Saar's work consists of figures standing against a grille as they wait on the north and south platforms. The title, Hear the Lone Whistle Moan, is from a spiritual that uses the train as a metaphor for the passage to heaven. Trains have often been associated by African Americans with escape and the Underground Railroad in particular. In the words of the artist, "...these pieces...create a simple narrative of two people. One, the young woman coming to the city in hopes of advancing her career, the other, a successful businessman leaving the city to return to his hometown. I believe these two scenarios to be examples of how many Americans have used the railroads to and from New York throughout history. Yet I was also addressing the specific and rich tradition of the role of the railroad in general in the lives of African Americans." A third figure is of a conductor at the top of the platform stairs.
Addition, 2018
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As part of station improvement, Saar expanded her original project and created "copacetic," a panoramic scene of imagined dancers, singers, musicians, and patrons enjoying Harlem’s heyday of the 1930s and ’40s. "copacetic" comprises 24 laminated glass panels installed throughout the four glass shelters along the platforms. The upper windows are inspired by the Harlem-125 Street station’s wrought iron work and designs from the African diaspora. The glass artwork was created from the artist’s original woodcut prints, which as she explains, “gives a nod to the work of the many great African American artists of the Harlem Renaissance that have used the same medium [woodcut prints] in their practice, such as Elizabeth Catlett, Hale Woodruff, and Aaron Douglas.” Saar’s palette of deep reds, blues, and yellows introduces a vibrant graphic quality to the platform’s shelters, illuminated by the rising and setting sun over Harlem.