The Met’s galleries for African Art, Ancient American art and Oceanic art in The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing have temporarily closed in preparation for the exciting new renovation project which will reenvision these collections for a new generation of visitors.
The Met’s galleries devoted to the art of sub-Saharan Africa, the ancient Americas, and Oceania were inaugurated in 1982. At the time, their opening marked a radical expansion of the cultural achievements recognized by the Museum. Since then, we have witnessed a surge in transformative and expanded art historical studies on the vast areas of world art these galleries embrace. Those advances of the last thirty-eight years have in turn sparked a reenvisioning of this global crossroads within the Museum.
In Akan culture the term Sankofa refers to a quest for knowledge, which is visualized as a bird with feet planted forward and head turned backward. Likewise, this project involves a critical examination of the past as a guide for renewal. Developed over the last four years with wHY Architects, the initiative will begin to manifest in January 2021 with the deinstallation of the existing Oceanic art galleries.
By 2025, visitors will encounter a complete conceptual and physical overhaul of the forty-thousand-square-foot Michael C. Rockefeller Wing. The glass wall abutting Central Park will be replaced to allow greater illumination and increased space will be allotted to the presentation of art.
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New York
New York
10028
United States