Brooklyn College, where he is Professor Emeritus. He has lived and worked in New York City and Martha’s Vineyard and currently resides in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, with his wife and fellow artist Selina Trieff.

The Lazy Gardener
By Richard Selesnick + Nicholas Kahn
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Nicholas Kahn and Richard Selesnick are a collaborative artist team who work primarily in the fields of photography and installation art, specializing in fictitious histories set in the past or future. Kahn & Selesnick have participated in over 100 solo and group exhibitions and have work in over 20 collections, including the Boston Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Houston Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Smithsonian Institution. In addition, they have published 3 books with Aperture Press, Scotlandfuturebog, City of Salt, and Apollo Prophecies, and 2 books with Candela Books, One Hundred Views of the Drowning World and Dr. Falke’s Oraculum. They have lectured and led residencies world-wide including for Toni Morrison’s Atelier Program at Princeton University and at the Sanford Underground Research Facility, and have received commissions and grants from NASA and the Pollock Krasner Foundation among others.

Blue Wonder
By Lena McCarthy
Four murals located on Trap Sheds along MacMillan Pier
Lena McCarthy is an American visual artist. Her practice primarily consists of painting, making large scale murals and more recently, three-dimensional objects of wood and ceramics. Inspired by the natural world, contemporary illustration and her personal experiences, Mac’s work combines figurative symbols with abstracted forms to create metaphorical spaces that contemplate mysterious aspects of the world around us. In 2016, Lena began painting in the streets while living in Santiago, Chile and has since continued to paint in public spaces across the world. She has participated in numerous mural festivals and been an artist in residence with La Sierra Foundation (2023 Colombia) Dripped on the Road traveling residency (2021 USA), and Watershed Studios (2019 Ireland). Lena holds a BFA in painting from Boston University. She is a recipient of the Mass Cultural Council Grant for Creative Individuals, the Blanche E. Coleman award and the Mass MoCA Assets for Artists grant. Lena lives and works in Western Massachusetts.

We The People
By Sky Power
Located on Harbormaster Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
Sky Power is a contemporary painter based in Provincetown, MA since 1976. In the early seventies, Power attended Cornish School of Allied Arts in Seattle, WA, and was an artist-in-residence at the Pulpit Rock Artist Community in Woodstock, CT. Power studied with Hans Hofmann students, Paul Resika, Selina Trieff, and Robert Henry, and has been an exhibiting artist at Berta Walker Gallery in Provincetown, MA, since 2004. For the past four decades, Power has exhibited at various galleries and museums including George Billis Gallery in NYC, the U.S. Embassy in Muscat, Oman; New Britain Museum of American Art, Westmoreland Museum of American Art, Wichita Art Museum, Cape Cod Museum of Art, Cahoon Museum, and Provincetown Art Association and Museum. The artist’s work is included in the permanent collections of the U.S. Embassy, Valletta, Malta, and the Provincetown Art Association and Museum.

Sisters
By James Everett Stanley
Located on Trap Shed at MacMillan Pier
James Everett Stanley is a New England-based painter and Associate Professor of Painting at Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston, Massachusetts. He has exhibited his work recently at LaMontagne Gallery, Boston; Hirschl & Adler Modern, New York; Provincetown Arts Society, Provincetown; EXPO Chicago; Art Basel Miami Beach. A graduate of the MFA program at Columbia University, Stanley is the recipient of fellowships from the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, and The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. His work is included in the permanent collection of The Studio Museum in Harlem.