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In Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction, we celebrated the achievements of women artists between the end of World War II and the start of the Feminist movement.
This show is not a beginning or end, it’s one event in an ongoing process of looking at women artists and amplifying how they are represented here at MoMA. Every single curator in the Museum is involved in this effort.
Sarah Meister, Curator, Department of Photography, andThe first major retrospective of Francis Picabia in the US in nearly 50 years explored the work of an audacious and irreverent artist who never stopped questioning the meaning and purpose of art.
He doesn’t fit a conventional mold, and he allows, I think, you to narrate an alternative history of what modern art could be…one that’s more open ended, that allows for abstraction or figuration or publishing or poetry or Conceptual art.
Anne Umland
The celebrated choreographer Jérôme Bel brought together staff members to form the MoMA Dance Company for a series of performances in the Marron Atrium.
Acts of making have their place… When that is the Marron Atrium, something extraordinary happens. Not only did exceptional individuals come together, but the institution, its multitude of histories, were brought to us. Even if we occupied that unmatched space momentarily (yet out of breath with sore ankles), working with Jérôme Bel, Ana, Martha, Lizzie and Team allowed us to embody the ideals and promise that has guided the Museum since its inception.
Sean AndersonMost of us have been at MoMA for quite some time, but have not had the chance to interact with each other. Through rehearsals and performances, in a short but intense period of time, a bond was created—as if we all knew we were part of something special. I relive those moments anytime I come across my fellow performers.
Francis EstradaAmateur dance isn't as easy as it looks!
Thomas LaxBefore MoMA Dance Company, I would never have dreamed of a scenario in which doing the splits in front of an audience at MoMA did not end with me being escorted off the premises! Working with Jérôme Bel was an incredible opportunity, and making connections with my colleagues across the Museum has enriched my time as a MoMA employee.
Grace RobinsonIt was a delight, amplified by the presence of my colleagues, to dance in the grand space of the Museum's Marron Atrium. Jérôme Bel's generous and unconventional piece gave me freedom to express joy through movement and music, enabling me to connect in new ways with my fellow dancers, co-workers, and the Museum's visitors.
Diana PanIt has been a beautiful transformative experience. Some of us have said that feels like being part of a secret society. Dance is now a language that we communicate with. I have run into a couple of "members of the company" in the staff caff or the elevator and instead of saying hello, we just start to dance and then we greet each other.
Leticia Gutierrez
Each year, MoMA's Access Programs serve over 10,000 New Yorkers with disabilities, and include partnerships with community organizations such as LAND Gallery and Studio, a day habilitation program for adult artists with developmental disabilities.
Some of our artists had never been to a museum before we began this partnership and now they feel at home here. It's because the MoMA educators treat our artists with the respect they deserve and challenge them to explore new ideas.
Matthew Bede MurphyIan Cheng’s Emissary trilogy of live simulations, a major recent addition to MoMA’s collection, immersed MoMA PS1 visitors in a video game that plays itself.
In Ian Cheng's live simulation works, storytelling, gaming, cognitive psychology, digital animation, moving images, and performance coalesce to create infinitely generating scenarios that are independent of the artist himself. These artworks are entirely responsive, from the gallery to the computer desktop to the intimacy of our personal device screens, resulting in an exhibition that doesn't just live in the museum, but lives in its circulation.
Jocelyn Miller
Noticing dusty corners of the Museum was just the beginning of Nina Katchadourian’s investigative audio project on our MoMA Audio app.
Dust Gathering was a milestone project for me. MoMA's education department showed an openness to my process and thinking that was exceptionally important, and my project was allowed to find its way. MoMA is full of so many people committed to preserving and protecting the art and I hope that visitors learned not only about dust, but about who works in the Museum and how well they do their jobs.
Nina KatchadourianRobert Rauschenberg: Among Friends presented the artist’s wide-ranging career and collaborations with artists, dancers, and musicians. Charles Atlas worked with the curatorial and design teams on the exhibition’s design.
To me the work doesn’t seem old, it’s an example that you can make work that lives on. And just the whole process has been really interesting of making an exhibition and seeing how an exhibition is made and all the care that goes into it. It’s been life-changing for me.
Charles Atlas
A major retrospective screened all of Pedro Almodóvar’s exuberant films from his three-decades-long career.
It’s not only a privilege, it’s a dream for an old director of my age, just to think that the young audience, the young generation of spectators, can see all my movies on a bigger screen in the place and on the surface that they were born. This is possible because of this retrospective.
