Rendering of Arts of the Ancient Americas Galleries, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image by WHY Architecture
Opening Date: May 31, 2025
The complete renovation of the wing, which encompasses over 40,000 square feet of gallery space on the Museum’s south side, was designed by Kulapat Yantrasast of WHY Architecture
The Metropolitan Museum of Art announced that it will reopen the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing on May 31, 2025, following the completion of a major renovation. The wing includes the collections of the Arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas, and Oceania, and, when complete, will feature over 1,800 works spanning five continents and hundreds of cultures. These three major world traditions will stand as independent entities in a wing that is in dialogue with neighboring gallery spaces. The galleries have been closed to the public and under renovation since 2021.
Designed by WHY Architecture in collaboration with Beyer, Blinder, Belle Architects LLP, and with The Met’s Design Department, the reimagined galleries have been designed to transform the visitor experience and incorporate innovative technologies that will allow The Met to display objects in new ways. In galleries dedicated to each of the distinct collection areas, design elements reference and pay homage to the architectural vernaculars of each region.
The reinstallation of all three collection areas—Arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas, and Oceania—will also reflect new scholarship, undertaken in collaboration with international experts and researchers. Digital features and new wall text will allow for deeper contextualization of objects. Highlights of the collections that are well known to long-time visitors to The Met will be showcased in innovative ways with a completely new gallery design, which will also incorporate filtered daylight through a custom-designed, state-of-the-art sloped glass wall on the south facade, adjacent to Central Park. Additionally, across each collection there will be objects on view for the first time, including major new acquisitions of historic and contemporary art in the Arts of Africa galleries; a gallery dedicated to light-sensitive ancient Andean textiles, which will be the first of its kind in the United States; and several new commissions for the Oceania galleries by Indigenous artists and a range of new digital features that will present contemporary perspectives.
“The complete renovation of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing reflects The Met’s profound commitment to—and deep expertise—in caring for and expanding understandings of the works in the Museum’s collection. Together with our collaborative and community-based approach to curating these collections, the transformation of these galleries allows us to further advance the appreciation and contextualization of many of the world’s most significant cultures,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “When the wing first opened in 1982, it brought a much broader perspective on global art history to The Met, and this thoughtful and innovative reimagining reflects our ambition to continually expand and even complexifying narratives. We’re deeply grateful to the many artists, scholars, community leaders and cultural figures who are partnering with us on this essential and ongoing work, and we look forward to unveiling these stunning galleries to visitors across New York City and the world this spring.”
Kulapat Yantrasast, Founder and Creative Director of WHY Architecture, commented: “The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing affirms WHY’s belief that museums are true sites of empathy. Spaces where visitors from many different places can encounter and appreciate the artworks from other cultures around the world. Through our design with The Met, we hope to highlight the diversity and distinction within these rich collections while providing a welcoming and memorable sense of place. Natural light and visual connections to Central Park are essential to the reimagined wing, and moments of discovery are so crucial when we design art spaces. We hope that visitors remember what they experience and where that happens.”
Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, said: “The primary goal of this considerable institutional project is to deepen appreciation for the greatness of the art displayed within. While the creation of the wing asserted the place of the arts of sub-Saharan Africa, the Ancient Americas, and Oceania in the world’s leading museum, the edition you will soon experience underscores their autonomy from one another and foregrounds the artists responsible for those achievements. The new galleries devoted to three major collections presented in the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing allow us to reintroduce them with to the public enriched with a wealth of contextual detail. Those layers of information range from artist bios to interviews with experts in the region that relate the works presented to specific historical sites in the form of audioguide commentary and documentary films produced as an integral part of the experience.”
Jhaelen Hernandez-Eli, Vice President of Capital Projects at The Met, commented: “Our buildings are works of art themselves, mediating the relationship between the environment, our collections, and the communities we host. The redesign of the wing addresses the most critical issues of our time, from carbon footprint reduction to the emphasis on local materials and artisanship. The project manifests the collective work and shared values of our architects and engineers—WHY Architecture, Beyer, Blinder, Belle Architects LLP, Kohler Ronan, Thornton Tomasetti and Arup—as well as our local trades shepherded by AECOM Tishman. Together, we prioritized job creation and workforce training, reuse of materials, and the reduction of energy consumption while ensuring that the resulting architecture supports our collection and inspires our public.”
