Northern Waterthrush by Vanesa 脕lvarez D铆az

Location: Ten Eyck Garden, 15-17 Ten Eyck Street, Brooklyn, NY 11206
A colorful mural of birds and flowers painted on a garden shed.
Photo: Elias Williams

Listen to the bird in this mural!

Painted: 6/13/2025

About the Mural: In this mural painted by Vanesa 脕lvarez D铆az, a Northern Waterthrush perches on a branch amid a selection of colorful native plants: foxgloves, goldenrod, coneflowers, wild petunias, and more. As part of the 约炮视频 Mural Project鈥攁 public-art initiative drawing attention to birds that are vulnerable to extinction from climate change鈥擭YC Parks鈥 Art in the Parks program and NYC Parks GreenThumb worked with the 约炮视频, Gitler &_____ Gallery, and local artists to design murals in community gardens across the city. Through a collaborative process between the partners, artist, and garden group, each mural was designed to feature climate-threatened birds as well as native plants that birds depend on for food and shelter. By creating vibrant urban green spaces, community gardeners provide essential support for birds and people. 

This mural was created with in Williamsburg, which held a community event with the artist to celebrate the new piece鈥檚 completion. The small pocket of green serves as a gathering space for community members to open conversations with each other, learn about biodiversity, and enjoy time in nature, says garden member Rob Hult. 鈥淲e grow fruits and vegetables to support people, and plants and flowers to support pollinators, birds, and biodiversity,鈥 Hult says.

About the Bird: The Northern Waterthrush is a shy, slim warbler, often found foraging for insects near bogs and forested streams. It鈥檚 known for its sweet song and distinctive habit of bobbing the rear of its body up and down while it walks. Artist Vanesa 脕lvarez D铆az, who lives in Brooklyn near the garden, says she often sees the birds in the neighborhood and has always loved their colors鈥攕treaky brown over a yellowish underbelly. 

Though the waterthrush鈥檚 populations are stable today, it faces threats from a changing climate. If warming continues at its current pace, the species is set to lose 36 percent of its summer range, according to 约炮视频鈥檚 Survival By Degrees report. Taking action to limit climate change can help the species survive across a wider spread of habitats. Meanwhile, maintaining pockets of green space like community gardens鈥攁nd filling them with native plants that attract insect snacks鈥攐ffers crucial patches of habitats for birds in the city.

About the Artist: is a muralist and visual artist from the north of Spain based in New York City. With over 20 years of experience, she has been selected in international competitions and created murals with social and feminist themes in Spain, Mexico, and the United States. She has been an artist in residence through Project Art USA, teaching artist for LEAP NYC鈥檚 Public Art Program, and works frequently as a lead artist with Thrive Collective painting murals in public schools.

In 2021 she was selected by the NYC Health+Hospitals Arts in Medicine Program to paint a community-based mural in Morrisania Hospital in the Bronx. Other recent works in New York City include 鈥淯nion with the Universe鈥 in Union Square, commissioned by the NYC Department of Transportation; 鈥淕enerations鈥 in Woodside, Queens, created with ArtBridge; and The Flag Project at Rockefeller Center. During the last three years, 脕lvarez D铆az was one of the Su-casa program Brooklyn Arts Council Artists in Residence. She also continues creating murals in Spain, from the PintaMalasa帽a street art project in Madrid to the 鈥淓xpostas鈥 mural series in Galicia. Besides her public art, she is developing her studio practice in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

脕lvarez D铆az hopes the mural at Ten Eyck Garden can brighten the space and spark more curiosity about the birds and plants depicted. While creating the mural, she says the best moments were the ones shared with garden members. 鈥淚n the garden, the conversations revolve around when the fruits ripen, the butterflies, the birds,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat's truly special and valuable for the time and the city we inhabit.鈥