Syosset

Sail

Tom Fruin
A permanent stainless steel and plexiglass sculpture by artist Tom Fruin at LIRR Syosset station shows a tall sail on a concrete base with blue sky and a traffic light visible through a patchwork of plexiglass colors.
"Sail" (2019) © Tom Fruin, LIRR Syosset Station. Photo: Lauren Guida

About the project

The LIRR Syosset station in the township of Oyster Bay serves many communities with a strong connection to the Long Island Sound and Oyster Bay. The sculpture created by Tom Fruin celebrates that connection, dating back to the area’s founding when shipbuilding was a key local industry.  

At 18 feet tall, the stainless steel and plexiglass sculpture serves as a welcoming gateway at the station, signifying home, recreation, and natural attractions. The colorful sail casts a kaleidoscope of colorful shadows during the daytime sun, and transforms into a beacon of light at night.

In his sculpture and public art, Fruin takes on urban objects such as houses, water towers, and flags, elevating their form and architectural scale to become a focal point and part of the landscape. Here, he creates his first vessel, a sailboat, with its main form as an arced plane that catches light and creates a sense of movement that animates the station entry. 

About the artist

Tom Fruin was born in Los Angeles and currently lives and works in New York City. Working with plexiglass, steel, plastic, and scrap materials, Fruin takes on urban objects such as houses, billboards, and flags, elevating their form to emblematic status and architectural scale. Illuminated from within and constructed in municipal locales, Fruin’s works dim to their own internal rhythms, becoming beacons of color and temples of light that dot skylines and community parks around the world, such as his interpretations of Brooklyn water towers.