OUR WORK
Project Portfolio
A selection of our work spanning commercial installations, residential commissions, sculptures, custom furniture, and architectural metalwork across the New York metropolitan area.
Commercial
Repoussé Wall Art
Metalwork
Estate Staircase Railing
Sculpture
Twisting Flame Atrium Sculpture
Furniture
Live-Edge Dining Table
Commercial
Airport Surround & Cladding
Commercial
Stainless Cladding
Furniture
Helix Chandelier
Metalwork
Greenhouse Aluminum Roof
Metalwork
Stainless Steel Cable Rail
Furniture
Custom Rails & Racks
Commercial
Swatch Airport Storefront
Furniture
Custom Hand Forged Table
Commercial
Aluminum Storefront
Commercial
Dufry Storefront Tower Columns
Commercial
America Airport Storefront
Residential
HRCQ Backsplash
Commercial
Entry Redesign
Residential
Organic Designed Andirons
Sculpture
Free Standing Sculpture
Sculpture
Aluminum Portrait
Sculpture
Contemporary Sculpture
Sculpture
Public Sculpture
Sculpture
Custom Steel Archway
Sculpture
Aluminum Art Wall
Sculpture
Portrait Sculpture
Sculpture
Portrait Sculpture
National Historic Trail Permanent Sulpture
Two metal sculpture memorials commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights March.
Civil Rights March Sculptures
To Commemorate the historic Selma to Montgomery has commissioned two metal sculptures to be installed at the beginning and the end of the National Historic Civil Rights Trail located within the City.
Barrette Bailey, Robert Minervini and Jon Cook are the artists who have been chosen to design and build the works. They are shown above in front of the fist sculpture which is still a work in progress. The two metal sculptures will bookend the National Historic Civil Rights Trail located in Montgomery AL. The two monuments will signify the struggles and determination to overcome inequality.
Barrett and Rob are both graduates of the New York Academy of Art. Rob is a metal artist and owner of Art Emphasis Design in New Jersey. High 5 Productions, owned by Jon and Barrett, will document the process for the city.
Civil Rights March History
On March 24, 1965, a group of 8,000 courageous men and women made history in Alabama as they marched on foot into the Capital City. Only 17 days before, their first peaceful attempt to march from Selma to Montgomery was forcefully stopped at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, in a violent event remembered as Bloody Sunday.
In determined pursuit of the basic constitutional right to vote, they successfully began the march again on March 21st. Some five days later in Montgomery, 25,000 people marched from St. Judes’s campus on Fairview Avenue to the steps of the State Capital. Overcoming great oppositioin, Their successful March to the capital resulted in teh Voting Rights Act of 1965, a significant milestone in the fight for Civil Rights. In memory of the heroic event, marchers retrace the steps of the bridge crossing and final portion trail every year.