China Daily

MoMA being renovated for more space

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NEW YORK — The Museum of Modern Art in New York is boldly expanding its midtown Manhattan home that draws more than 3 million visitors annually from around the world, including those who came on Friday to see the first completed phase of the $450 million project.

Spread over three floors of the art mecca off Fifth Avenue are about 1,400 square meters of reconfigur­ed galleries, a new, second gift shop, a redesigned cafe and espresso bar and, facing the sculpture garden, two lounges graced with black marble quarried in France.

Still under constructi­on are about 4,600 square meters of new galleries opening in 2019, bringing MoMA’s total artfilled space to about 16,000 square meters on six floors. The expansion will allow more of the museum’s collection of nearly 200,000 works to be displayed.

The project also will provide 25 percent more space for visitors to relax or have a sit-down meal.

The museum building, which opened in 1939, now nearly fills an entire city block and showcases works by artists, including Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Andy Warhol, Vincent van Gogh and Frida Kahlo, to name just a few from the permanent collection.

The complex fuses original architectu­re by Philip Goodwin and Edward Stone with Philip Johnson-designed additions in 1951 and 1964 and a new section by Argentine native Cesar Pelli in 1984, topped in 2004 by Yoshio Taniguchi’s $425 million expansion and renovation.

“We’re riffing off the DNA of MoMA’s history,” says Elizabeth Diller, whose Bostonbase­d firm, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, was hired for the project, working with the Gensler firm in San Francisco. “This work has required the curiosity of an archaeolog­ist and the skill of a surgeon.”

MoMA director Glenn Lowry wants to achieve much more than augmenting square footage. MoMA curators are embracing ethnic and cultural diversity that transcends establishe­d European artists through shows including, for instance, black and female artists. MoMA also is highlighti­ng art tracing certain social periods for example, creativity in the decades after World War II that spawned feminism.

“The Museum of Modern Art’s renovation and expansion project will seek to reassure and surprise,” Lowry says.

Architectu­rally, he says, MoMA is “opening up, so you’re aware of the city” by bringing the urban turf closer to visitors through an all-glass facade facing West 53 rd Street, more window panels elsewhere and a rooftop lounge with a terrace.

Some galleries will be pliant, with partitions that can drop or be lifted, and ceilings of varying heights, depending on exhibition needs. Added studios and galleries will be set up for performanc­es or film screenings.

The current, double-height entrance lobby will be reconfigur­ed to ease visitor congestion that often results in lines reaching out onto the sidewalk. Demolition starts this month, and visitors will have to use alternativ­e entrances. Providing easier access inside is the historic Bauhaus staircase that was extended to reach down to the first floor.

In the newly completed area, the first exhibition opens on June 12. Frank Lloyd Wright at 150: Unpacking the Archive will celebrate the 150th anniversar­y of the US architect’s birth.

 ?? AP ?? Louise Bourgeois’ The Quartered One hangs at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
AP Louise Bourgeois’ The Quartered One hangs at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

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