9780692902554-0692902554-New York City Transit Authority: Objects

New York City Transit Authority: Objects

ISBN-13: 9780692902554
ISBN-10: 0692902554
Edition: First Edition
Author: Jesse Reed, Hamish Smyth
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: Standards Manual
Format: Hardcover 351 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780692902554
ISBN-10: 0692902554
Edition: First Edition
Author: Jesse Reed, Hamish Smyth
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: Standards Manual
Format: Hardcover 351 pages

Summary

New York City Transit Authority: Objects (ISBN-13: 9780692902554 and ISBN-10: 0692902554), written by authors Jesse Reed, Hamish Smyth, was published by Standards Manual in 2017. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other Industrial & Product Design (Decorative Arts & Design, Transportation) books. You can easily purchase or rent New York City Transit Authority: Objects (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Industrial & Product Design books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $3.85.

Description

The evolving design of New York subway ephemera: a collector's story

New York City Transit Authority: Objects originated as a photography experiment. In 2011, New York photographer Brian Kelley began documenting collections of used MetroCards in his Brooklyn studio, arranging them in various grids with the goal of perfecting the lighting of an image. His brother suggested he make the grids more interesting by finding other types of cards. Having exhausted his search for discarded MetroCards in many of the city's 472 subway stations, Kelley turned to eBay for new finds. The online rabbit-hole gave him a crash course in the history of NYC transportation. He discovered tokens dating back to 1860, a ticket stub from 1885 when it cost three cents to take the train across the Brooklyn Bridge, as well as patches, matchbooks, tokens, timetables, pins and signs, posting his photographs of these finds on Tumblr and Instagram. Six years on, many MTA employees follow and advocate his project, sometimes contacting him with information and tips on rare items. As the collection grew, Kelley recognized that there were no comparable digital archives documenting the city's transportation evolution.

New York City Transit Authority: Objects is a story told through the evolving design that spans decades of the city's history. Kelley's objects tell a greater story of New York's past. For him, The NYCTA Project remains a photography experiment and self-funded hobby, archiving the culture of his home city. For the reader, it's an intimate view of the city's history that merges design and infrastructure over the past 150 years.

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