Exhibitions/ P.S. Art 2015

P.S. Art 2015: Celebrating the Creative Spirit of New York City Kids

At The Met Fifth Avenue
June 9–October 18, 2015

Exhibition Overview

This year marks the thirteenth anniversary of P.S. Art, an annual exhibition of talented young artists from New York City's public schools. The selection showcases the creativity of eighty-eight prekindergarten through grade 12 students from all five boroughs and includes paintings, prints, sculptures, photographs, mixed-media works, collages, and drawings. Each piece demonstrates personal expression, imaginative use of media, close observation, and an understanding of artistic processes.

This juried exhibition is also a celebration of public school achievement in the arts. Dedicated art teachers support students' creativity and help them look closely in order to respond to their worlds through art making. As students take art classes from one year to the next, they increase their understanding of art, sharpen their skills, and delve more deeply into their imaginations.

We received over 900 submissions, which a panel of arts specialists from the Department of Education and Studio in a School narrowed down to 370 semifinalists. A jury of distinguished members of the New York City arts community, including staff of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, chose the eighty-eight works on display in P.S. Art 2015. This exhibition celebrates the students' artistic journeys and discoveries from early childhood to young adulthood.


The New York City Department of Education would like to thank The Metropolitan Museum of Art for generously mounting, hosting, and helping to select works for this exhibition in the Ruth and Harold D. Uris Center for Education. The Department of Education also gratefully acknowledges The Studio in a School Association, Inc. for its sponsorship and substantial role in the coordination of P.S. Art 2015.


On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in



Lilybeth Jimenez (Age 6, Grade 1). My Beautiful Flowers, 2015. Tempera on paper. School: P.S. 145, Brooklyn. Art Teacher: Carrie Adams