Large sculpture on the roof of The Met Museum

Modern and Contemporary Art

About Us

The Met’s Modern and Contemporary Art department studies, collects, and exhibits art from 1890 to the present. The collection encompasses modernist movements and contemporary practices from across the globe. Featuring important holdings of European modernism, American art and modern design, and contemporary art, the department continues to expand its collection through strategic acquisitions, with a focus on artists and works from Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Turkey, and African diasporas. With strengths in painting, sculpture, and works on paper, the collection also includes international decorative arts, design, installation art, and time-based media. In addition to its gallery displays, the department engages in mission-driven activities such as special exhibitions, site-specific commissions by contemporary artists, and collaborations within and beyond the museum. It also prioritizes collections care through maintenance, cataloging, research, and the support of fellows and interns.

Our History

The Met has been acquiring the art of its time since its founding in the nineteenth century, even though a dedicated Department of Contemporary Arts was only established in 1967. The department’s early years were shaped by curators like Henry Geldzahler, and later Lowery Stokes Sims, who joined the museum in 1972. The department’s holdings have grown significantly through acquisitions, generous gifts, and bequests. Notable collections include the Leonard A. Lauder Cubist Collection, featuring nearly 90 Cubist masterpieces; the Alfred Stieglitz Collection; works from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation; a monumental promised gift of major works by Philip Guston; and the Azari collection of contemporary Iranian art.

The department found a permanent home in the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing in 1987 and later also mounted exhibitions at The Met Breuer (2016–2020). Looking ahead, the department’s collections will find a new home in The Tang Wing for Modern and Contemporary Art, slated to open in 2030.


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The Mete of the Muse, Fred Wilson  American, Bronze, patina, paint
Fred Wilson
2006
Street Story Quilt, Faith Ringgold  American, Cotton canvas, acrylic paint, ink marker, dyed and printed cotton, and sequins, sewn to a cotton flannel backing
Faith Ringgold
1985
America Today, Thomas Hart Benton  American, Ten panels: Egg tempera with oil glazing over Permalba on a gesso ground on linen mounted to wood panels with a honeycomb interior
Thomas Hart Benton
1930–31
Böhmen liegt am Meer (Bohemia Lies by the Sea), Anselm Kiefer  German, Oil, emulsion, shellac, charcoal, and powdered paint on burlap
Anselm Kiefer
1996
Untitled, Al Loving  American, Acrylic on three joined canvases
Al Loving
1971
Alphabet No. 2, Ibrahim El-Salahi  Sudanese, Oil on canvas
Ibrahim El-Salahi
1962; reworked 1968
Before and After I, Andy Warhol  American, Casein on canvas
Andy Warhol
1961
mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People): Welcoming the Newcomers, Kent Monkman  Canadian, Acrylic on canvas
Kent Monkman
2019
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