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Public Art : Art Collection

Honey, Where's my Metro Pass? is a public art sculpture by Nick Lang and Thad Duhigg located at the St. Charles Rock Road MetroLink Station. The piece depicts the contents of an average Metro rider's pockets and is made from painted steel, aluminum, and cast iron.

Honey, Where’s my Metro Pass?

  • Art Collection
Garden under the Bridge is a public art installation by Barbara Grygutis located at the Grand MetroLink Station. The central seed pod sculptures create a gateway to the station an illuminate the surrounding plaza of embedded lights and pigmented concrete.

Garden Under the Bridge

  • Art Collection
Everyone Appreciates a Punctual Train is a series of bronze figurines created by artist Mary Lucking and installed at the Wellston MetroLink Station. The figurines are placed on the train canopies as well as a pedestal and include birds, squirrels, and clocks.

Everyone Appreciates a Punctual Train

  • Art Collection
Spring Forth is a stainless steel public art sculpture by artist Jim Gallucci located at the Union Station MetroLink Station. The arching forms depict fantastical plants leaping from the grassy embankment.

Spring Forth

  • Art Collection
Out of the Park is an aluminum public art sculpture by Andrews/LeFevre Studios located at Stadium MetroLink Station. The sculpture depicts a baseball bouncing in an arc that resembles the Gateway Arch.

Out of the Park

  • Art Collection
London is a public art sculpture by Ben Fehrmann located at the Shrewsbury-Lansdowne MetroLink station.

London

  • Art Collection
Changing Identities is a public art sculpture by artist Catharine Magel located at the UMSL-South MetroLink Station. The artwork memorializes the lives of four people killed in a bus accident.

Changing Identities

  • Art Collection
Nucleic Life Formation is a public artwork created by artist Amy Cheng and installed at the St. Louis Lambert International Airport Terminal 1 MetroLink station. Made of ceramic tiles and brass, the piece includes two murals with abstract designs loosely resemblinging the structure of a DNA double helix.

Nucleic Life Formation

  • Art Collection
Wheels is a public art sculpture by artists Bill Baker and Claudia Cuesta located at the Civic Center Transit Center. The sculpture is a symbol of the movement and life of people, trains, buses, and the city. The sculpture is ringed with a poem by T.S. Eliot.

Wheels

  • Art Collection

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