Pedro AlmodóvarLaunched in September 2016, our Exhibition History provides a comprehensive digital record of over 3,500 gallery exhibitions from the Museum’s founding in 1929 to today.
Putting the entire MoMA Exhibition History online was like a dream come true for me. After 20 years of caring for the unique documents that chronicle MoMA’s innovative exhibitions, it was thrilling to make them accessible for all the world to share in. And indeed they have done so, resulting in discoveries and revealing new trends in research and scholarship!
Michelle ElligottScholarship and conservation brought new perspectives to an exhibition celebrating the 150th anniversary of visionary architect Frank Lloyd Wright’s birth.
The primary goal of this conservation campaign was to make Wright’s vision more clear to audiences today and in the future, but the restoration is also designed to be revisited, and reversed if desired, by future generations who may have a different interpretation of this model.
Ellen Moody
For Quiet Mornings, we opened early once a month for visitors to experience the Museum at its most peaceful—without the crowds and with free guided meditation sessions.
It’s a great opportunity to see art and practice meditation in a group before the busy day begins, so one can absorb and experience both and be elevated and feel connected in this busy city.
Quiet Mornings participantFor our #ArtSpeaks series, colleagues across the Museum share works on display that have special meaning for them and speak about how art makes a difference in the world.
I loved the talk about Monet’s Water Lilies by the two security guards. One of them spoke meaningfully about how the painting evoked emotion and memory and had the ability to touch his spirit and bring peace. The other’s talk showed how much he had learned about the artwork and artist over his 30 years and was a powerful demonstration of an adult learning something for himself that brings him joy and pleasure.
MoMA visitorIn June we unveiled the full design of our building project and celebrated the completion of the first major phase, on the east end of the Museum.
This project has called on us to work across MoMA’s rich architectural history, incorporating the Museum’s existing building blocks into a comprehensible whole through careful and deliberate interventions into previous logics, as well as the construction of new logics that arise from MoMA’s current aspirations. This work has required the curiosity of an archeologist and the skill of a surgeon.
Elizabeth Diller
As part of VW Sunday Sessions, Black Radical Imagination presented a screening program of short films by Jamilah Sabur, Suné Woods, Vashti Harrison, and Ephraim Asili.
Black Radical Imagination co-founders Amir George and Erin Christovale presented a diverse film program of challenging shorts that demonstrated the incredible range of programming the VW Dome can support: intimate conversation as well as larger-than-life formal screenings. The films all referenced surreal and Afro-futurist aesthetics, but were grounded with urgent and relatable sociopolitical themes. This audience was one of the most engaged I've seen in the dome; it was difficult to arrange chairs fast enough to seat the incoming crowds!
Taja Cheek
Accompanying Frank Lloyd Wright at 150, the People’s Studio invited visitors to explore architecture through themes connected to community, nature, and the integration of art and daily life.
It affirms that we all have valuable perceptions (like artists do) and that we can all express ourselves creatively…. People can build beautifully interesting and unique things alongside one another in a humanitarian and socially equal way. Utopia in action!
Fritz Donnelly, New York City
A major new performance commission, Alexandra Bachzetsis’s Massacre: Variations on a Theme, featured three dancers and music for two pianos and was inspired by Tarantism, classic Northern Soul dancing, and Surrealist imagery.
I don’t feel that I’m an activist performance artist. I think work is always political. Or the body is political—what you achieve through your body and through other bodies. But I don’t think it offers any straightforward solution. You can only hope that it makes some people think for themselves.
Alexandra Bachzetsis
MoMA’s PopRally hosted Petra Collins: In Search of Us—an evening of performance, music, and digital art conceived and developed by Collins with artist Madelyne Beckles—and featured Collins in its online interview series, Creative New York.
One thing I am constantly thinking about, as a photographer, is how the work is exhibited and how viewers relate. I love the idea of creating spaces and creating an experience … rather than just displaying photo work in a linear way.
Petra Collins
Nan Goldin’s The Ballad of Sexual Dependency was presented in its original 35mm format along with a selection of photographs and materials from the artist’s personal archive.
One of my first exhibitions in Berlin was Nan Goldin's at KW in 1992 in the former East Berlin. Goldin's work looked so different than the environment of the formerly socialist, partially abandoned cityscape. It looked like a premonition of what the future will bring. Twenty-five years later at MoMA, I was privileged to reinstall The Ballad on a much grander scale with my colleagues Rajendra Roy and Lucy Gallun. The Ballad has not lost its power to be about the past, the present, and the future at the same time. It didn't age a single minute.
