Glenn Lowry, the sixth director of New York’s Museum of Trendy Artwork (MoMA), who might be stepping down this month after 30 years on the helm, as soon as posed the query of what precisely his museum was. He then provided his personal solutions, together with “a cherished place, a sanctuary in Midtown Manhattan”, “a laboratory of studying, a spot the place probably the most difficult and tough artwork of our time will be measured in opposition to the achievements of the quick previous”, and “an thought represented by its assortment”.
MoMA’s assortment was initially envisaged by its first director, Alfred Barr, as “a torpedo shifting by means of time, its nostril the ever advancing current, its tail the ever-receding previous of fifty to 100 years in the past”. MoMA was then imagined as a type of “feeder” establishment, modelled on the Musée du Luxembourg’s relationship to the Louvre, so that after a recent work had stood the check of time it will be handed over to the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork. Immediately, MoMA’s assortment spans greater than 200,000 works of contemporary and up to date artwork, together with work, sculptures, drawings, pictures and extra, from 1872 to the current day.
From its short-term quarters of six rooms on the twelfth flooring of the Heckscher Constructing on Fifth Avenue (which opened in 1929, 9 days after the Wall Road Crash), to Lowry’s bold incorporation of the up to date artwork centre PS1 in Queens (2010) and the $450m enlargement of the primary constructing on 53rd Road (2019)—which greater than doubled its measurement—MoMA’s founders, trustees, workers and guests have been asking what the museum is, and who it’s for. Now, as Christophe Cherix, an in-house appointee from the Division of Drawings and Prints takes over from Lowry, these questions must be addressed by a brand new chief.
“What makes us very totally different is our assortment,” mentioned Cherix after the 2019 revamp. With that in thoughts listed here are ten (simply ten!) of the important works that make MoMa one of many world’s foremost artwork museums.
1. Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907) by Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso. Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. 1907
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Acquired by means of the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest. © 2004 Property of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Picasso’s confrontational and psychosexual masterpiece depicts 5 bare intercourse staff in Barcelona’s red-light district. Two of the ladies are pushing apart the curtains of the brothel whereas the opposite three strike erotic poses. Their our bodies are fragmented and jagged, like shards of flesh-coloured glass, and their faces are warped or asymmetrical, with the 2 figures on the best staring again at us, their faces impressed by African masks. By jettisoning idealised notions of female magnificence and banishing conventions of perspective, this portray is a precursor to Picasso’s later Cubist fashion and stays one of many nice landmarks of Modernist artwork.
2. The Pink Studio (1911) by Henri Matisse

Henri Matisse. The Pink Studio. 1911
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Mrs. Guggenheim Fund. © 2025 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
“The place I bought the color crimson—to make certain, I simply do not know,” Matisse as soon as remarked. “I discover that every one this stuff… solely develop into what they’re to me once I see them along with the color crimson.” The artist’s depiction of his atelier within the Parisian suburb of Issy-les-Moulineaux is a vital portray of Matisse’s post-Fauvist “center interval”. It represents a Modernist tackle the custom of artists utilizing their studios as a topic—and is a small retrospective of his earlier work, a few of which is proven hanging on the partitions.
Unusually, a whole exhibition (organised by MoMA) was constructed across the portray in 2022. It reunited The Pink Studio with the six surviving work depicted on its six-foot-by-seven-foot canvas. These included the key Le Luxe II (1907) and the lesser-known Corsica, The Outdated Mill (1898), in addition to three sculptures and one ceramic.
3. Bicycle Wheel (1951, third model after misplaced authentic of 1913) by Marcel Duchamp

Marcel Duchamp. Bicycle Wheel. 1951
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. The Sidney and Harriet Janis Assortment. © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Property of Marcel Duchamp
Pre-dating his notorious Fountain, the porcelain urinal signed “R. Mutt” which brought on a sensation on the inaugural exhibition of the Society of Unbiased Artists in New York in 1917, Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel was the French-born artist’s first “readymade”. “An on a regular basis object [could be] elevated to the dignity of a murals by the mere alternative of an artist,” Duchamp insisted. His readymades had been a problem to capitalism, which depends on the shopping for and promoting of commercially produced objects with pre-determined use-values, in addition to the centuries-held assumption that artwork was the remit of solely expert creators making authentic work. Duchamp was rediscovered as an enormously influential inspiration for the Pop and conceptual artists of the Nineteen Fifties and Nineteen Sixties.
4. The Tune of Love (1914) by Giorgio de Chirico

Gorgio de Chirico. The Tune of Love. 1914
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Nelson A. Rockefeller Bequest. © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SIAE, Rome
Surrealism was partly outlined by the juxtaposition of acquainted however sudden objects in work or sculptures, with the intention of upsetting unsettling responses within the viewer. In his 1869 poetic novel Les Chants de Maldoror the Compte de Lautréamont (the pen title of Uruguayan French author Isidore Ducasse) had imagined the “lovely… probability encounter of a stitching machine and an umbrella on an working desk”, and his concepts turned a significant inspiration for the Surrealists within the Twenties. Pre-dating the muse of the motion in 1924 by André Breton, on this work Giorgio de Chirico locations a rubber glove, a plaster head copied from a classical statue and a inexperienced ball beside a constructing in a piazza. De Chirico sought out the enduring realities hidden behind outward appearances, and believed that the trendy artist should overcome the interferences of “logic and customary sense” and “enter the areas of childhood imaginative and prescient and dream”.
5. Object (Le Déjeuner en fourrure) (1936) by Meret Oppenheim

