Because the New York Metropolis Aids Memorial celebrates its tenth anniversary this 12 months, the nonprofit established to honour these misplaced to the Aids epidemic is unveiling its newest public fee: Everlasting Flame for Scott Burton (2026) by the American sculptor Oscar Tuazon. Put in on the memorial’s web site in St Vincent’s Triangle in Manhattan’s West Village, the fee being unveiled on 20 June revisits the ultimate public work of Scott Burton, the influential artist who died of Aids-related sickness in 1989.
Tuazon, whose observe melds components of structure, social engagement and conceptual sculpture, first grew to become taken with Burton’s work as an artwork pupil in New York within the Nineties. “The twin nature of his sculptures––without delay publicly seen and deeply personal––appeared like a secret hidden in plain sight,” Tuazon says. His fee for the Aids Memorial reimagines Burton’s landmark set up for the Sheepshead Bay fishing piers in Brooklyn, a piece initially commissioned in 1987 and accomplished posthumously in 1994.
Scott Burton, Fee for Sheepshead Bay Fishing Piers, 1994 {Photograph} by Christopher Wesnofske. Assortment of the Public Design Fee of the Metropolis of New York
The work grew to become emblematic of Burton’s method to public artwork, dissolving boundaries between sculpture, design and civic infrastructure. Comprising benches, lighting components and different purposeful varieties, Burton’s work inspired public interplay whereas providing social and political commentary. Sadly, years of publicity to the atmosphere, compounded by harm sustained throughout Superstorm Sandy, led to its decommissioning in 2022. Key elements had been subsequently preserved by Nicholas Olney and Eric Gleason of the gallery Olney Gleason. Tuazon used a few of these salvaged components for his new sculpture.
“I adopted Burton’s intention as carefully as potential,” Tuazon says. “Pink Atlantic granite is a cloth that Burton typically used. Terrazzo was an atypical alternative for an outside sculpture at Sheepshead Bay—maybe the one time he used this materials—and the ottoman-style benches that kind the core of the work had been badly broken by publicity to a marine atmosphere for 3 a long time. I attempted to lovingly restore his work utilizing unique fragments and remodel the broken terrazzo into a brand new combination materials.”
Tuazon’s sculpture takes the type of a purposeful round bench with a pole that shines a beam of sunshine.
“Everlasting Flame for Scott Burton isn’t only a backward-looking monument,” says Dave Harper, the chief director of the Aids Memorial. “It’s an act of direct preservation and delicate reimagining that means a perpetual renewal of Burton’s work and the technology he represents. In the end, I need guests to see that historical past will not be fastened and should not be forgotten. By considerate stewardship, the concepts and inventive spirits of these we misplaced to the Aids disaster proceed to stay, breathe and evolve proper right here within the current.”

Scott Burton, Fee for Sheepshead Bay Fishing Piers, 1994 {Photograph} by Christopher Wesnofske. Assortment of the Public Design Fee of the Metropolis of New York
Tuazon’s design displays the Aids Memorial’s ongoing dedication to preserving the historical past of the Aids disaster whereas guaranteeing that its cultural and human legacies stay energetic inside public life. The revealing will embody drag performances, stay music and floral installations.
“I need guests to know that commemoration is an energetic, dwelling verb,” Harper says. “I hope guests depart understanding that the New York Metropolis Aids Memorial, as we rejoice our tenth anniversary this 12 months, isn’t just a spot of mourning, however a vibrant, enduring platform for inventive power, social connection and justice.”
Everlasting Flame for Scott Burton means that reminiscence is sustained via transformation. It stands as a testomony to an artist misplaced through the Aids disaster and to the enduring capability of public artwork to attach generations throughout time.
“Neighborhood is the strongest safety we have now,” Tuazon says. “I needed to place the pink triangle on the centre of this work, as a memorial to Burton and all the opposite artists misplaced to Aids, and to make this a tactile, loving, communal area the place buddies and strangers meet. I insist on the intimate nature of this, as one thing that you just expertise via contact. The HIV/Aids disaster was a failure of establishments (one thing we’re seeing once more proper now), and the antidote is––and has all the time been––delight, visibility and neighborhood. Within the phrases of Act Up, ‘Silence=Dying’.”








