The Met Fifth Avenue will close early at 5 pm on Friday, May 30 for an event.

Brightly lit gallery with objects in vitrines at various elevations in the background. In the center are several seated statues on pedestals.
Special Installation

Arts of Africa

The Met’s Arts of Africa galleries return on May 31, 2025, in a reimagined Michael C. Rockefeller Wing. Following a multiyear renovation, the reenvisioned installation reintroduces visitors to the Museum’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 present original creations from the Middle Ages to the present, and one-fourth of the works are on display at the Museum for the first time.

The new permanent installation foregrounds the creativity of artists across the subcontinent and enduring, dynamic historical traditions. A major emphasis in the reenvisioned galleries is on authorship and biographies featured in labels accompanying the creations of some 40 recognized masters of individual artists, ranging from Ọlọ́wẹ̀ of Ìsẹ̀ (ca. 1873–1938, Efon-Alaaye, Nigeria) to Abdoulaye Konaté (born 1953, Diré, Mali). The art on display encompasses works from Mali to Madagascar, created from the twelfth century to the present, in a diversity of media, ranging from wood sculpture and textiles to photography.

The works conserved and presented at The Met are elements of the myriad cultural landscapes that blossomed south of the Sahara. Among those original sites of creation are storied hubs of global commercial trade, the affluent courts of powerful West and Central African monarchs, and ephemeral transient equatorial rainforest settlements. Artists and their workshops masterfully translated and amplified an array of distinctive worldviews into artifacts that enhanced otherwise fleeting everyday lived experience or events of great pomp and circumstance animated by dancers and musicians. Some relate to ongoing local practices; others were given new life in the Americas following ongoing population movements beginning in the seventeenth century. Even fully isolated from those cultural contexts, many of these works of daring ingenuity have, since the twentieth century, been catalysts for innovators inspired by their originality and arresting visual power to take new leaps.

Physically transformed by Kulapat Yantrasast of WHY Architecture and Beyer, Blinder, Belle Architects LLP, in collaboration with The Met’s Design Department, the reconceived galleries anchor this extraordinary collection within regional architectural vernaculars and pay tribute to Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks while also highlighting connections to other major world traditions.

Critical to this ambitious effort, The Met’s curatorial team benefited from national and international expertise throughout the development, planning, and execution of this capital project. 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—from historians to novelists to musicians, many of whom are featured in the new audio guide tour.

A major component of the expanded contextualization is a digital initiative that introduces Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks and was undertaken in partnership with the World Monuments Fund (WMF). Together, The Met and WMF jointly selected sites across sub-Saharan Africa that span from antiquity to the twentieth century—some of which are currently inaccessible to most visitors—for their cultural and historical significance. These landmarks are featured in a series of a dozen short films produced with Sosena Solomon in collaboration with The Met’s curatorial and digital teams and in partnership with cultural experts in Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Republic of Benin, Botswana, Uganda, and Togo, and can be accessed through in-gallery prompts or through the online exhibition guide.

Accessibility

Icons showing wheelchair accessibility, hearing loop, and open captioning

Verbal imaging tours of the space for visitors who are blind or partially sighted are available by request and can be booked.

Press

We are in Africa, surrounded and embraced by it.

The New York Times
Image Credits
Photo by Bridgit Beyer © The Metropolitan Museum of Art