Meret Oppenheim. Object. 1936
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Buy. © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Professional Litteris, Zurich
Like de Chirico, Oppenheim channels the creativeness with this unusual furry cup, saucer and spoon, which was first imagined in a dialog between the Swiss German artist, then solely 23, Picasso and his muse and lover Dora Maar, at a Parisian café. Oppenheim was sporting a fur-lined metallic bracelet, and joked that something may very well be lined in fur, together with the cups they had been consuming from. Constituted of the fur of a Chinese language gazelle, Object speaks to the Surrealist fascination with the methods inanimate objects can tackle residing qualities and reveal hidden or unconscious needs, in addition to the shock techniques the group used in opposition to well mannered bourgeois social behaviour.
6. Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair (1940) by Frida Kahlo

Frida Kahlo. Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair. 1940
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Reward of Edgar Kaufmann, Jr. © 2025 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo MuseumsTrust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Shortly after her divorce from muralist Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo minimize her hair brief. On this rebellious self-portrait she depicts herself holding a pair of scissors, surrounded by her severed braid and chopped hair. She is sporting an outsized gray swimsuit and crimson shirt, each references to Rivera, as an alternative of the normal Mexican clothes she normally wears in her work. The musical notes from a Mexican people track seem above the scene, and the translated lyrics learn: “Look, if I cherished you it was due to your hair. Now that you’re with out hair, I don’t love you anymore”. Whereas Kahlo and Rivera would reunite later in 1940, the portray has usually been seen as a robust inventive illustration of her legendary self-possession, independence and aptitude.
7. The Migration Sequence (1940-41) by Jacob Lawrence

Jacob Lawarence. The Migration Sequence, Panel no. 58: Within the North the Negro had higher instructional services. 1940-1941
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Reward of Mrs. David M. Levy. © 2025 Jacob Lawrence / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Within the early a long time of the twentieth century a wave of African Individuals left the poverty and prejudice of the southern states and made new lives within the quickly increasing industrial cities of the north. Between 1916 and 1930 greater than 1,000,000 individuals moved, together with Jacob Lawrence’s mother and father, in what has develop into often called the Nice Migration. The epic drama of this collection tells a transparent however complicated story of the private hardships, sacrifices and alternatives that got here with this historic demographic shift, and Lawrence experiments with quite a lot of kinds, from social realism to close abstraction and comic-book narration. The latter will be recognised in the best way he wrote sentence-long legends for every of the 60 work as explanations of what he had depicted.
8. One: Quantity 31, 1950 (1950) by Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock. One: Quantity 31, 1950. 1950
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York.Sidney and Harriet Janis Assortment Fund (by trade). © 2025 Pollock-Krasner Basis /Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
A defining work of Summary Expressionism, One is an ideal instance of Pollock’s “drip” interval, when the artist used an modern strategy of dropping, pouring and flinging paint onto a canvas on the ground of his studio in Springs, Lengthy Island. Critics nonetheless disagree over the elusive which means of Pollock’s drips. Some have recognised an try and seize the anxieties and pleasures of post-war America, as Pollock mentioned that “the trendy painter can’t categorical his age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, within the previous types… of previous tradition”. Others have recognized in Pollock’s tangled skeins the swirling rhythms and underlying order of nature, such because the fractal patterns of coastlines or tree branches, which tallies with Pollock’s riposte to an accusation that he didn’t paint from life: “I’m nature.”
9. Gold Marilyn Monroe (1962) by Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol. Gold Marilyn Monroe. 1962
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Reward of Philip Johnson. © 2025 Andy Warhol Basis for the VisualArts / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
An icon of the sexual revolution and the Golden Age of Hollywood, Marilyn Monroe died from a barbiturates overdose in 1962. Quickly after, Andy Warhol used a publicity nonetheless for the 1953 noir thriller Niagara, which was shot in “three-strip” Technicolor, for this work, and the picture would seem within the many different Marilyns he made within the Nineteen Sixties. Warhol painted the canvas with a single color (on this case, gold) after which used a industrial method—silk-screening—to position Monroe’s face on high. Whereas the resplendent color of gold has been lengthy related to non secular devotion in Christian iconography, right here Monroe is remodeled right into a martyr who was pursued by a pernicious public. Warhol’s iconoclastic work deconstructs the star as made by the media and a celebrity-obsessed tradition, whereas celebrating the person herself.
10. American Individuals Sequence #20: Die (1967) by Religion Ringgold

Religion Ringgold. American Individuals Sequence #20: Die. 1967
The Museum of Trendy Artwork, New York. Acquired by means of the generosity of The Trendy Ladies’s Fund, Ronnie F. Heyman, Eva and Glenn Dubin, Lonti Ebers, Michael S. Ovitz, Daniel and Brett Sundheim, and Gary and Karen Winnick
Painted in the course of the “lengthy sizzling summer time” of 1967, which was marked by a wave of race riots and eruptions of police violence in Newark, Detroit, and elsewhere within the US, Ringgold’s mural-sized tableau depicts traumatised males, girls and kids, who’re bloodied by knives and gunshots, and lurch throughout the two-panel canvas. Everybody on this interracial scene is struggling: not one of the figures, regardless of their enterprise fits and stylish cocktail clothes, have any management over the insanity that’s engulfing them. When MoMA reopened in 2019 with a radical rehang, curators positioned Die in the identical room as Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, making a putting comparability between the fleshy tones, therapy of girls, and depiction of unsettling confrontation in these two main works.







