Get us in your inbox

Search
Photograph: Courtesy MTA Arts & Design/Patrick Cashin

The top NYC subway art installations

Check out our selection of the most amazing subway art installations in stations across the Five Boroughs

Written by
Howard Halle
&
Peter Kirby
Advertising

More and more, subway stations across all five boroughs are featuring amazing installations by some of the biggest names in contemporary art. The sheer variety of stuff on display—marvelous mosaics, scintillating sculptures and stupendous works in stain glass, to name a few—rivals anything you’ll find at NYC’s myriad galleries, or at museums such as MoMA, the Guggenheim and The Met. The best part? You can experience this artistic abundance on your daily commute—and all for the price of a Metro Card. But you got to know where to look, so to help you out, we offer this authoritative list of the top subway art installations in New York City.

Best subway art installations

Elizabeth Murray, Blooming, 1996
Photograph: Rob Wilson, courtesy MTA Arts & Design/

1. Elizabeth Murray, Blooming, 1996

Lexington Avenue-59th Street

Lines of poetry by Delmore Schwartz and Gwendolyn Brooks join images of coffee cups and shoes in this mosaic mediation on the daily rituals that surround getting on the subway and going to work. The blooming tree of the title, meanwhile, is a reference to this station’s East Side location, a neighborhood which was called Bloomingdale before the famed department store above the stop took the name for itself.

Faith Ringgold, Flying Home Harlem Heroes and Heroines, 1996
Photograph: Rob Wilson, courtesy MTA Arts & Design/

2. Faith Ringgold, Flying Home Harlem Heroes and Heroines, 1996

125th Street, 2,3

The veteran African-American artist created this piece as a celebration of the history of Harlem and the figures—performers, painters, sports heroes, artists, writers, musicians, civil rights activists, and religious leaders—who made it the cradle of black culture.

Advertising
Yoko Ono, SKY, 2018
Photograph: Patrick Cashin, courtesy MTA Arts & Design

3. Yoko Ono, SKY, 2018

72nd Street B,C 

Yoko Ono’s azure blue mosaics depict the sky filled with puffy clouds, bringing a bit of the outdoors—and messages of hope—into the station that lies just beneath the legendary Dakota: The co-op building the artist has called home since 1973.

 

Fred Dana Marsh, Marine Grill Murals, 1913/2000
Photograph: Rob Wilson, courtesy MTA Arts & Design

4. Fred Dana Marsh, Marine Grill Murals, 1913/2000

Broadway/Nassau Street (Fulton Street), A,C

These nautically-theme ceramic lunettes depicting NYC’s waterfront history were originally installed in the old McAlpin Hotel on Herald Square, and were dismantled tile by tile after a developer converted the building to condos. They were piled unsorted into crates, and shipped to a Transit Authority bus garage. There, a group of interns spent a summer piecing the tiles back together like jigsaw puzzles. The restored pieces were moved to their current location in 2000.

Advertising
William Wegman, Stationary Figures, 2018
Photograph: Patrick Cashin, courtesy MTA Arts & Design

5. William Wegman, Stationary Figures, 2018

23rd Street, F,M

The artist know for collaborating with Weimaraners created this series immortalizing two of his companions—Flo and Topper—in glass mosaics. The dogs (who, in some cases, wear clothes) are pictured as canine straphangers, staring plaintively across the platform, as if wondering, Will that that train ever come? You know the feeling

 

Chuck Close, Subway Portraits, 2017
Photograph: Courtesy Governor Cuomo's Office

6. Chuck Close, Subway Portraits, 2017

Second Avenue–86th Street

Famed for his monumental photorealistic portrait heads, Chuck Close translates his inimitable style into mosaic tiles for a series of 12 images of his artist friends—among them Philip Glass, Cindy Sherman and Lou Reed. Two self-portraits round out this group of remarkable renderings.

Advertising
Michael Ingui, Crescendo, 2007
Photograph: Courtesy the MTA

7. Michael Ingui, Crescendo, 2007

E. 105th Street

The architectural environment of the L train’s penultimate stop is echoed in the design of this energetic installation made of laminated glass.

Sam Gilliam, Jamaica Center Station Riders, Blue, 1991
Photograph: Courtesy the MTA

8. Sam Gilliam, Jamaica Center Station Riders, Blue, 1991

Jamaica Center-Parsons-Archer

For the final stop on the E, J and Z lines, artist Sam Gilliam created this abstract aluminum relief meant to convey images of “movement, circuits, speed, technology and passenger ships.” Its palette employs the same colors used to denote the E, J and Z on the subway map.

