
Architectural
Chronology
In the late 1920s, three progressive and
influential patrons of the arts, Miss Lillie P. Bliss, Mrs. Cornelius
J. Sullivan, and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., perceived a need
to challenge the conservative policies of traditional museums and
to establish an institution devoted exclusively to modern art. When
The Museum of Modern Art was founded in 1929, its founding Director,
Alfred H. Barr, Jr., intended the Museum to be dedicated
to helping people understand and enjoy the visual arts of our time,
and that it might provide New York with "the greatest museum
of modern art in the world."
The public's response was overwhelmingly enthusiastic,
and over the course of the next ten years, the Museum moved three
times into progressively larger temporary quarters, and in 1939
finally opened the doors of the building it still occupies in midtown
Manhattan. Upon his appointment as the first Director, Barr submitted
a plan for the conception and organization of the Museum that would
result
in the Museum's multi-departmental structure with departments devoted
for the first time to Architecture and Design, Film and Video, and
Photography, in addition to Painting and Sculpture, Drawings, and
Prints and Illustrated Books. Subsequent expansions took place during
the 1950s and 1960s planned by the architect Philip Johnson, who
also designed The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Garden. In 1984, a major
renovation designed by Cesar Pelli doubled the Museum's gallery
space and enhanced visitor facilities.
The rich
and varied collection of The Museum of Modern Art constitutes one
of the most comprehensive and panoramic views into modern art. From an initial gift of eight prints and one drawing,
The Museum of Modern Art's collection has grown to include over
150,000 paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, architectural
models and drawings, and design objects. MoMA also owns approximately 22,000
films and four million film stills, and MoMA's Library and Archives,
the premier research facilities of their kind in the world, hold
over 300,000 books, artist books, and periodicals, and extensive individual
files on more than 70,000 artists. The Museum Archives contains primary source material related to the history of MoMA and modern and contemporary art.
The Museum maintains an active schedule of exhibitions
addressing a wide range of subject matter, mediums, and time periods,
highlighting significant recent developments in the visual
arts and new interpretations of major artists and art historical
movements. Works of art from its collection are displayed
in rotating installations so that the public may regularly expect
to find new works on display. Ongoing programs of classic and contemporary
films range from retrospectives and historical surveys to introductions
of the work of independent and experimental film- and videomakers.
Visitors also enjoy access to a bookstore offering an assortment
of publications and reproductions, and a design store offering objects
related to modern and contemporary art and design.
The Museum is dedicated to its role as an educational
institution and provides a complete program of activities intended
to assist both the general public and special segments of the community
in approaching and understanding the world of modern art. In addition
to gallery talks, lectures, and symposia, the Museum offers special
activities for parents, teachers, families, students, preschoolers,
bilingual visitors, and people with special needs. The Museum's
Library and Archives contain the leading concentration of research material
on modern art in the world, and each of the curatorial departments
maintains a study center available to students, scholars and researchers.
In addition, the Museum has one of the most active publishing programs
of any art museum and has published more than 1,200 editions appearing in twenty languages.
In January 2000, the Museum and P.S.1 exercised
a Memorandum of Understanding formalizing their affiliation. The
final arrangement results in an affiliation in which the Museum
becomes the sole corporate member of P.S.1 and P.S.1 maintains its
artistic and corporate independence. This innovative partnership
expands outreach for both institutions, and offers a broad range
of collaborative opportunities in collections, exhibitions, educational
programs, and administration.
MoMA has just completed the largest and most ambitious building project
in its history. This project nearly doubled the space for MoMA's
exhibitions and programs. Designed by Yoshio Taniguchi, the new
MoMA features 630,000 square feet of new and redesigned space.
The Peggy and David Rockefeller Building on the western portion of the site houses
the main exhibition galleries, and The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research Building—the Museum's first building devoted solely to these activities—on the eastern portion of the site
provides over five times more space for classrooms, auditoriums,
teacher training workshops, and the Museum's expanded Library and
Archives. These two buildings frame the enlarged Abby Aldrich
Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. The new Museum opened to the public on November 20, 2004, and the Cullman Building opened in November 2006.
To make
way for its renovation and rebuilding, MoMA closed on Fifty-third
Street in Manhattan on May 21, 2002, and opened MoMA QNS in Long
Island City, Queens, on June 29, 2002. MoMA QNS served as the base of the Museum's
exhibition program and operations through September 27, 2004, when
the facility was closed in preparation for The Museum of Modern
Art's reopening in Manhattan. This building now provides state-of-the-art storage spaces for the Museum.
Today, the Museum and P.S.1 welcome thousands
of visitors every year. A still larger public is served by the Museum's
national and international programs of circulating exhibitions,
loan programs, circulating film and video library, publications,
Library and Archives holdings, Web site, educational activities,
special events, and retail sales.

Pictured above, from left to right:
The Museum of Modern Art moves to townhouse at
11 West 53 Street (townhouse parcel is part of present site) in 1932; International
Style building designed by Philip L. Goodwin and Edward Durrell Stone opens at
11 West 53 Street location in 1939, photo by Eliot Elisofon; New west wing and
renovated and improved facilities, designed by Cesar Pelli, open in 1984, photo by Adam Bartos.
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