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Keith Haring

Untitled (Subway Drawing), 1983

Information about the artwork

  • MaterialChalk on paper in original subway frame made of glass fiber reinforced plastic
  • Dimensions222 x 115.2 cm
  • Year of acquisition2019
  • Inventory numberUAB 1120
  • On viewCurrently not exhibited
  • Copyright© The Keith Haring Foundation. Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Museum Brandhorst, Munich

More about the artwork

Between 1980 and 1985, Keith Haring left about 5,000 of his white chalk drawings on the backgrounds of vacant advertising spaces in New York’s public underground system. With his quick and simple lines and straight­forward drawings, Haring invited everybody to fill in the outlines with meaning. Accessibility and ubiquity popularized these works, despite their brief visibility before new ads covered them. Haring saw the “Subway Drawings” as creative “acts” that he performed for the public. But as his popularity grew, so did the commercial worth of his drawings, and collectors and gallerists recognized this, too. Much to Haring’s dismay, many “Subway Drawings” were soon dismounted and separated from public spaces. Converting Haring’s ephemeral acts of drawing into art objects and commodities, the art market’s mechanisms facilitated the entry of six “Subway Drawings” into the Brandhorst Collection.

Further artworks

Artwork: "Untitled (Subway Drawing)" from Keith Haring
Keith Haring Untitled (Subway Drawing), 1981
Artwork: "2 Paßstücke" from Franz West
Franz West 2 Paßstücke, 2003
Artwork: "Ohne Titel" from Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen Ohne Titel, 1983
Artwork: "Untitled" from Cy Twombly
Cy Twombly Untitled, n. d.
Artwork: "Interior (Bassano in Teverina)" from Cy Twombly
Cy Twombly Interior (Bassano in Teverina), 1980
Artwork: "Ladies and Gentlemen (Alphanso Panell)" from Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol Ladies and Gentlemen (Alphanso Panell), 1975
Artwork: "Untitled (Lexington)" from Cy Twombly
Cy Twombly Untitled (Lexington), 2001
Artwork: "Not Only Securing the Last Letter But Damaging It as Well (Boss)" from Ed Ruscha
Ed Ruscha Not Only Securing the Last Letter But Damaging It as Well (Boss), 1964
Artwork: "Flowers" from Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol Flowers, 1965