After making waves in Amsterdam and Barcelona, Moco Museum (that’s Modern & Contemporary, FYI) landed in London in 2024 on a mission to make world-class art accessible for the masses. They’ve already got a collection boasting big-names like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Andy Warhol, Yayoi Kusama, Tracey Emin and KAWS, but their latest exhibition is taking things strictly underground.
‘Voice of the Street: Keith Haring’s Subway Drawings’ is designed to transport visitors back to the electric energy of 1980s New York. Forget staring at stuffy white gallery walls, Moco has built a fully immersive, recreated NYC subway environment to house 30 of Haring’s iconic transit drawings created between 1980 and 1985.
It’s a brilliant look at how the legendary artist turned mundane daily commutes into a public platform for joyful resistance, connection, and self-expression. Expect his bold, instantly recognisable visual language to completely transform the space. If you want to experience the raw, spontaneous power of street art in its natural (albeit recreated) habitat, this is the ticket. Mind the doors!
‘Voice of the Street: Keith Haring’s Subway Drawings’ runs at the Moco Museum until June 18 2026. To get £15 tickets with Time Out Offers head here.
(A quick note for the purists: the works are attributed to Haring based on independent expert research; the Keith Haring Foundation doesn't officially authenticate them or endorse the show.)
