• Home
  • Art & Culture
  • Business
  • Food
  • Tourism
  • Contact Us
Sunday, May 11, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
The Martha's Vineyard Guide
  • Home
  • News Agencies
    • The MV Times
    • The MV Gazette
  • Tourist Agencies
    • MVOL
    • MV Chamber
  • Food Agencies
    • Edible Vineyard
    • Farm Field Sea
  • Galleries
    • Cousen Rose
    • The Field Gallery
    • Old Sculpin Gallery
    • Eisenhauer Gallery
    • North Water Gallery
    • The Granary Gallery
    • Louisa Gould Gallery
    • The A Gallery
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News Agencies
    • The MV Times
    • The MV Gazette
  • Tourist Agencies
    • MVOL
    • MV Chamber
  • Food Agencies
    • Edible Vineyard
    • Farm Field Sea
  • Galleries
    • Cousen Rose
    • The Field Gallery
    • Old Sculpin Gallery
    • Eisenhauer Gallery
    • North Water Gallery
    • The Granary Gallery
    • Louisa Gould Gallery
    • The A Gallery
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
The Martha's Vineyard Guide
No Result
View All Result
Home Art, Culture & Activities

Why are there sculptures of gloves at the Porter Square T station?

by mvguide
April 7, 2024
in Art, Culture & Activities
0
Why are there sculptures of gloves at the Porter Square T station?
0
SHARES
27
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



Wickedpedia

“It is an open-ended story and many stories are told about it.”

Passengers ride past “Glove Cycle” by Mags Harries at Porter Square station on the Red Line Lane Turner/Globe Staff

The bronze gloves cascade down the median strip of the 143-foot escalator as it descends from street level to the Porter Square train platform. Gloves holding hands, gloves crumpled and tossed, gloves reaching for each other in a cheeky homage to Michelangelo’s “The Creation of Adam.” On the platform, more gloves sit piled in a corner heap and pressed into the tile floor. While commuters rush through the station on their way from Point A to Point B, the gloves remain frozen in time and space — whimsical and a bit mysterious.

The MBTA and the Cambridge Arts Council commissioned Cambridge-based artist Mags Harries to create the “Glove Cycle” installation more than 40 years ago; it was unveiled when the Red Line stop opened in 1984. All told, there are over 50 bronze gloves throughout the station. 

“I saw this as a narrative, starting with the intro at the top of the escalator and finishing down in the inbound platform,” Harries explained in an email. “My intention is not to bring beauty, but to create a piece that is relatable … the gloves are extensions of the body.”

Lane Turner/Globe Staff
Chloe Courtney Bohl/Boston.com
Chloe Courtney Bohl/Boston.com

On a quiet afternoon inside Porter Square Station last month, commuters rode the escalator — the longest in the MBTA system — down to the platform. Small children reached out to touch the gloves on their way down. Adults, too, seemed to take notice.

“It’s playful,” one commuter said appreciatively of the installation. “It gives a sense of spatial awareness.”

“I love it,” another T rider agreed. “It spruces up the day.”

Harries attributes “Glove Cycle”’s enduring popularity to the endless interpretations riders have ascribed to it over the years.

“It is an open-ended story and many stories are told about it,” she wrote. “One day while returning to Porter square, a person had placed a chocolate kiss in each glove. I have seen lost gloves artfully arranged among the pieces.”

Throughout her career, Harries has created public art pieces that are free and accessible. She prides herself on “taking art out of the rarified museums into the street.”

Other art at T stations

“Glove Cycle” is one of the best-known pieces of public art on the T, but by no means the only one. In and around Porter Square Station alone, there are five other works, including the “Gift of the Wind” sculpture at street level and “Ondas,” a carved granite installation inside the station entrance. Like “Glove Cycle,” these pieces were commissioned as part of the Arts on the Line program to add public art to T stations in the 1970s and 80s.

“Following the lead of other world cities such as Stockholm, Paris, Montreal and Moscow, which have incorporated art into their public transportation systems, Arts on the Line is this country’s first and largest program of its kind,” the MBTA boasted in a 1985 brochure.

Arts on the Line added 20 artworks to Harvard, Porter, Davis and Alewife stations for a combined total cost of $695,000 — just 0.5% of the construction budget for the Red Line Northwest Extension of which Arts on the Line was a part. Funding came from the federal Urban Mass Transportation Administration and the National Endowment for the Arts.

The Cambridge Arts Council chose the pieces, which ranged from life-sized cement statues of people outside the brand-new Davis Square Station, to an abstract hanging neon sculpture in Alewife Station. All of the artworks were built to last, and many were by Massachusetts-based artists.

