An essential part of the Wynn experience.
Explore the art collection at Wynn Las Vegas and Encore with this self-guided walking tour, featuring iconic sculptures, rare decorative works, and immersive installations woven throughout the resort.
Key Takeaways
- Wynn Las Vegas and Encore feature a museum-caliber art collection integrated into public spaces.
- The works span contemporary sculpture, historic decorative arts, and site-specific commissions.
- Art is designed to be discovered organically as guests move through the resort.
- This self-guided walk can be completed in 60–90 minutes or enjoyed throughout the day.
At Wynn Las Vegas, art is not confined to galleries or tucked behind velvet ropes. It lives in arrival moments, corridors, dining rooms, and quiet transitional spaces—encountered naturally as part of the guest experience. The result is one of the most immersive and thoughtfully curated art walks on the Las Vegas Strip, equally compelling for first-time visitors and repeat guests.
This self-guided tour highlights some of the most significant works on display across Wynn and Encore, allowing you to explore them at your own pace.
Arrival: Sculpture as a First Impression
Begin at Wynn’s main porte-cochère, where Dressage Horse by Stephan Weiss stands in powerful mid-stride. Cast in bronze and inspired by the champion dressage horse Brentina, the sculpture captures grace, strength, and motion—setting the tone for what lies inside.

Nearby at the south porte-cochère, Weiss’s Shoe offers a contrasting study in form. Abstracted yet unmistakably feminine, the monumental high heel reflects Weiss’s fascination with movement and line, and his belief that fashion and fine art could share the same sculptural language.
The Atrium and Plaza: Contemporary Icons

Step into the Wynn Atrium to encounter Smiling King Bear by Okuda San Miguel. Towering at 16 feet, the prismatic bear—crowned, geometric, and joyfully surreal—has become one of the resort’s most recognizable contemporary works, embodying Wynn’s playful yet sophisticated approach to art.

Continue toward Wynn Plaza, where Tulips by Jeff Koons commands attention. Part of Koons’ celebrated Celebration series, the mirror-polished stainless-steel bouquet appears buoyant and light, despite weighing more than three tons. It is both whimsical and monumental, a paradox that mirrors Las Vegas itself.
Corridors and Esplanades: Art in Motion
Moving through Wynn Fairway Esplanade, pause at Gallops 2 by Nellie King Solomon. Created with ink, acrylic, and carbide on Mylar, the work’s flowing forms and pooled pigments evoke motion and energy—an abstract counterpart to the nearby golf course landscape.
Art continues to reveal itself in quieter spaces, where pieces are scaled for contemplation rather than spectacle, encouraging guests to slow down and look closely.
Dining Rooms as Galleries

Wynn’s art collection is deeply integrated into its dining environments. At the Baccarat Salon, Cixi and Miranda by Timothy Horn reinterpret 17th-century pearl earrings at heroic scale. Crafted in glass with luminous, pearlescent finishes, the sculptures balance decorative elegance with unexpected monumentality.

Near Terrace Pointe Café, look up to see the Eiffel Chandelier, created in 1918 by Gustave Eiffel. Crafted from wood and original Favrile glass shades, the rare piece reflects Eiffel’s belief that engineering and beauty are inseparable—a philosophy echoed throughout Wynn’s design.
Encore: Transformation and Myth
Cross into Encore, where the visual language shifts toward symbolism and transformation. At the west casino entrance, the Mosaic Butterfly Sculpture by Trevi Manufacturing, Inc. rises 18 feet high, its hand-applied glass tiles and dynamic formation signaling evolution and energy.
Inside Wazuzu, the dramatic Crystal Dragon by Roger Thomas stretches 38 feet long and is composed of more than 120,000 crystals. Believed to bring good fortune, it is both an artistic centerpiece and a cultural talisman.
Nearby, Encore’s high-limit rooms feature Thomas’s Crystal Peacocks, their crystal-laden tails shimmering with movement and light—among the most photographed works on the property.
Quiet Icons and Final Discoveries
In Encore Tower Suites, Eve by Joseph Andrau offers a moment of calm. Carved from a single block of French limestone, the sculpture blends biblical reference with modern sensuality, reflecting Andrau’s place within the modern School of Paris.
Conclude your walk near the Encore Concierge Desk with Joe Joe by Tim Bavington, a graphic painting inspired by The Beatles’ “Get Back,” translating music into color and rhythm.
Art at Wynn and Encore unfolds gradually, rewarding curiosity and repeat encounters. Whether you complete this walk in an hour or discover it over the course of a stay, the collection reveals itself as an essential part of the experience.