Klaus BiesenbachHelado Negro performed as part of the Summer Thursdays concert series in The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden.
The PopRally team came up with the idea of organizing our Summer Thursdays concert series to complement Crossing Borders: Immigration and American Culture, a digital exhibition of selected works in our collection by artists who immigrated to the US. The concerts were joyous, bringing together musicians with roots in Africa, Asia, South America, North America, and Europe, now living in the US. Their life journeys were expressed in music that blended sounds from home with those from here.
Leah DickermanMoMA's Instagram, which has more than three million followers, was honored with a 2017 Webby Award for Culture & Lifestyle.
Amazing images and stories thank you for sharing @MuseumModernArt made my Tuesday, very inspiring.
Bravo MoMA!!! I am so proud to be a part of your artistic community!!!
Beautiful. Thank you for introducing me to amazing artists ✨❤✨
I love posts like this. I want to know more about the artists. More about the paintings
Wish I was in NYC right now why?? 😩
A major gift from the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros will add more than 100 works of modern art by major artists from Latin America to our collection, and establish the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Research Institute for the Study of Art from Latin America.
We are profoundly grateful to Patty Cisneros, whose longstanding and unwavering dedication to art and artists from Latin America continues to transform and expand our understanding and appreciation of that region’s significant role in the history of modern and contemporary art.
Glenn D. Lowry
Agnès Varda and JR’s Visages, Villages (Faces, Places) (2017)
Agnès Varda and JR are artists separated by generations, joined by a profound sense of humanity. They approached MoMA about pre-acquiring their documentary celebrating the unseen rural communities in France, and we are thrilled to have helped bring their critically important (and beautifully rendered) vision to light. With Faces, Places we cement a relationship with Agnès, and launch one with JR.
Rajendra Roy
Dayanita Singh’s Museum of Chance (2013)
Museum of Chance is arguably Dayanita Singh's magnum opus, and in some ways it could be seen as a survey of her career in one complex work, in that it includes individual pictures that refer back to older series. The work carries with it seemingly boundless possibilities in presentation, sequence, and storytelling, where the images can be sequenced and re-sequenced within two large, movable structures, or in the smaller display frames that can be hung on the wall. Bringing this contemporary artist's work into the collection was a priority for the Museum, and the acquisition of the stunning and complex Museum of Chance addressed this need.
Quentin Bajac
László Moholy‑Nagy’s EM 1 (Telephone Picture) (1923) was reunited in the collection with EM 2 (Telephone Picture) (1923) and EM 3 (Telephone Picture) (1923).
Since 1970 The Museum of Modern Art has owned two of the three legendary "Telephone Pictures" that Moholy-Nagy made in 1922. Last year we finally were able to acquire EM 1, the companion to MoMA's EM 2 and EM 3. According to the artist, he used the telephone to give a commercial signmaker specifications for a composition to be painted three times, on three panels of different sizes. MoMA now can present the full story of Moholy's historic venture into "readymade" painting.
Ann Temkin
Dante Giacosa’s 500f city car for Fiat (designed 1957)
The Fiat 500 is an icon of automotive history that fundamentally altered car design and production in Italy. Adding this unpretentious masterpiece to our collection will allow us to broaden the story of automotive design as told by the Museum.
Martino Stierli
Ibrahim El‑Salahi’s Prison Notebook (1976)
Ibrahim El-Salahi is today recognized as a foundational figure of African and Arabic modernism. Prison Notebook exorcises the months of deprivation and abuse he endured while arbitrarily imprisoned in Sudan in 1975. Its pages are filled with verses of his poetry and delicate drawings of shackled figures, faces behind barred doors, self-portraits, prison architecture, birds, and mythological figures that suggest the hope of freedom or escape. This intensely personal work is both a major historical document and a masterpiece of drawing.
Christophe Cherix
Bruce Nauman’s Contrapposto Studies, i through vii (2015–16)
Bruce Nauman's magisterial installation Contrapposto Studies, i through vii is the artist's most ambitious video work to date. Reflecting on and elaborating his 1968 video Walk with Contrapposto, it distills a career noted for its innovation and experimentation into a frank and profound analysis of the body, aging, and technology.
Stuart Comer
All works in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art and © 2017 The Museum of Modern Art, unless otherwise noted