Major Keith Haring exhibition at Moco Museum London

Voice of the Street: Keith Haring’s Subway Drawings

This page announces the exhibition “Voice of the Street: Keith Haring’s Subway Drawings,” presented at Moco Museum London.

Before the galleries, before the global fame, Keith Haring went underground. Not metaphorically , literally. New York’s subway system became his chosen arena: a place of urgency, anonymity, and endless flow.

From 1980 to 1985, Haring created thousands of drawings on the blacked-out advertising panels found in subway stations. Armed with white chalk and a deep sense of purpose, he worked fast. The drawings were uncommissioned and unprotected. Many were erased within hours. Some survived. But all of them made their mark.

Presented at Moco Museum London, this exhibition focuses on Keith Haring’s subway drawings created in New York between 1980 and 1985. On view starting 18th march for three months only with limited tickets available.

 

These works were not preparatory studies. They were immediate. Intentional. Radically public. Haring called the subway his “laboratory,” a space where he could test ideas in real time , directly with the people. He wasn’t just drawing. He was connecting.

In the noise and motion of the underground, Haring created stillness. Symbols like the radiant baby, the barking dog, and the crawling figures weren’t graffiti for graffiti’s sake. They were messages anyone could read , regardless of language, background, or destination.

Voice of the Street invites you to see these drawings not just as art, but as acts. They are protests made of joy, warnings made of rhythm, and fleeting moments of care in a city built to move on. These images live on , not just because they were preserved, but because they were shared.

He didn’t wait for permission. He made contact. Then disappeared.

Haring drew to reach people. Not some people. All people.

What defines the exhibition

The Underground as Stage

Haring used the subway not just as a space but as a stage, for movement, confrontation, and visibility. He knew he had seconds to spark a reaction. The city became his audience.

Universal Language

Haring’s symbols weren’t just aesthetic. They were communicative. Barking dogs, radiant babies, crawling figures , simple forms carrying complex truths.

Art Without Permission

These drawings weren’t commissioned or protected. But some did survive , and they survive with power. They were acts of belief, in art as action, not possession.

Haring’s Style; Speed and Intuition

Subway drawings had no time for hesitation. Haring relied on muscle memory, improvisation, and deep internal clarity.

Silent Protest, Joyful Resistance

1980s New York was loud with fear, control, and contradiction: the AIDS crisis was escalating, Reagan-era politics clamped down on visibility, and street culture exploded in color and sound. Haring met this moment with silent protest, and radiant joy.

These works weren’t just interruptions, they were invitations.

“If I only made art for galleries, I would probably be frustrated all the time.”

Keith Haring

What does it mean to live through art? Keith Haring’s life and work are inseparable. Born in 1958 in Pennsylvania, Haring moved to New York at a moment when the city became a place of artistic experimentation. Drawing from graffiti, pop culture, and mass communication, he developed a visual language that was spontaneous, public, and unmistakably his own.

Haring believed that art should be accessible to everyone, not limited to elite spaces. This conviction shaped both his practice and his activism. His imagery, bold, rhythmic, and direct, addressed universal themes such as love, fear, power, and mortality, while addressing the social crises of his time.

Today, Haring’s work continues to resonate as a reminder that art can be a tool for communication and collective awareness, showing how a single line can remain emotionally and politically charged across time and context.

Keith Haring | Left to right - 1983 Camera on loan from RP Collection, Nevada, Courtesy of Trimper Gallery, New York; Radiant Baby / Two Figures Holding Hands on loan from Grossblatt Family, Nevada, Courtesy of Trimper Gallery, New York; N.Y.C. 1984 Head TV on loan from Trimper Gallery, New York

The works in this exhibition have been attributed to Keith Haring and are presented in reliance on independent research, documentation, and expert input. Moco Museum acknowledges that The Keith Haring Foundation does not authenticate these works or endorse the exhibition.

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Practical Information

  • Opening Hours

    Monday – Thursday: 10:00 – 17:00

    Friday – Saturday: 10:00 – 18:00

    Sunday: 10:00 – 17:00

    31 May: 10:00 – 16:00

    1 June: 11:00 – 17:00

  • Duration

    Approximately 90-120 minutes

  • Location

    Moco Museum London is located at 1-4 Marble Arch, London, UK. Get directions via this link

    Check out things to do in the area!

  • Contact

    Do you have a question? Email us at [email protected]. For all other inquiries visit our contact page.

  • Audio tour

    Don’t forget to bring your headphones to access the free audio tour.

  • Please note!

    The temporary exhibition space will remain closed until Tuesday, March 17.

Reviews

  • 4.6 uit 5 sterren
    Rated 4.6/5
    by 6M+ Visitors
  • 5 uit 5 sterren
    Jaewon L.
    In addition to the highly informative and extensive collection of major figures in modern pop art, I was impressed by the pristine interior. The colourful displays of works by famous artists provided great inspiration whilst helping me relax.
  • 5 uit 5 sterren
    Anna C.
    Fantastic modern art museum. Lots of pop art and great exhibits and installations from some well known artists. Lots of bold colours, a feast for the eyes. Great ticket price too. Not too crowded, always an important factor when visiting galleries / art museums. Best museum I’ve been to in a while.
  • 5 uit 5 sterren
    Krisztian V.
    I loved it. Exciting, memorable, inspiring. Now we came across it again in London. ❤️ There are artists whose work I would’ve never discovered otherwise — like Robbie Williams’ creations beyond music… amazing! Love it. I truly hope more and more big cities will have something like this. The world becomes a better place with spaces like these 🤞 I wholeheartedly recommend it! For thinkers. For wanderers. For parents with kids, or just a visit with a friend. Enjoy the ride — and pass it on.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I see Keith Haring’s subway drawings?

You can see Keith Haring’s subway drawings at Moco Museum London as part of Voice of the Street: Keith Haring’s Subway Drawings.

Is this a permanent exhibition?

No. The Keith Haring exhibition at Moco Museum London runs for a limited three month period only.

What kind of experience is this exhibition?

The exhibition presents Keith Haring’s uncommissioned subway drawings in a fully immersive recreation of New York’s 1980s subway environment.

How do I buy tickets?

Tickets for the Keith Haring exhibition in London are available via the official Moco Museum London website.

Get Tickets