Suzanne Dirks, Artist and Educator (New York, New York)
We walk past public clocks every day — on street corners, above doorways, and high on towers — often without noticing them. Yet these clocks once played a central role in organizing city life, offering shared reference points in a place shaped by schedules, movement, and collective rhythms.
At the January 2026 lecture of the Horological Society of New York (HSNY), artist and educator Suzanne Dirks asks a deceptively simple question: Do public clocks still organize how we move through New York City, or have they begun to fade into the background? Through the history of public timekeeping, stories of clocks saved and restored through community action, and close observation of clusters of clocks across different neighborhoods, Dirks will explore what these timepieces help keep alive — shared time, civic care, and moments of connection in an ever-changing city.
*Doors open at 5:30 PM ET, lecture to begin at 6 PM ET. RSVP is required.
** The lecture video will be available to members immediately, and to the general public following a two-month delay.
About Suzanne Dirks
Suzanne Dirks is a New York City–based artist and educator whose work centers on time, memory, and the urban landscape. A West Village native, she is the founder of @NewYorkCityClocks, an ongoing project documenting public clocks across the five boroughs. With a background in fiber arts and early childhood education, her interdisciplinary practice blends historical research, photography, and lived observation to explore how public timekeeping shapes shared public life.