Visiting Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion?

You must join the virtual exhibition queue when you arrive. If capacity has been reached for the day, the queue will close early.

Learn more
Events/ Ongoing Programs/ MetCelebrates/ The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism Virtual Premiere
METCELEBRATES

The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism Virtual Premiere

Free

Also streaming on Facebook and YouTube.

Join Dr. Denise M. Murrell, Merryl H. and James S. Tisch Curator at Large in The Met’s Director's Office, for a virtual tour of the groundbreaking exhibition The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism. Through some 160 works of painting, sculpture, photography, film, and ephemera, it will explore the comprehensive and far-reaching ways in which Black artists portrayed everyday modern life in the new Black cities that took shape in the 1920s–40s in New York City’s Harlem and nationwide in the early decades of the Great Migration when millions of African Americans began to move away from the segregated rural South. The first art museum survey of the subject in New York City since 1987, the exhibition will establish the Harlem Renaissance and its radically new development of the modern Black subject as central to the development of international modern art.


The exhibition is made possible by the Ford Foundation, the Barrie A. and Deedee Wigmore Foundation, and Denise Littlefield Sobel.

Ford Foundation logo

Corporate sponsorship is provided by Bank of America. 

Bank of America logo

Additional support is provided by the Enterprise Holdings Endowment, the Terra Foundation for American Art, the Gail and Parker Gilbert Fund, the Aaron I. Fleischman and Lin Lougheed Fund, and The International Council of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The catalogue is made possible by the Mellon Foundation.

Additional support is provided by Denise Littlefield Sobel and Robert E. Holmes. 

 

Questions? Contact us by email or by phone at 212-570-3755.

Your support means more now than ever! A gift to The Metropolitan Museum of Art helps sustain the Museum's extraordinary level of programming, conservation, and research, enabling millions of visitors to experience the power of art.

Donate

Want to do more? Join as a Member of The Met to receive access to exclusive content and events.

Marquee: William H. Johnson (American, 1901–1970). Woman in Blue, c. 1943. Oil on burlap, 35 x 27 in. (88.9 x 68.6 cm). Clark Atlanta University Art Museum, Permanent Loan from the National Collection of Fine Art, 1969.013

 

 

 

 

All Upcoming

{{listingCard.programType}}


{{ listingCard.startDateText }}