About the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
The Met’s Michael C. Rockefeller Wing includes the three distinct collections—the Arts of Africa; the Ancient Americas; and Oceania—displaying them as discrete elements in an overarching wing that is in dialogue with the Museum’s collection as a whole.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the American statesman and philanthropist Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller assembled a fine-arts survey of non-Western art traditions that included the ancient Americas as well as areas of the world not represented in the Museum’s collection, notably African and Oceanic art. In 1969, it was announced that Rockefeller’s collection would be transferred to The Met as a new department and wing. Opened to the public in 1982, the addition was named after Nelson Rockefeller’s son, Michael C. Rockefeller, who was greatly inspired by the cultures and art of the Pacific and pursued new avenues of inquiry into artistic practice during his travels there. Among the wing’s signature works are the striking Asmat sculptures he researched and collected in southwest New Guinea.
The reenvisioned installation will reintroduce visitors to The Met’s collection of sub-Saharan African art through a selection of some 500 works organized to survey major artistic movements and living traditions from across the subcontinent. The new galleries will present original creations spanning from the Middle Ages to the present, including artworks such as a 12th century CE fired clay figure shaped in Mali’s Inner Niger Delta to the fiber creation Bleu no. 1 (2014) by Abdoulaye Konaté (born 1953, Diré, Mali), a critically acclaimed innovator based in Bamako, Mali. One-third of the works, which are new acquisitions given by donors to celebrate The Met’s capital project, will be on display at The Met for the first time.
The reconceived galleries anchor this extraordinary collection within regional architectural vernaculars and pay tribute to Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks—such as a soaring ceiling spanned by a succession of horizontal baffles that suggest ribbing to pay homage to one of Africa’s most celebrated structures: the Great Mosque of Jenne in Mali—while highlighting connections to other major world traditions. The new galleries, which are immediately adjacent to those of Greek and Roman Art and European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, will underscore Africa’s ancient visual traditions and its historical connections with Europe going back to the Renaissance.
The reinstallation is grounded in contemporary research and exchanges with a network of international experts based in the United States and across sub-Saharan Africa. A major component of the expanded contextualization is a digital initiative that introduces Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks in a series of original films produced with Ethiopian-American filmmaker Sosena Solomon that will be displayed in the gallery as well as online and that was undertaken in partnership with World Monuments Fund (WMF).
For more information about the Arts of Africa galleries.
The reinstallation is organized around some 700 works selected to foreground the artistic legacy of Indigenous artists from across North, Central, and South America and the Caribbean prior to 1600 CE. This extraordinary collection will be reintroduced for a new generation of visitors while reflecting contemporary scholarship and research and providing greater illumination of the ancestral arts of the Americas. The new galleries will include monumental stone sculptures and exquisite metalwork and will also include refined ceramic vessels; shimmering regalia of gold, shell, and semiprecious stone; and delicate sculptures of wood.
The new galleries for the Arts of the Ancient Americas are across from the Modern and Contemporary Art galleries and adjacent to those dedicated to the arts of the Oceania. Drawing inspiration from ancient American architectural traditions, the design incorporates stone platforms that echo the layout of landmarks from Mesoamerica and the Andean region, from the rectilinear plazas of Central Mexico to the U-shaped, enfolding arms of sacred architecture of Peru’s North Coast. A highlight will be a new gallery devoted to ancient American textiles and featherwork, which will frame a 3,000-year history of achievements in the fiber arts.
The new installation is the result of a close collaboration with colleagues across Latin America over the past eight years. The renovated galleries will reflect recent advances in scholarship, incorporating knowledge about artists, their materials, their techniques, and their social roles and newly revealed relationships between regions. They will also expand the scope to consider Indigenous traditions in the Viceregal (Colonial) period. The galleries also benefit from new perspectives on indigenous concepts of the natural world as well as nuanced perceptions of gender roles. Indigenous texts—ancient, historical, and modern—have informed the curatorial narrative, enriching the interpretation and appreciation of the works in the collection.
