Go to: Main Content Go to: Navigation

Transport for London

Mark Wallinger: Going Underground

12 March 2008

New artwork for pocket Tube map cover by Mark Wallinger

We're really excited to be working with Mark - his work for the cover of the pocket Tube map is the latest created by a long and distinguished line of world-class artists

Tamsin Dillon, the Director of Art on the Underground

The Turner Prize winning artist Mark Wallinger has been commissioned to create the latest artwork for the cover of London Underground's (LU's) pocket Tube map.

It is available for free at stations from today.

Artwork produced by Mark Wallinger uses historical symbols and challenges people's understanding of them by placing them in a different context.

His cover of the pocket Tube map is called 'Going Underground' and it uses the Royal Air Force 'roundel' of red, white and blue concentric circles.

His inspiration came from the ties between the RAF and LU during the Second World War when Tube stations were used as bomb shelters during the Blitz.

Social commentary

The artwork is the latest to be commissioned by LU's art programme, Art on the Underground, which aims to produce a series of world class temporary and permanent art works across the network.

Going Underground continues Wallinger's particular form of social commentary, which has previously focused on class, royalty and nationalism.

His early paintings and later sculptural works have aimed to explore our understanding of the meaning of England and its national identity.

He uses the symbols and myths of England to ask what they really mean for the contemporary world.  

Inspiring

Tamsin Dillon, the Director of Art on the Underground, said: "We're really excited to be working with Mark - his work for the cover of the pocket Tube map is the latest created by a long and distinguished line of world-class artists.

"We hope that it will be equally inspiring to our passengers and encourage them see to see their journeys from a new perspective."

Mark Wallinger said: "The work came together because the roundels for the two organisations - RAF and LU - link together both formally and historically.

"The design and the colours rhyme and I was thinking about how the Underground became a vast bomb shelter during the Blitz and the hope that the RAF represented in the skies above.

"In the 60s, the RAF roundel was used by the Mods, then revived a decade or so later by bands like The Jam - it seems very much a London phenomenon."


Notes to editors

Add maps to your website, blog, iGoogle or Netvibes homepage

Journey Planner

Advanced
options
Add journey planner to your website, blog, iGoogle or Netvibes homepage
You are here:
CorporateMediaNews centreRelease archiveMarch 2008

Elsewhere on tfl.gov.uk