[ad_1]
The subway mosaic is believed to be the first permanent piece of LGBT public art in New York.
New York City’s long awaited Second Avenue subway already has a bunch of commuters waiting. Over three dozen mosaic portraits depicting everyday New Yorkers waiting for a train adorn the walls of the new line as part of a commissioned art piece by Vik Muniz.
Muniz based his piece, entitled “Perfect Strangers”, on staged photographs of various people he knows in real life.
One pair of “strangers” featured is a local married couple, Thor Stockman and Patrick Kellog, who are depicted holding hands. The couple told BuzzFeed News they got involved after a friend invited them to pose for a photo at the artist’s Brooklyn studio.
Fort-seven-year-old Kellog, who currently works as a computer programmer, is pictured dressed in the overalls he used to wear as an electrician.
“We were given no direction on how to look. I think we are supposed to be standing waiting for a train — not really posing or smiling as you would for a personal portrait,” Kellog said of their pose.
“Just average New Yorkers,” he said.
New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Even though they were called in for a photo session, the couple never imagined they would be selected to appear in the final piece. “We assumed they were taking photographs of thousands of average New Yorkers,” explained Stockman. “The chances of being selected were next to zero, so we forgot all about it.”
It would be several years later that they found out both their likenesses would appear on the subway walls.
“They are just people you would expect to see,” Vik Muniz told Seattle PI in an interview. “You would expect to see men holding hands.”
Thor Stockman
As the only queer couple featured in the piece, images of Thor and Stockman spread all over the internet after a preview of the Second Avenue art project was released.
One criticism the couple noticed online is the sentiment that they are “too white” to be featured in the mural — a criticism Kellog admits the couple has to agree with.
“There should be more art in New York featuring people of color. More representations of gender,” Kellog said. “I don't think Thor and I are supposed to represent the entirety of the gay community in New York City — there is no way we could.”
[ad_2]