New York's newest subway station features a powerful show of support for the LGBTQ community
When Manhattan’s Second Avenue subway station opens at 72nd Street next month, it will do more than simply offer a relief valve for New York’s congested metro transit system. It will also highlight a gay married couple—a reported first for a non-political, permanent public art installation in New York City history.
As travelers walk the platform of New York’s newest train stop, they’ll be greeted by a life-sized portrait of Thor Stockman and his husband, Patrick Kellogg, holding hands and standing stoically among the three dozen life-sized murals created by Brazillian artist Vik Muniz for his “Perfect Stranger” series.” And while Stockman and Kellogg’s picture may not be particularly flashy, their inclusion in the Muniz’ series is being heralded as a major step toward representation in a city known for its vibrant LGBTQ community.
“What makes it a turning point is it isn’t gayness singled out and made the theme,” former executive coordinator of the Larry Kramer Initiative for Lesbian and Gay Studies at Yale University, and current SUNY Buffalo professor Jonathan David Katz explained to the Associated Press. “On the contrary, the work naturalizes gayness within the fabric of the city, and in so doing, that’s actually an even more powerful message.”