MoMA's $858M Expansion and New York's Shifting Art Landscape Discussed
The Museum of Modern Art on 53rd Street is scheduled to reopen in November with a $858 million expansion project that will add 125,000 square feet of new and renovated gallery space. This transformation signals a new era for the institution and reflects broader changes in New York City's contemporary art scene. Art critic Christian Viveros-Fauné joined moderator David Cohen to discuss several historical survey exhibitions, including "Regarding Warhol" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a Lucy Lippard exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, and Hunter College's recreation of "The Times Square Show" from 1980. Their conversation also touched on the 2010 Whitney Biennial and exhibitions featuring artists Charles Ray, Alex da Corte, Atta Kwami, and Sean Scully. The discussion examined how these exhibitions and institutional developments collectively represent evolving artistic narratives and institutional priorities within the city's cultural ecosystem.
Key facts
- MoMA's $858 million expansion project creates 125,000 square feet of new/renovated space
- MoMA scheduled to reopen in November
- MoMA located on 53rd Street in New York City
- Christian Viveros-Fauné discussed exhibitions with moderator David Cohen
- "Regarding Warhol" exhibition at Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Lucy Lippard exhibition at Brooklyn Museum
- Hunter College recreated "The Times Square Show" from 1980
- Discussion included 2010 Whitney Biennial
Entities
Artists
- Charles Ray
- Alex da Corte
- Atta Kwami
- Sean Scully
- Andy Warhol
- Lucy Lippard
Institutions
- Museum of Modern Art
- Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Brooklyn Museum
- Hunter College
- Whitney Museum of American Art
- artcritical
Locations
- New York City
- United States
- 53rd Street