Each One, Every One, Equal All - CODAworx

Each One, Every One, Equal All

Client: Metropolitan Transportation Authority New York City Transit

Location: New York, NY, United States

Completion date: 2022

Project Team

Artist

Nick Cave

Public Art Agency

MTA Arts & Design

Fabricator

Mayer of Munich

Management

MTA Construction & Development, Naik Group, AECOM

Design/Architect

MTA Construction & Development ā€“ Stations Architecture (Times Square Shuttle), di Domenico + Partners (42 St Connector)

Construction

MLJ Contracting Corporation

Industry Resource

OUTFRONT

Overview

"Every One" is installed in the corridor connecting Times Square and Grand Central Station. It's the first of three murals the artist Nick Cave created for this station. This highly ambitious project, with its monumental scale and video component, will be the largest and most technical MTA Arts & Design public art commission in the history of the New York City subway system. "Every One" spans one wall measuring 143 feet, another measuring 179 feet, which together feature over two dozen figures and are accompanied by 11 videos on digital screens. Subsequent segments of this work-in-progress ("Each One' and "Equal All") will be installed at the new shuttle entrance and on the center island platform wall in 2022.

Goals

The MTA Arts & Design commission is intended to enhance the transit experience, bring awareness to the moment, and connect back to the street above and our connectedness as individuals. Sandra Bloodworth, Director, MTA Arts & Design, ā€œThe work carries a powerful message of equality and representation. Its name makes clear that the artwork, and the celebration, is meant for each and every one of us.ā€ Artist Nick Cave, ā€œTimes Square is one of the busiest, most diverse and fabulously kinetic places on the planet. For this project I took the aboveground color, movement, and cross- pollination of humanity, bundled it into a powerful and compact energy mass that is taken underground and delivered throughout the station and passage. The artwork serves as a reminder that we are all unique and special individuals comprised of different characteristics and built from a lifetime of gathered memories.ā€ ā€œEach Oneā€ stands at an impressive 14.5 feet tall. The Soundsuits appear in various states of vertical movement and suspension, accentuated by stripes that run floor to ceiling. The movement and shape of forms is a nod to the famous New Yearā€™s Eve ball drop on top of the One Times Square building directly above.

Process

MTA Arts & Design, in conjunction with the design team, identified artwork locations selected to activate the space, and integrated the artwork into the station architecture, including the new 42 St Connector (360 linear feet). Mayer of Munich studio adopted innovative strategies to depict the unique and varied mixed media materials used in Caveā€™s Soundsuits (larger than life wearable sculptures) on which the mosaic is based. Using traditional mosaic techniques, as well as millefiori, printed, and etched glass, materials depicted in this piece include vintage textile, sequined appliquĆ©s, metal, hot pads, doilies, synthetic hair, hats, bags, bugle beads, wire, knitted and crocheted fabrics, and vintage toys, ceramic birds, and tole flowers. The mosaic approach translates the exuberant movements of performance and captures the energy and manner in which Soundsuits activate the space around them. The result is a permanent, immersive, mosaic installation that perpetuates the mediumā€™s rich history throughout NYCā€™s transit system and demonstrates the potential for infrastructure to inspire, inform, and invigorate the passenger experience.

Additional Information

Nick Cave (b. 1959, Fulton, MO; lives and works in Chicago, IL) is a multi-disciplined artist, educator and foremost a messenger, working between the visual and performing arts through a wide range of mediums including sculpture, installation, video, sound, and performance. His Soundsuits camouflage the body, masking and creating a second skin that conceals race, gender and class, forcing the viewer to look without judgment. They serve as a visual embodiment of social justice that represent both brutality and empowerment. His work is shown nationally and internationally. Cave sees his work as an impetus for change in the community at large. He leads the Graduate Program of Fashion Department at the School of The Art Institute of Chicago and is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery in New York. First photo: MTA Arts & Design/Cheryl Hageman