New York City’s subway isn’t just a way to get from point A to point B—it’s a living, breathing portrait of humanity in motion. Photographer Chris Maliwat, the eye behind the ongoing project “Subwaygram,” turns everyday commutes into timeless visual stories. With nothing more than his iPhone and an instinct for observation, he freezes those fleeting, real-life moments most of us overlook—the tired eyes, the late-night thinkers, the lovers lost in their own world, the dreamers chasing something bigger.
Maliwat’s work isn’t about perfection; it’s about honesty. His photos show New Yorkers at their rawest—waiting, scrolling, dozing, or simply existing. Each frame feels unposed yet poetic, echoing the rhythm of subway cars rattling beneath the city. Taken before and after the pandemic, these images reveal a quiet resilience and unity among strangers sharing the same space.
The New York City subway, over a century old, has survived wars, recessions, and storms—and so have its riders. Subwaygram captures that same spirit: endurance, diversity, and the pulse of real life underground. Maliwat’s portraits remind us that for a few minutes between stops, millions of lives intersect, each carrying its own untold story.
Every shot is a subtle nod to what makes New York, New York—its people. Ordinary faces, extraordinary energy, all moving together beneath the surface. These unfiltered subway moments don’t just document the commute; they celebrate the shared human experience that rides along with it.
You can find Chris Maliwat on the web:
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