Travis Huggett thought of the subway as a means of getting from one place to another. Then he had a son on the autism spectrum.
To Orson, now 9, a train was something more than transportation. It was soothing, endlessly fascinating, more intriguing than any destination it might reach. At his school for children with autism, other boys shared the same passion. When Mr. Huggett started photographing some of them, asking them about their interest in trains, he discovered how many different ways they were drawn.
“Some were really interested in maps and timetables,” Mr. Huggett said. Some liked model trains more than the real thing. Some found crowded cars too stimulating, but one wanted even more stimulation: his idea was to ride the subway to Coney Island and then ride the Cyclone roller coaster. “It was incredible how different they all are,” he said. “I learned a lot about how diverse the community is.”
At the New York Transit Museum, the staff noticed that their most enthusiastic visitors were boys on the spectrum, a phenomenon seen at similar museums around the globe. So in 2010 it created a Subway Sleuths program for autistic children in second to fifth grades that uses their common interest to help them develop social skills. This summer it added a pilot program for high school students. “Our purpose is all about communication and building friendships,” said Regina Asborno, the museum’s deputy director.
She said that even after eight years, the museum could not say why trains appealed to children on the spectrum, or why boys predominated. One explanation is that trains’ systemized nature — that they run on regular schedules along fixed routes — appeals to minds with autism.
But Mr. Huggett thought the diversity of children’s interest defied such unified explanation.
“I don’t think my son cares about that,” he said. “He’s not interested in maps and timetables. What they love about it isn’t necessarily the same thing.” Mr. Huggett said he tried to find girls who were similarly passionate about trains, but was unsuccessful.
When he took the portraits, he usually rode with both parent and child. They favored weekends because the crowds were smaller and less stimulating. Mr. Huggett preferred elevated trains because the light was better; none of the boys found the outdoor scenes too exciting.
Most objected to the noise, and covered their ears when a train pulled in. But few were intrigued by the photographer’s presence, at least not compared to the draw of the trains.
“It’s not often that you get to photograph people doing their favorite thing in the world,” he said. “To have me along, taking pictures — they don’t care.”
Credits
By: John Leland
The New York Times | November 08, 2018
Photos by: Travis Huggett