Metropolitan Faces
Metropolitan Faces
![Photograph of laminated glass artworks on wall of 57th Street station. Five hand painted colorful glass artworks, portraits and flowers, line the stone walls of the station, with columns running down the middle of the mezzanine floor and blurred people walk past the artworks.](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2021-10/Katz_NYCT_%2057%20St%20_01_%20Etienne%20Frossard%20.jpg?itok=4SZzusJj)
About the project
In "Metropolitan Faces," Alex Katz incorporates his iconic boldly simplified portraits and flowers painted with flat fields of color into the mezzanine level of the 57 St station. A New Yorker for over 90 years, Katz has developed a signature painting style that captures his subjects with minimal yet precise brushstrokes. His tightly cropped paintings take cues from daily visual culture like advertising and cinema, celebrating everyday America. The large painted glass panels, fabricated by Glasmalerei Peters Studios, fill the passageway with light and color through the faces that reflect those of commuters, while his lush floral compositions are a nod to nearby Central Park.
Commenting on the public permanent installation, the artist and subway rider said, "It is a privilege to make art for all people." The lengthy station mezzanine, which was constructed in the late 1960s and designed with the commercial development above, provides a unique setting within the transit environment to view the series of paintings on glass that are set within the cast stone panels that line the station walls.
![Photograph of laminated glass artwork on wall of 57th Street station. Large hand painted black and white flowers hang on the stone wall of the station, while a blurred person swipes through the turnstile in the foreground.](/sites/default/files/styles/gallery/public/2021-10/Katz_NYCT_%2057%20St%20_02_%20Etienne%20Frossard%20.jpg?itok=yOgt-_LL)
About the artist
Alex Katz is a renowned New York-based painter and printmaker who is best known for his large scale colorful and boldly simplified portraits and landscapes. His tightly cropped paintings take cues from daily visual culture like advertising and cinema, celebrating everyday America. Katz’s work has been the subject of more than 200 solo exhibitions and 500 group exhibitions internationally since 1951, and can be found in over 100 public collections worldwide.