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The Museum of Modern Art @UC9CswYtb5rL31CHwyVoyJvQ@youtube.com

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The Museum of Modern Art is home to over 200,000 artworks, c


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in the future - u will be able to do some more stuff here,,,!! like pat catgirl- i mean um yeah... for now u can only see others's posts :c

The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 3 weeks ago

Vote for us for the Anthem Awards! Our documentary on Martin Wong's Hidden New York is a finalist in the Education, Arts & Culture category. We know so many of your have watched, shared, and commented on that special video, so please vote for us! Voting is open until Thursday, October 31st, at 11:59 pm PT. Click the link below and scroll down to "The Museum of Modern Art" and help us win the Anthem Community Voice award!

celebrate.anthemawards.com/PublicVoting#/2025/educ…

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 1 month ago

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Surrealist Manifesto, we made a short documentary that takes a deep dive into the Surrealist game “exquisite corpse,” a collaborative drawing made by multiple people, each adding a different body part while unaware of what the others drew. This video itself takes the form of an exquisite corpse, with three distinct parts, each introduced by an exquisite corpse animated by Kohana Wilson (the head), Miranda Javid (the torso), and Gina Kamentsky (the feet).

Spanning one hundred years of art history and the game’s existence, "How to See an Exquisite Corpse" explores the appeal and influence that makes this exercise both a radical strategy of creative freedom and a game that any group of friends can play. This is a celebration of “a drawing going out to play with other drawings,” as Corsiglia puts it.

We hope you enjoy! Let us know what you think in the comments!

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 2 months ago

We just published the first episode of our new series ART AND THE SENSES. We typically refer to the “visual arts,” but we experience art through all five senses. This series explores how artists help us understand and question our perceptions, one sense at a time: smell, hearing, taste—and that biggest taboo in a museum, touch.

In our first episode, we explore how the sense of smell unconsciously tells us what’s clean and safe versus what’s dirty and threatening. Why does it summon vivid associations and memories? We focus on Mike Kelley’s major installation "Deodorized Central Mass with Satellites," in which hanging clusters of stuffed animals playfully draw you in, conjuring childhood memories. But when the large “deodorizers,” shiny sculptures on the walls, spray a disinfectant on the candy-colored creatures, they become suddenly ominous. The smell fills the gallery and unlocks new questions: Why do these need to be cleaned? What’s wrong with them?

In this short documentary set in Cologne, Germany, and New York, an expert in scent production and dissemination, a curator, and conservation scientists take us behind the scenes to find out how the “Mike Kelley” scent gets made and what it uncovers about our expectations and memories outside of the museum. As curator Paulina Pobocha puts it, “We were talking about the scent component and whether we need warning labels, and I thought that was a little silly living in New York, where you’re bombarded with scents left and right and there are no warnings. It’s part of the world that we live in."

More episodes coming soon!

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 6 months ago

You have one more day to vote for us in the Shorty Awards! We're finalists in two categories. Please vote before 11:59 ET on 4/30.

Vote for our video on how artists are using AI in the Documentary category here: shortyawards.com/16th/how-to-see-like-a-machine-ho…

Vote for our full YouTube channel in the YouTube Presence category here: shortyawards.com/16th/momas-youtube-channel

Thanks for watching and for your support!

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 7 months ago

We are saddened to hear of the passing of Richard Serra.

Serra studied form, including its mass, weight, ability to delineate space, and the ways it behaves under the pressures of gravity. As a result, his sculptures produce in us a heightened awareness of our surroundings. They are spaces to contemplate—to experience our “total senses.”

We are deeply grateful for his boundless creativity, his long friendship with us, and generosity to MoMA.

In honor of his life, we've compiled videos from our archive that feature the installation of his work and his discussion of it.

Watch here:
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLf...

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 9 months ago

For #wellnessmonth we created a Guided Color Meditation. Join meditation artist Dora Kamau for an eight-minute guided audio meditation that explores the therapeutic power of color. We’ll delve into color theory and the psychological and emotional effects colors can have on us. Composer James Pratley Watson, who created the soundscape for this meditation, aligned each color with its respective sonic “healing frequency,” in an attempt to infuse it with a deeper vibrational resonance. As Kamau leads you through this immersive meditation, allow the interplay of sound and color to guide you through a calming exploration of your own consciousness.

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 10 months ago

For parents, educators, and anyone interested in the topic, we just put out a video on how art can be a tool for Social Emotional Learning (SEL) https://youtu.be/uzr9aPuFaaI How can art allow us to express who we are? MoMA Educators are joined by a licensed social worker and therapist to discuss how SEL can help us develop healthy identities, manage emotions, and make good decisions. We'd love to hear how you use these skills with your kids, students, and in your own lives.

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 1 year ago

IN THE STUDIO is back with new art technique tutorials! In this episode, Helina Metaferia demonstrates collage techniques she uses in her work and admires in the work of Romare Bearden, Hannah Höch, and other artists from MoMA's Collection.

We're currently filming more episodes, so let us know in the comments if there are any particular techniques or mediums you'd like us to cover in the future.

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 1 year ago

Lately there have been a litany of alarming headlines declaiming the new ways AI is expediting, unnerving, or sometimes comically­ failing our near-future world. At the heart of these are debates about ownership and privacy, labor and exploitation, reality and fakery. And with the recent breakthroughs of AI image and text generators, the public discussion has entered the art world.

For the latest episode of our How to See series, we spoke with artists and curators about how recent breakthroughs in AI and machine learning are putting new demands on artists to use, confront, and investigate the technology.

Check out our latest video, HOW TO SEE LIKE A MACHINE and join the rich conversation in the comments! https://youtu.be/G2XdZIC3AM8

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The Museum of Modern Art
Posted 2 years ago

What does the future of Horror look like? Horror film experts give their take in our most recent video:

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