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The Subway: Design for a Modern Icon

5 Av/53 St (E/M)

The Subway: Design for a Modern Icon

MTA Arts & Design and The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Artwork in vinyl by MTA Arts & Design / The Museum of Modern Art, New York showing the graphic design used within the subway system in colorful shapes and black words.
"The Subway: Design for a Modern Icon" (2019) © MTA Arts & Design and The Museum of Modern Art, NYCT 5 Av/53 St Station. Photo: Patrick Cashin

About the project

"The Subway: Design for a Modern Icon" celebrates the historic connection between MTA and the Museum of Modern Art, two of New York’s most iconic institutions, and the way in which graphic design links the museum and the transit system. 

Panels along the downtown platform at 5 Av/53 St station present a dynamic visual display highlighting the distinctive graphic design used within the subway system. That design was created by Unimark International in the 1970s, headed by designers Massimo Vignelli and Bob Noorda. The display includes quotations, an illustrated timeline, and pages from the "New York City Transit Authority Graphic Standards Manual" that unified the system and is still in use today with internationally recognizable signage. Also prominently displayed are details from the famous 1972 subway map of various intersections of lines in all five boroughs that highlight the beauty of both the aesthetic and civic design of the subway system.

This exhibit, designed by MoMA’s Graphics department and curators from the Architecture & Design department, illustrates a fascinating history to riders who navigate the MTA system each day, and those who use the subway to reach the museum.