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See Yayoi Kusama and Kiki Smith’s Grand Central Madison Mosaics

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As workers busily finished construction of the brand-new train station Grand Central Madison in November, the artist Kiki Smith was standing in front of her new mosaic “River Light,” an abstracted, blue-and-white depiction of glinting sunshine on the East River.

“I’ve never made a mosaic before,” she said, pausing to touch the varied surfaces of the small and colorful glass pieces making up the composition. She added, “I’ve also never made anything so big in my life.”

The 80-foot-long work is on the Madison Concourse level of Grand Central Madison, the 700,000-square-foot, $11.1 billion Long Island Rail Road terminal, set to open in December. The terminal is the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s largest project yet.

At a time of increased concerns over safety, and with subway ridership still recovering, some may question the M.T.A. spending money on art, though the art program’s cost, $1.4 million, is only .01 percent of the terminal’s total budget.

Thematically, Smith’s works all reference nature, with a particular nod to the flora and fauna of Long Island — the wild turkeys depicted in her mosaic “The Spring” are poised to become a commuter favorite — and the digital and photographic works all depict some aspect of city life, in all its bustling and eccentric glory.

Kusama added that she recalls taking the subway all over New York, especially to the library, museums and the theater.

Public transit was also the setting for at least one of her groundbreaking “happenings,” as public art interventions were called.

“I once had a nude happening at a subway station,” Kusama said, referring to the last iteration of her “Anatomic Explosions” series, in November 1968. “The police came immediately, so it was only a few minutes and I left with the dancers, but that was a spectacle.”

A committee of arts professionals and transit authority staffers picked Smith and Kusama in 2020, after a call for portfolios. “It was a highly competitive process,” said Sandra Bloodworth, the director of M.T.A. Arts & Design. There were seven finalists, and the women who were chosen made proposals that were very close to the finished designs. In the past, both artists have made much more provocative and button-pushing works than their Grand Central Madison pieces, which Bloodworth said reflected a savvy approach on their parts.

“Artists are smart,” she said. “When they come into the public realm, they’re aware of what works in that environment.”

“I wanted to do something that reflects the environment in which these images appear,” Pfeiffer said.

He described the result, photographed in a studio, as a cross between a fashion shoot and a still life work.

“I use my commission to amplify his performance,” Pfeiffer said of Hartfield. “It was a collaboration with him.”

The locals are more animated in Barcia-Colombo’s five-channel video work, “Platform,” featuring 40 New Yorkers moving in slow motion. He put out a casting call on social media for some of the participants, and found others on the street.

“We’ve been so isolated in the pandemic,” Barcia-Colombo said. “This is about being in a crowd again.”

Barcia-Colombo added that a digital component was a good complement to the medium of mosaics, New York’s traditional go-to for public transit art.

“Digital art is the future of public art,” he said. “All these stations have screens in them. It’s an entry point for people.”

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