New Mosaics Arrive at Metropolitan-Lorimer Subway Stop

Hyperallergic
19 June 2024

Local artists Jackie Chang and Chloë Bass created two multi-panel series, now on view at the Brooklyn station.

New Yorkers can now see two new mosaic installations in Williamsburg’s Metropolitan Avenue-Lorimer Street subway stop. Officially announced last week, Jackie Chang’s Signs of Life (2024) and Chloë Bass’s Personal Choice #5 (2023) are displayed on opposite ends of the sprawling Brooklyn station, where commuters transfer from the L to G trains. 

On the far end of the station, Chloë Bass’s three-panel Personal Choice #5 (2023) spreads across the L train entrance like an open book, each mosaic bearing a phrase. Together, they read: “Whenever I’m pulled under by the weight of all I miss, I take some consolation that I have known, and may yet know, another life.” 

Below the metal lettering, bodies cluster together, sometimes touching in gentle gestures and other times appearing uncomfortably close. Bass continued her ongoing practice of utilizing historic images from the New York Public Library’s Picture Collection, and here relied on photographs captured near the Lorimer station. Two Orthodox Jewish people walk briskly in long coats, a group of idling teenagers pair off in tight embraces, and two seated men are caught in conversation, an apparently intentional gap between them. The bleak underground ceiling cuts off each figure’s face, anonymizing the mosaics’ subjects.

“Making a work for the subway — truly one of my favorite places to engage with the complex feelings that being alone in public can raise — allows me to demonstrate different gestures of intimacy and contact (sometimes extreme contact, whether positive or negative) that exist alongside the consequences of having 8 million neighbors you do not know,” said Bass, who has contributed to Hyperallergic. She called New York a “tremendously intimate place.” 

Bass said she had “a small pile of possible phrases for the work” but wasn’t particularly attached to any. “Choosing the images and choosing the sentence became a kind of instinctive matching game,” said the artist. 

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