Following the success of Arts on the Line, the MBTA expanded its art collection to include more than 70 pieces along the Red, Orange, Green, Blue and Silver lines and the Commuter Rail. Most of these pieces are still on display today, although a few have been removed. 

With the completion of the Green Line Extension, the T used federal money to fund art installations at Medford/Tufts, Ball Square, Magoun Square, East Somerville, Union Square, and Lechmere stations. Each one is designed to complement the specific geography of its station and/or reflect some characteristic of the neighborhood it inhabits.

“Totems of Light” by Linda Lichtman at Airport Station on the Blue Line. Lane Turner/Globe Staff
Untitled murals at Jackson Square Station on the Orange Line. Lane Turner/Globe Staff
One of a series of untitled sculptures by James Tyler located outside the Davis Square Station on the Red Line. Lane Turner/Globe Staff

By and large, though, art is not the MBTA’s top priority these days.

“After many years of disinvestment in the transit system, the MBTA is currently focused on projects directly related to safety and reliability as the T works to rebuild its aging infrastructure,” MBTA spokesperson Joe Pesaturo wrote in an email to Boston.com.

“Still,” Pesaturo wrote, “the MBTA does seek to engage the community and local youth to produce quality public art by proposing designs for art and murals to be installed at various locations.”

At the Orange Line’s Jackson Station, for instance, the local nonprofit Hyde Square Task Force is planning to add new murals by student artists and local residents to complement ongoing renovations to the station.

Whether the presence of artwork inside Boston’s train stations does much to improve the experience of riding the T is an open question. Harries, for her part, sees public art as an important expression and reflection of the city’s character. 

“It creates place, memory and a different spirit to our lives,” she wrote. “Our cities are designed to essentially look like each other,” but “artists bring an intimate and unique view into a place.”

Newsletter Signup

Stay up to date on all the latest news from Boston.com




Source link

mvguide

mvguide

Related Posts

Take the Greater Boston news quiz: May 9, 2025

Take the Greater Boston news quiz: May 9, 2025

by mvguide
May 10, 2025
0

Close Modal Boston.com Newsletter Signup Boston.com Logo Stay up to date with everything Boston. Receive the latest news and...

At Harvard, a clash between democracy and monarchy

At Harvard, a clash between democracy and monarchy

by mvguide
May 9, 2025
0

Politics Far-right writer Curtis Yarvin was in town to debate Danielle Allen, a prominent political theorist and democracy advocate...

One new neighborhood added to Boston’s Open Streets

One new neighborhood added to Boston’s Open Streets

by mvguide
May 8, 2025
0

Local News During a talkshow appearance Wednesday, Mayor Michelle Wu said she loves the programs and always hears positive...

Keith Lockhart on his 30th anniversary and the Pops’ spring season

Keith Lockhart on his 30th anniversary and the Pops’ spring season

by mvguide
May 7, 2025
0

Arts Cynthia Erivo, George Takei, and even astronaut Sunita Williams will join Lockhart at Symphony Hall this spring. Boston...

‘Jaws’ fans will eat up ‘The Shark is Broken’ in Beverly

‘Jaws’ fans will eat up ‘The Shark is Broken’ in Beverly

by mvguide
May 5, 2025
0

Arts If Steven Spielberg’s classic film is part of your cinematic vocabulary, this behind-the-scenes comedy at North Shore Music...

Where to travel in New England this May

Where to travel in New England this May

by mvguide
May 4, 2025
0

Scenic Six Plus: Mother's Day plans, Newport Oyster & Chowder Festival, and New Hampshire Renaissance Faire. A fishing boat...

Next Post
The Vineyard Gazette – Martha’s Vineyard News

The Vineyard Gazette - Martha's Vineyard News

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Facebook Twitter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe and receive updates in your email inbox.
SUBSCRIBE

Category

  • Agriculture & Land
  • Art, Culture & Activities
  • Business
  • Food
  • News
  • Tourism

Advertise With Us

Community PR

Submit a Press Release

Currently Playing

© 2025 The Martha's Vineyard Guide - Site by Sitka Creations® LLC.

No Result
View All Result
  • Betsy Shands
  • Breakwater MV Real Estate
  • Community PR
  • Contact Us
  • Darcie Lee Hannaway
  • Home
  • JMS Rentals
  • Marston Clough
  • MV Center for Living
  • MV Community Greenhouse
  • MV Mediation Program
  • Nelson Mechanical Design, Inc.
  • Seth Williams Plumbing and Heating
  • Submit a Press Release
  • Summer Shades
  • Trademark Services LLC

© 2025 The Martha's Vineyard Guide - Site by Sitka Creations® LLC.