Advertising
Jean Shin, Elevated, 2017
Photograph: Courtesy Governor Cuomo's Office

9. Jean Shin, Elevated, 2017

Lexington Avenue-63rd Street

The El trains that used to run up Manhattan’s East Side are recalled in a series of expansive mosaic murals for the F/Q station at Lexington Avenue and 63rd Street. Made of ceramic tile, glass mosaic and laminated glass, the installation is based on photos of the old 2nd and 3rd Avenue Elevated train. In addition to this image of elevated tracks, Shin's project includes scenes of commuters from the ’30s and ’40s, along with an expanse of empty sky meant to represent the absent El.

Willie Birch, Harlem Timeline, 1995
Photograph: Courtesy the MTA

10. Willie Birch, Harlem Timeline, 1995

135th Street

Luminaries from Harlem’s history—Langston Hughes, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk—mingle with ordinary straphangers in this mural on the 3 train, which borrows stylistically African-American quilts, textile designs of Mexico and Africa, and visionary folk art.

Advertising
Sarah Sze, Blueprint for a Landscape, 2017
Photograph: Courtesy Governor Cuomo's Office

11. Sarah Sze, Blueprint for a Landscape, 2017

Second Avenue–96th Street

Some 4300 unique porcelain wall tiles, spanning 14,000 square feet make up this schematic cityscape capturing the frenetic tempo of New York life.

Nancy Spero, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, 2004
Photograph: Courtesy Rob Wilson

12. Nancy Spero, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, 2004

66th Street-Lincoln Center

The 1 train stop at 66th Street-Lincoln Center is the gateway to the city’s premier performance complex, so this series of glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance and orchestra-related subjects by noted artist Nancy Spero is perfect station decor.

Advertising
Odili Donald Odita, Kaleidoscope, 2012
Photograph: Courtesy Karen Mauch

13. Odili Donald Odita, Kaleidoscope, 2012

20th Ave

Odita, whose abstract works reflect the artist’s personal response to and visual memory of specific sites, created this laminated glass mural for the 20th Avenue D train stop in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. Rendered in bright colors, the piece is meant to evoke “a symbolic cultural quilt of the surrounding neighborhood,” describing “all the life, energy, and movement that can be found at the 20th Avenue subway location,” as the artist puts. The piece consists of 40 individual panels running the length of the elevated station platform.

Leo Villareal, Hive, 2012
Photograph: Courtesy James Ewing

14. Leo Villareal, Hive, 2012

Bleecker Street

Once upon a time, you couldn’t transfer to the F from the northbound 6 train at Bleecker Street. The MTA finally remedied the situation at no small cost, and then decided to punctuate their accomplishment with this LED light installation by Leo Villareal. The fixtures are formed to created an outline of a honeycomb in a piece titled, appropriately enough, Hive. The name is equally appropriate for a transfer point where straphangers frenetically change trains at rush hour like so many busily buzzing bees.

Advertising
Roy Lichtenstein, Times Square Mural, 2002
Photograph: Laura Gallant

15. Roy Lichtenstein, Times Square Mural, 2002

42nd St–Times Sq

The MTA’s busiest station is home to more than just people trying to give you a stress test. It also features the work of five major artists, including pop master Roy Lichtenstein’s Times Square Mural, a 53-foot-long mash-up of Art Deco, comic-book and retro-futuristic imagery. The massive piece is mounted among the rafters in the main mezzanine, so follow the example of the clueless tourists on the street above and look up!

Tom Otterness, Life Underground, 2004
Photograph: Rob Wilson

16. Tom Otterness, Life Underground, 2004

14th St at Eighth Ave

On your way to the A, C, E or L, you can spot dozens of sculptor Tom Otterness’s adorable bronze figurines perched on railings, benches and support beams. Keep your eyes peeled for the artist’s playful renditions of city life, including one tiny figure trying to beat a fare and another getting gobbled up by a sewer alligator turned businessman. Fucking alligator businessmen, man.

Advertising
Vik Muniz, Perfect Strangers, 2017
Photograph: Courtesy Governor Cuomo's Office

17. Vik Muniz, Perfect Strangers, 2017

Second Avenue–72nd Street

New Yorkers of all stripes come alive in these mosaics by Muniz, a Brazilian artist based in New York City and Rio de Janeiro, featuring life-size figures who are depicted as if they were waiting for a train.