Joanne Pillsbury, the Andrall E. Pearson Curator of the Arts of the Ancient Americas, said, “Since the Museum’s founding, the presence of these works at The Met has reflected shifting sensibilities about the place of ancient American art in a global history of art. Over the last 30 years, we’ve seen a revolution in our understanding of the Inca, the Classic Maya, and the other great cultures that thrived in Latin America before the 16th century, including the identification of specific, named artists. It has been exciting to work with scholars from across the Americas to reconceive the galleries in light of this new knowledge.”
For more information about the Arts of the Ancient Americas galleries.
The reimagined galleries reintroduce The Met’s iconic collection of Oceanic art presenting over 500 years of art from this expansive region, newly framed in Indigenous perspectives and celebrating the unceasing creativity of Oceania’s finest visual artists.
The new galleries will feature over 650 stellar works from the Museum’s remarkable collection of Oceanic art, drawn from over 140 distinct cultures in a region of astonishing diversity, which covers almost one-third of the earth’s surface and continues to capture the global imagination. These include monumental artworks from the large island of New Guinea and the coastal archipelagos that stretch beyond its shores to the north, central, and eastern Pacific, as well as the two neighboring regions of Australia and Island Southeast Asia, whose Indigenous communities all share a common ancestry. A significant set of acquisitions substantively broaden the media and cultural scope of works presented in the galleries. These include works that expand the curatorial narrative, recalibrating and balancing the former focus on ceremonial architecture and men’s ritual practice, by broadening the collection to include the work of women, especially fiber work by senior female artists from Australia and New Guinea.
The galleries for the Arts of Oceania are organized around a stunning new diagonal trajectory through the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing designed to foreground ancestral connections and Indigenous temporalities, offering perspectives on art that reach deep into Oceania’s past while also acknowledging ongoing manifestations of its agency in the present. The newly designed layout establishes visual sightlines that emphasize the dynamic interactions between adjacent Island groups, which have paved the way toward innovation and creativity in the artistic sphere, with a soaring installation of Asmat art to the north and the iconic Kwoma ceiling, illuminated by natural light, to the south. These are linked by a suite of smaller, more intimate focus galleries designed for close looking and reflection where visual resonances reinforce the long-standing relationships between Austronesian-speaking peoples who are deeply connected, not separated, by the ocean. Written and digital narratives placed throughout the galleries elevate Indigenous voices, foreground the latest developments in interdisciplinary scholarship, and emphasize the continued creativity of Oceania’s Indigenous artists through the lenses of global history, storytelling, and Pacific oratory and performance.
Maia Nuku, John A. Friede and A. J. Hall Curator for the Arts of Oceania, said, “The Met’s collection of Oceanic art is unusually expansive in terms of breadth and range. This gives us a rare opportunity to present art from across the entire region of Oceania, astonishing artworks that were created in the last 500 years by descendants of the early Austronesian-speaking voyagers who settled this last region of the world in waves of migration that began 3,500 to 5,000 years ago. The conceptual framing of our new galleries for Oceania responds directly to the unique spatial and relational dynamics of Oceania: horizon lines, the arching dome of the sky, and islands tethered in a vast ocean—these are the coordinates that guide and shape life in this compelling landscape. The dynamic new layout is enhanced by architectural features specifically designed to frame the installation of artworks in vertical and horizontal planes. This formal arrangement for landmark works provides strong visual cues that emphasize connectivity and speak directly to the distinctive ways that Oceanic peoples approach life and use art to navigate physical and spiritual worlds.”
For more information about the Arts of Oceania galleries.
