AVJB

By AVJB

Labyrinth 217/270

Mark Wallinger, one of the UK's leading contemporary artists, has created a major new artwork for London Underground to celebrate its 150th anniversary. The result, commissioned by Art on the Underground, is a multi-part work on a huge scale that will be installed in every one of the Tube's 270 stations. Wallinger sees the commission as a unique opportunity to explore the potential of the Underground as a whole. Wishing to forge a poetic link with the Tube's rich history of graphic language, he has made a work that sits comfortably alongside the two of its major design icons, the roundel and Harry Beck's Tube map, and yet stands out as a new symbol marking the Tube's 150th year.

Each of Wallinger's Labyrinth artworks bears a different number, written in the artist's hand. For the collector or the train-spotter in us, there's something appealing in this cryptic element of the work. Although the numbers resonate with the tradition of editioned artworks, such as prints made in series, in fact they relate to the ordering system that allocates each artwork to its particular station. This numbering scheme brings an internal logic to this vast collection of artworks that is directly connected to a real, albeit highly unusual, Tube journey. They refer to the order of stations visited in the Guinness World Record 'Tube Challenge' 2009, the record for the fastest time taken to pass through every single station on the London Underground network.

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