Samm Kunce, Under Bryant Park, 2002
Photograph: Laura Gallant

18. Samm Kunce, Under Bryant Park, 2002

42nd St–Bryant Park

One of the subway’s largest commissioned pieces, Samm Kunce’s mural spans the length of the tunnel connecting the orange trains and the 7 and goes a long way to lighten the slog of an extended transfer walk. Mosaic roots intertwine with literary quotations, paying homage to the Public Library (quotes!) and Bryant Park (roots!) overhead.

Advertising
Bill Brand, Masstransiscope, 1980
Photograph: Rob Wilson

19. Bill Brand, Masstransiscope, 1980

B,Q from DeKalb Ave

Installed in the abandoned Myrtle Avenue station, Bill Brand’s Masstransiscope uses the principles of the zoetrope, a 19th-century visual-illusion device. When seen from moving Manhattan-bound B and Q trains leaving DeKalb Ave, the images on a long panel begin to animate: Abstract shapes twist, a rocket ship blasts off, and commuters whose phones have died are provided a brief, glorious moment of stimulus.

Andrew Ginzel and Kristin Jones, Oculus, 1999
Photograph: Laura Gallant

20. Andrew Ginzel and Kristin Jones, Oculus, 1999

Chambers St/Park Pl/World Trade Center

If you feel like someone’s watching you the next time you’re waiting for a downtown A or C, don’t freak out—it’s probably just one of the 300 mosaic eyes installed throughout the station by artists Andrew Ginzel and Kristin Jones. The images are based on photos of real New Yorkers’ eyeballs, including one extra-large peeper that stares up from the floor. (Okay, this last one is admittedly pretty freaky.)

Advertising
Robert Wilson, My Coney Island Baby, 2004
Photograph: Laura Gallant

21. Robert Wilson, My Coney Island Baby, 2004

Coney Island-Stillwell Ave

No, it’s not a huge portrait of Lou Reed (but how cool would that be?). This station’s street-level walls are dominated by colossal iterations of the ’hood’s icons (hot dogs, Ferris wheels). During the day, sunlight streams through the silk-screened glass brick, giving artist Robert Wilson’s scenes an alluring glow. (One piece of advice: If you plan to eat a supersized frank à la Wilson’s, wait at least 30 minutes before riding the Cyclone.)

New York City Architectural Artifacts from the Collection of the Brooklyn Museum
Photograph: Laura Gallant

22. New York City Architectural Artifacts from the Collection of the Brooklyn Museum

Eastern Pkwy-Brooklyn Museum

If the institution’s $12 fee is too steep for you, head underground to get a small sampling of the collection for just one swipe of your MetroCard. The station’s walls are adorned with more than 70 busts, gargoyles and abstract designs salvaged from buildings scheduled for demolition.

Advertising
Al Held, Passing Through, 2004
Photograph: Rob Wilson

23. Al Held, Passing Through, 2004

Lexington Ave-53rd St/51st St

This glass mosaic weaves its way along more than 100 feet of undulating wall within the station’s mezzanine in a combination of vibrant color and shifting geometry. The images suggest an alternate universe unrestricted by time and space, which may seem pretty attractive when you’re stuck waiting for a late-night 6 train.

Vito Acconci, Wall-Slide, 2002
Photograph: Laura Gallant

24. Vito Acconci, Wall-Slide, 2002

161st St/Yankee Stadium

Vito Acconci’s 2002 installation spans every floor of the commuter hub, thoughtfully cutting into and rearranging pieces of the station itself. On the bottom level, chunks of wall jut out to form makeshift seats, while on the top one, the brightly colored tile is sliced into sections that appear to slide down beneath the floor. (Like a wall slide!)

Advertising
Ik-joong Kang, Happy World, 1998
Photograph: Laura Gallant

25. Ik-joong Kang, Happy World, 1998

Flushing-Main St

The diversity of Queens is captured in Ik-joong Kang’s immense mural on the Main St station’s mezzanine wall, made up of more than 2,000 tiles, each presenting a different scene from the city of 8 million stories (think: an Italian dude flipping a pizza or a hipster smoking a cig). Keep it in mind the next time you doze off and end up at the end of the line: There are worse ways to kill time than peeping thousands of cool little tiles.

Recommended
    You may also like
    You may also like
    Advertising