British Columbia

Meet the 'Sneaky Artist' sketching commuters on Metro Vancouver transit

TransLink's Art Moves program aims to improve the rider experience by featuring an artist in residence every month so keep your eyes peeled for artist Nishant Jain who is sketching commuters throughout December and sharing the drawings with his subjects.

Nishant Jain is TransLink's artist in residence during the month of December

Two images are aligned side by side. On the left is a picture of the artist from the waist up, and he is a young man wearing glasses, a grey blazer and a big smile. On the right is an image of a notebook with multiple sketches on the page all of people riding a city bus.
Nishant Jain is TransLink's artist in residence for the month of December and captures commuters in quick sketches he shares with his subjects. (Smita Kumar/Nishant Jain)

He calls himself the Sneaky Artist, but if you keep your eyes peeled on Vancouver public transit this month, you might just catch Nishant Jain in action.

A sketch artist who has spent years drawing people in urban landscapes, Jain is the December artist in residence for TransLink's Art Moves program, which features a different creator every month providing performances and experiences for riders.

Jain has been sketching commuters on the Expo Line since Dec. 2 and has a couple of pop-up performances planned before New Year's Eve. 

"A train is a beautiful thing because people who don't know anything about each other still get together to do this thing together ... I just love observing that kind of human activity," said Jain, speaking Monday on CBC's The Early Edition.

Jain found art after being entrenched in academia. He was halfway through completing a PhD in neuroscience in the Netherlands a few years ago when he said it dawned on him he would be happier doing something creative.

So he started taking a notebook with him everywhere and sketching what and who he saw, feeding both his curiosity about the world around him and his confidence about being an immigrant in the various cities where he has lived and worked.

"My art is a way to feel comfortable in foreign places, to try to better understand strangers and the way communities live, even looking at it from a distance, even when you feel like you are an outsider," he said.

A sketchbook image shows multiple doodles of people on a Vancouver SkyTrain.
Nishant Jain calls himself the Sneaky Artist and says many of his sketches are done in under 30 seconds because he never knows when his subject will hop off the train. (Nishant Jain)

Jain has been sharing his art on social media, which is how TransLink discovered his work. During his residency, he is not just sketching but sharing his work with his subjects as well.

The minimalist sketches are done quickly, as Jain never knows when his subject's stop is approaching, and he said he likes to capture people in very human moments, such as simultaneously listening to headphones and dozing off.

"The idea is not really to capture a portrait but to capture a representation of the person in that moment," he said.

Your next opportunity to appear in one of Jain's pieces is this Friday, Dec. 16, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Waterfront Station.

According to an email from TransLink, the Art Moves program was launched in May 2022 and has featured a total of 33 musicians, performers, and artists.

With files from The Early Edition