A public art program that included five installations in the busy area of Times Square, was organized on the occasion of The Armory Show that took place in New York City during the first days of March. Four galleries were selected and these in turn selected four artists to place their works in the square located on Broadway, between 45 and 47 streets. The artists included in the project were Grimanesa Amoros (Peru), Tom Otterness (U.S.), David Kennedy-Cutler (U.S.), and Niki de Saint Phalle (France). The West Harlem Art Fund chose Kyu Seok Oh (U.S.). Grimanesa Amoros, Peruvian artist living in New York, presented the sculptural installation entitled Uros House. The piece was created with Polyethylene, steel, metal, and computer controlled LEDs. Amoros was inspired by the structures constructed by the Uro Indians in Peru, who live on 42 floating islands in the Titicaca Lake. The artist, who intervened the Duffy square space, symbolized with this piece an area by the Puno coast and the foam of its colorful ocean where the houses, made out of cane, of the Uros islands, in Peru, used to 'float.' Tom Otterness's piece entitled Mouse, depicts a giant mouse created in bronze. Otterness's works are widely known in the city, as they are placed in several subway stations. With this large format work, the artist pursued an interaction with the large number of people that transits this area of the city. With his work entitled Geologies, Cosmologies, and Apologies #1-a monolith created with CDs, Plexiglas, ashes in acrylic media, and everything glued with epoxy resin-David Kennedy-Cutler alludes to the oil spill that occurred in Greenpoint Brooklyn. With this work he is able to bring the aesthetic of that neighborhood, to Time Square, one of the most transited places. The works by Niki de Saint Phalle and Kyu Seok also attract attention because of their scale. Saint Phalle's piece consists of a 10 feet high sculpture that represents a woman, created in ceramics; while Kyu's depicts a flock of sheep, created with papier-mâché, that blend in with the people that inundated the plaza.