Stephen Prina

A Lick and a Promise

Sep 12–Dec 13, 2025

MoMA

Mike Kelley, Anita Pace, Stephen Prina. Beat of the Traps. 1992. Performed in Expanded Art, Wiener Festwochen, The Remise, Vienna, Austria, 1992. Performers (from left): Jonathan “Butch” Norton, Carl Burkley, Alan Abelew, Stephen Prina, Anita Pace, M.B. Gordy. Photo: Karl Krauss. © Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. All Rights Reserved/VAGA at ARS, NY.⁠, Anita Pace, Stephen Prina
  • MoMA, Floor 4, Studio The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Studio

For the past five decades, artist, musician, and composer Stephen Prina has developed a singular and irreverent approach to installations, films, and musical performances. Prina frequently brings together networks of cultural materials—a Joni Mitchell song, Robert Bresson films, Glenn Gould recordings, the paintings of Édouard Manet—recombining them in different contexts to surface new meanings and associations.

Stephen Prina: A Lick and a Promise will be the first in-depth survey to focus on the artist’s long engagement with music and performance, bringing new perspectives to a central factor in Prina’s wider oeuvre: how cultural artifacts find new lives in different contexts. Unfolding across multiple locations in the Museum, including the Kravis Studio, the exhibition presents the world premiere of A Lick and a Promise (2025), an orchestral commission for 16 instruments, alongside restagings of works such as Sonic Dan (1994–2001). The survey highlights Prina’s wide-ranging collaborations, including a performance of Beat of the Traps (1992), created with Mike Kelley and Anita Pace. The series culminates with A Push Comes to Love Fest, an all-day concert on December 13, 2025, featuring a range of artists including David Grubbs, Ken Okiishi and Emily Sundblad, Ursula Oppens, Marina Rosenfeld, TILT Brass, and White People Killed Them (Raven Chacon, John Dieterich, and Marshall Trammell). This exhibition offers an opportunity to celebrate Prina’s innovative approach to appropriation—one uniquely focused on sound and music—and the rare warmth and intellectualism that mark him as a prescient and still-evolving artist.

Four works by Stephen Prina will also be installed in the galleries, including The Top Thirteen Singles from Billboard’s Hot 100 Singles Chart for the Week Ending September 11, 1993 (1993); Exquisite Corpse: The Complete Paintings of Manet, 41 of 556, Nymphe Surprise (The Startled Nymph), 1861, Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo (1988), currently on view in Gallery 203; and Untitled/“The history of modern painting, to label it with a phrase, has been the struggle against the catalogue”—Barnett Newman/(Monochrome Painting, 1988–1989) (1991), currently on view in Gallery 414.

Organized by Stuart Comer, The Lonti Ebers Chief Curator of Media and Performance, with Sibia Sarangan, Curatorial Assistant, May Makki, former Curatorial Assistant, and Gee Wesley, former Curatorial Associate, Department of Media and Performance. Produced by Lizzie Gorfaine, Director, and Kate Scherer, Senior Manager and Producer, with Olivia Rousey, Jessie Gold, Aminah Ibrahim, Kayva Yang, and Monica Nyenkan, Assistant Performance Coordinators, and Nora Chellew, former Assistant Performance Coordinator, Performance and Live Art.

Media and performance at MoMA are presented through a partnership with Richard Mille.

Leadership support for the exhibition is provided by the Jill and Peter Kraus Endowed Fund for Contemporary Exhibitions, the Steven A. and Lisa Tananbaum Endowment for Contemporary Art Commissions, the Lonti Ebers Endowment for Performance, Jerry Speyer and Katherine Farley, and the Sarah Arison Endowment Fund for Performance.

Major funding is provided by The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art.

Annual support for programming in The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Studio is generously provided by the Wallis Annenberg Director’s Fund for Innovation in Contemporary Art and by the Sarah Arison Endowment Fund for Performance.

Pianos provided by Steinway & Sons.

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