I had passed through the station many times before this little fella caught my eye, perched on a beam overhead.
Was this a rogue artistic statement? [No.]
There were more figures dotted about, and a larger installation below a staircase.
The subway system has a budget for art, I learned. We had some fun on a tour underground with a bona fide subway railfan.
Sure, I'd enjoyed the fossil replicas in the station below the Museum of Natural History. And I'd noticed the full-sized mosaics of revelers in the passages near Times Square. But there is real history throughout the system. The original lines were private, and the tile banners in each station followed their distinct color schemes of their owners.
More importantly, each station had a theme (localized to the neighborhood, in some fashion) to help riders recognize their stops. Not everyone could read, back in the day.
The Statue of Liberty is just barely visible beneath the bridge in the design at the Chambers Street station. The white tiles lining the walls were chosen to counteract the subterranean darkness. Despite layers of grime, they still reflect a lot of light.
A beaver, at Astor Place. It seems lucky that these pieces have endured in situ—not having been pried loose and stolen, nor defaced.
Our enthusiastic guide led us to some uncommon sights, like this intimate view of the tracks curving out of a station. We were standing, comfortably, behind a railing on the platform (not, as it might appear, on the tracks).
He made sure that we passed below the Roy Lichtenstein mural at the Times Square Station.
(A Roy Lichtenstein mural, in the subway?!)
Oh, the things you see when you take a moment to look around!
October 17, 2018
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