Sing for Hope Pianos
The Sing for Hope Pianos

World Piano Day at Oculus

About this Program

Two new Sing for Hope Pianos make their public debut Monday, March 25 at Westfield World Trade Center. Sing for Hope Artist in Residence Patrick Freeman has created a pair of Sing for Hope Pianos with a matching inverted color palette and swirling imagery that unifies the two instruments. The instruments were created to celebrate World Piano Day on March 28, an annual worldwide celebration of the piano coinciding with the 88th day of the year, a nod to the 88 keys on a standard piano.

The Sing for Hope Pianos

From the Bronx to Beirut, the Sing for Hope Pianos program is a global arts initiative that creates artist-designed pianos; places them in public spaces for anyone and everyone to enjoy; then transports and activates them year-round in permanent homes in schools, hospitals, transit hubs, refugee camps, and community-based organizations. Sing for Hope has provided more pianos for under-resourced public schools than any other organization in the world.

The Sing for Hope Pianos
700+
SFH Pianos Created
2+ Million
People Annually Served
8 + Billion
Media Impressions Garnered

Frequently Asked Questions

This is the most important question of all, and the answer is a resounding Yes! The Sing for Hope Pianos are for everyone and anyone to enjoy. Have a seat and play — it’s all yours!