This week we finally get to welcome spring—and spend some quality time in The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. To round out your visit, here’s what you won’t want to miss this week:
Posts in ‘This Week at MoMA’
This Week at MoMA: March 9–15
With an extra hour of daylight to enjoy, this week visitors of all ages have more to experience in the galleries and in our theaters:
This Week at MoMA: March 2–8
Our spring season kicks off this week with big names and (literally) big works of art, and we can’t wait. Here’s what’s in store:
This Week at MoMA: February 23–March 1
Winter can make even the most extroverted people feel lonely. So what better time to come to the Museum, where the galleries are buzzing, and our programs—talks with artists, story time for toddlers, impromptu drawing sessions—allow you to mingle. Check out this week’s offerings and see for yourself.
This Week at MoMA: February 16–22

Sherrie Levine. President Collage: 1 (detail). 1979. Cut-and-pasted printed paper on paper, 24 x 18″ (61 x 45.7 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Collection Gift. © 2015 Sherrie Levine
If you’ve got the day off in honor of Presidents’ Day, you could sleep in and do nothing… but you could also do something amazing at MoMA. Here’s what we recommend for the week:
This Week at MoMA: February 9–15

Henri Matisse. The Heart (Le Coeur) from Jazz. 1947. One from a portfolio of 20 pochoirs, composition (irreg.): 14 13⁄16 × 24″ (37.7 × 61 cm); sheet: 16 9⁄16 × 25 11⁄16″ (42.1 × 65.3 cm).
Gift of the artist. © 2015 Succession H. Matisse/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Matisse’s studio is red, van Gogh’s sky is blue, if you love modern art, then this week is for you:
This Week at MoMA: February 2–8
Since February is the shortest month it’s important to pack in as much as possible, and this week is especially busy at MoMA, with a final-weekend Matisse blitz, a critical discussion on art and free speech, films that celebrate women in cinema, and so much more. You won’t want to miss these programs:
This Week at MoMA: January 26–February 1

Harry Callahan. Weeds in Snow, Detroit. 1943. Gelatin silver print, 3 1/4 x 4 7/16″ (8.2 x 11.3 cm). Gift of the photographer. © 2015 The Estate of Harry Callahan
With a storm on the way that may leave New Yorkers snowed in, it’s an ideal time to take the long view on making plans. Here’s what’s on the horizon this week:
This Week at MoMA: January 19–25

Leonard Freed. Baltimore, Maryland: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. being greeted upon his return to the United States after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. October 31, 1964. Gelatin silver print, 14 1/4 x 21 3/16″ (36.2 x 53.8 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Acquired through the generosity of Thomas L. Kempner, Jr. © 2015 Leonard Freed/Magnum Photos
We begin this week by honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and his inspirational legacy. The above photograph by Leonard Freed, drawn from MoMA’s collection, was taken in 1964, on the occasion of King’s return home after receiving the Noble Peace Prize (making him, at the time, the youngest person to receive the award).
This Week at MoMA: January 12–18
This week pairs art and conversation in just about every way, from scholarly discourse and artists in person, to the most talked-about films and exhibitions of the season. Don’t miss these highlights:
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