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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Art > When “The Subway Sun” Dominated NYC’s Underground
When “The Subway Sun” Dominated NYC’s Underground
Art

When “The Subway Sun” Dominated NYC’s Underground

Last updated: May 15, 2025 11:00 pm
Editorial Board Published May 15, 2025
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Primarily produced between 1936 and 1965 below the inventive course of late cartoonists Fred Cooper and Amelia Opdyke Jones, the imitation periodical marketing campaign by the Interborough Fast Transit Firm (IRT) fulfilled a wide range of functions within the subway system for over 5 many years. It inspired well mannered passenger etiquette, but additionally promoted native points of interest as a strategy to entice New Yorkers to make use of public transit — from the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork to the Brooklyn Botanic Backyard.

Fred Cooper, “The Cloisters” (1938)

Now, Manhattan’s Poster Home is shining a lightweight on the collection for the primary time within the new exhibition From the Bronx to the Battery: The Subway Solar, on view within the museum’s entry lobby via November 2. Curated by Es-pranza Humphrey, the present options 17 unique in-car posters from the museum’s everlasting assortment, produced between 1937 and 1939. They showcase Cooper’s distinctive kind design and signature illustration model that may ultimately grew to become the collection’s defining aesthetic. 

bk botantical gardenFred Cooper, “Rose Display/Brooklyn Botanic Garden” (1937)

Cooper was a longtime graphic artist and political cartoonist when his designs for The Subway Solar first launched within the Nineteen Thirties. His illustrations, which consisted of balloon-headed caricatures and one-of-a-kind lettering, typically plugged public sights and occasions by mixing useful data with amusing characters. “His design adds a level of humor and familiarity, as these are posters that people would interact with during their rides on the IRT,” Humphrey, the museum’s assistant curator of collections, informed Hyperallergic.

the metFred C0oper, “Free Concerts/Metropolitan Museum of Art” (1938)

In a half-page advert without spending a dime weekend concert events at The Met, viewers members are depicted along with large Egyptian antiquities. One other bright-red poster selling a rock backyard show on the New York Botanical Backyard within the Bronx revisits individuals of the Stone Age, depicting a toddler complaining to their mom a few dinosaur calf that’s seen ravaging a mattress of campanula cochlearifolia (fairy thimble) within the background. A 1939 advert selling the tenth Biennial Worldwide Water Colour Exhibition on the Brooklyn Museum offers a literal interpretation of the humanities medium via an illustration of artist at an easel whereas half submerged in a lily pond.

bronx botantical garden rockFred Cooper, “N.Y. Botanical Garden/Rock Garden Display” (1938)

Within the Forties, Cooper was succeeded by Jones, who additionally gave the publication a definite voice. Lots of her advertisements reminded riders methods to be courteous to their fellow subway passengers by advising in opposition to thoughtless behaviors like blocking prepare doorways and manspreading — points that proceed to plague the transit system at this time.

And like her predecessor, Jones additionally included humor into The Subway Solar with a view to seize riders’ consideration, warning in opposition to issues like “seat hogs” and “litterbugs” — a time period that Jones claimed to have coined as a spinoff of jitterbug.

poster houseThe exhibition From Bronx to the Battery: The Subway Solar explores the early years of the enduring subway marketing campaign. (photograph Maya Pontone/Hyperallergic)

Beneath Jones’s course, the subway’s colourful poster marketing campaign continued to flow into via the transit system via the mid-Sixties, after they have been changed with advertisements just like the Transit Authority’s “Etti-Cat” and different advertising campaigns.

Along with Poster Home’s presentation, Brooklyn’s New York Transit Museum revisits the heyday of The Subway Solar in a rotating exhibition that includes 40 classic subway advertisements created by Cooper and Jones.

“Cooper really thought about how he wanted viewers to receive the locations and what history he wanted to share with riders,” Humphrey mentioned.

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