Credits
We thank all who have made possible the renovation of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, including leadership commitments from The Carson Family Charitable Trust, Kyveli and George Economou, Bobby Kotick, Drs. Daniel and Marian Malcolm, Adam Lindemann and Amalia Dayan, Samuel H. and Linda M. Lindenbaum, Samuel and Gabrielle Lurie, The Marron Family, Naddisy Foundation, the City of New York, the Estate of Abby M. O’Neill, Andrall E. Pearson and Rappaport Family, the Estate of Ruth J. Prager, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer, Carlos Rodríguez-Pastor and Gabriela Pérez Rocchietti, Alejandro and Charlotte Santo Domingo, and Helena and Per Skarstedt. Major support was provided by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lockwood Chilton, Jr., Mariana and Raymond Herrmann, Mary R. Morgan, and Laura G. and James J. Ross.
Programming related to the reopening of the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing is made possible by the Ford Foundation and the Institute for Museum and Library Services.
The renovation of the galleries was overseen by Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing and Doris Zhao, Project Manager.
The Arts of Africa team includes: Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, Jennifer Peruski, Assistant Curator; Sandro Capo-Chichi, Senior Research Associate; and Imani Roach, Assistant Curator (2021-2024).
The Arts of the Ancient Americas team includes: Laura Filloy Nadal, Curator of the Arts of the Ancient Americas; Joanne Pillsbury, Andrall E. Pearson Curator of the Arts of the Ancient Americas; and Hugo Ikehara Tsukayama, Senior Research Associate.
The Arts of Oceania team includes: Maia Nuku, the Evelyn A. J. Hall and John A. Friede Curator for Oceanic Art; Sylvia Cockburn, Senior Research Associate; and Maggie Wander, Senior Research Associate (2022–24).
The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing team includes: David Rhoads, Christine Giuntini, Lauren Posada, Raychelle Osnato, Damien Marzocchi, Jessi Atwood, Matthew Noiseux, Paige Silva, Lydia Shaw.
The conservation of these collections was overseen by Lisa Pilosi, Sherman Fairchild Conservator in Charge with conservators Dawn Kriss, Sara Levin, Amanda Chau, Katharine Fugett, Teresa Jiménez-Millas, Caitlin Mahony, Marijn Manuels, Katherine McFarlin, Nick Pedemonti, Carolyn Riccardelli, Netanya Schiff, Chantal Stein, Ahmed Tarek, Marlene Yandrisevits, with additional help from the Objects Conservation Department, as well as a team of conservation preparators dedicated to the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing collection: Matthew Cumbie, Nisha Bansil, Johnny Coast, Jennifer Groch, Lindsay Rowinski, Nina Ruelle, Barbara Smith and staff preparators Warren Bennet, Andy Estep, Jacob Goble and Frederick Sager.
The Met’s Design team, overseen by Alicia Cheng, Head of Design, includes: Patrick Herron, Alexandre Viault, Tiffany Kim, Anna Rieger, Maanik Chauhan, Sarah Parke, Clint Coller, Jourdan Ferguson, Amy Nelson, with support from Rebecca Forgac.
The design of the Michael C Rockefeller Wing was led by WHY Architecture, in collaboration with The Met’s Design Department. Beyer Blinder Belle was the executive architect and led the design of the exterior sloped glazing wall. The construction was managed by AECOM Tishman. The team collaborated with engineers including Kohler Ronan, Thornton Tomasetti, and Arup. The cases were fabricated by Goppion. The design and construction process was led by Justin Mayer (Senior Project Manager, Capital Projects) and Mabel Taylor (Associate Project Manager) of The Met’s Capital Projects department overseen by Jhaelen Hernandez-Eli (Vice President, Capital Projects).
About The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded in 1870 by a group of American citizens—businessmen and financiers as well as leading artists and thinkers of the day—who wanted to create a museum to bring art and art education to the American people. Today, The Met displays tens of thousands of objects covering 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy. The Museum lives in two iconic sites in New York City—The Met Fifth Avenue and The Met Cloisters. Millions of people also take part in The Met experience online. Since its founding, The Met has always aspired to be more than a treasury of rare and beautiful objects. Every day, art comes alive in the Museum’s galleries and through its exhibitions and events, revealing both new ideas and unexpected connections across time and across cultures.
Images: Renderings of Arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas, Oceania Galleries, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Image by WHY Architecture