Tag Archives: 1 train

Sea Life Inhabits The Subway Tunnels in Deborah Brown’s Platform Diving

Seal and Oncoming Train
All Photos By Gail

Platform Diving consists of seven glass mosaic murals commissioned by the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority for the Houston Street subway station (at Varick Street) and installed in 1994 on the walls of the northbound and southbound subway platforms of the 1 Train, and in a waiting area by the token booth.

Dolphin Platform Diving

Sea Lions and Train
The mosaics depict undersea creatures — turtles, beluga whales, octopi, seals, and a manatee–swimming through the subway tunnels, platforms, and passenger cars. Occasionally, humans observe their movements. The concept behind the choice of imagery was to represent a fanciful, surreal encounter between the world we normally inhabit and the one we might encounter when we descend below the surface.

Sea Turtles

What’s so crazy is that these murals have been up for nearly 20 years, and I just them for the first time in early September, because I never get off at this stop.

Dolphins

Octopus Platform Diving

 

Alice In Wonderland Tile Mosaic Mural, 50th Street Subway Station

Liliana Porter They Way Out
Photo By Gail

The above mosaic, featuring The White Rabbit, The Mad Hatter and what looks like Humpty Dumpty (?) is part of The Way Out (1994), an Alice In Wonderland-themed four panel terracotta mosaic mural by artist Liliana Porter that decorates the walls of the 50th Street and Seventh Avenue Station on the One Train.

White Rabbit Mosaic

Alice in Wonderland Mosaic

Alice and White Rabbit

The Diva Tile Mosaic, Lincoln Center 66th Street Subway Station

 66th Street Lincoln Center Subway Mosaic
The Diva

This gorgeous tile mosaic is part of Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers by Nancy Spero. Given that this subway train exits at Lincoln Center, New York’s premier arts destination, the standards for subway art are pretty high. Spero’s work does not disappoint, with 22 brilliantly colored glass mosaic panels that line the walls of the station. Imagery of women both real and mystical is meant to honor the world-class opera, ballet and music you can catch at Lincoln Center, as well the artsy vibe that has long characterized the Upper West Side. The Diva, the central icon of opera, appears many times along the walls, leading riders through the station.

Here are a few other tiny mosaics that you may spot along the platform!

66th Street Station Mosaic

66th Street Station Mosaic

66th Street Station Mosaic

Photographed on the 66th Street Lincoln Center Downtown 1 Train Platform.

66th Street Lincoln Center

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