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International Initiatives and Engagement

With a vast collection covering over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy, The Met is a truly universal – and global – museum. In fiscal year 2025, The Met welcomed nearly 6 million visitors on site at our two iconic New York locations and more than 9 million online visitors from outside the United States. As we work to bring the world to The Met and bring The Met to the world, we are engaged in a wide range of international programming and institutional partnerships as we strive to be multilingual, multicultural, and inclusive in our outreach. From major loans and traveling exhibitions to conservation training and scholarly exchange, The Met is both a nexus and convener of global cultural activity.

To learn more about our international initiatives and opportunities, contact us at info@metmuseum.org.

FEATURED

The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

The Met’s collections of the arts of Africa, the ancient Americas, and Oceania returned in May 2025 in a reimagined Michael C. Rockefeller Wing. Following a multiyear renovation, the three major collections—spanning five continents and hundreds of cultures—now stand as independent entities.

In addition to bringing works from across the world to The Met as part of its innovative temporary exhibition program, The Met shares works from its collection internationally, either as individual loans or in a more comprehensive manner through the form of focused displays or touring exhibitions. These highly anticipated collection-based projects undertaken with international partners and venues allow us to directly engage global audiences with both our encyclopedic collection and our groundbreaking scholarship. In any given year, nearly 1,700 of The Met’s objects are on loan to cultural institutions around the world to help realize creative and ambitious curatorial projects.

Recent examples include The Shape of Time: Art and Ancestors of Oceania from The Metropolitan Museum of Art presented at the Museum of Art Pudong, Shanghai, and the National Museum of Qatar, Doha, in 2023 and 2024; From Impressionism to Early Modernism: French Masterpieces from the Robert Lehman Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, which presents 81 signature paintings from The Met’s collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art and opened at the National Museum of Korea in November 2025, previously on view at the National Palace Museum, Taiwan; and Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronze, 1100–1900, which opened at the Shanghai Museum in November 2025, an exhibition co-organized by The Met and the Shanghai Museum.

A group of individuals standing front of a large poster for Met objects on exhibit in Taiwan.

From Impressionism to Early Modernism: French Masterpieces from the Robert Lehman Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Promotional exhibition banner with a bronze duck on a dark background and the words Recasting the Past, The Art of Chinese Bronzes 1100-1900 in bright green text

The Met presents the most comprehensive exhibition of Chinese bronze art from the 12th to the 19th Century.

Red banner at the entrance to exhibition galleries at The Louvre hanging next to a larger ivory stone

The Louvre’s Department of Near Eastern Antiquities hosted ten major works from The Met's Department of Ancient West Asian Art, which is currently closed for renovation.

Dimly lite exhibition galleries featuring illuminated display cases with masks and artifacts, alongside descriptive panels.

The Shape of Time: Art and Ancestors of Oceania from The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Met is proud to support a suite of initiatives related to cultural property and collecting practices that include undertaking a focused review of works in the collection; hiring additional provenance researchers to join the many researchers and curators already doing this work at the Museum; further engaging staff and trustees; using The Met’s platform to support and contribute to public discourse on this topic; and partnering with global colleagues on exhibition, conservation and research initiatives.

A gallery of Greek and Roman marble statues of humans.
Research Initiative

The Met collection has more than 1.5 million works of art spanning 5,000 years of culture around the globe. How do these objects make it to The Met?

Two people look at a computer screen
Documentary

Look into the ancient past as The Met and the Republic of Iraq use cutting-edge technology to uncover the story of how a sculpture from Mesopotamia was created.

A marble carving of a female figure on a blue background with the words Cycladic Art
Exhibition
The presentation offers an extraordinary opportunity to closely examine a large body of little known Cycladic works that have been repatriated to Greece.
Max Hollein and Nitiya Kanokmongkol sign a partnership agreement, with four individuals standing behind them in a bright conference room.
Collaboration

The agreement formalizes a shared commitment to collaborate on exchanges and expertise, and the display and study of Thai art.

As a universal museum presenting art from around the world, The Met is dedicated to working closely with our international colleagues on the study, display, and interpretation of art. The Museum engages with governments, cultural organizations, communities and scholars across the globe in a range of educational initiatives, discourse, and cooperation that bring new depths of understanding and innovation to the work we do. In 2023–2024, The Met Fellowship Program welcomed international fellows from across the globe for research and projects in 23 departments within the Museum.

Two individuals stand beside a television displaying a vibrant photograph of rock formations amidst greenery, against a patterned backdrop.
Residency

The Museum partners with cultural institutions across the globe for short term Residencies, welcoming professionals to share information on researching and stewarding museum collections. Most recently The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing welcomed Residents in conjunction with the reopening of the new Wing.

Two men standing in front of a desk shaking hands and smiling.
Collaboration

The collaborative initiative furthers the commitment to exchanges of expertise and art between the two organizations that was formalized in a Memorandum of Understanding signed in 2021.

Three people standing in a lab, looking at a sample in one figure's hand.
Collaboration

This Program is a long-running partnership between the Met and more than 20 institutions across India, in conjunction with the Ministry of Culture, Government of India, to share knowledge on best practices for conservation of works of art. 50 conservators are part of the alumni of this Program including fellows in photo conservation.

three people standing in greek and roman galleries one is male with glasses
Residency

Three artisans have been selected for the 18-month residency program sponsored by Swiss watch manufacturer Vacheron Constantin.

At the Museum and around the world, The Met’s conservators and research scientists carry forward a proud tradition of discovery and preservation that has shaped the Museum since its founding. Their ongoing investigations built on technical research deepen our understanding of the objects under our care and help us understand their global contexts, and in collaboration with colleagues around the world, they lead projects that reveal new insights into artistic traditions across time and cultures. From on-site excavations to international conservation training programs, The Met is actively advancing global scholarship and best practices—ensuring that the world’s cultural heritage is preserved and understood for generations to come.

Archaeologists and laborers excavate an ancient site, surrounded by mountains under a cloudy sky, in a historical black-and-white photograph.
Project

Explore The Met’s excavations at Nishapur, a city in northeastern Iran. Related material is on view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Galleries 452 and 453.

Group photo of participants of the Indian Conservation Fellowships Pilot Program 2013–2015 Seminar
Collaboration
Objects Conservation staff collaborate with cultural heritage professionals worldwide on conservation and historic preservation projects.
4 women in headscarfs and one man in a brown jacket gathered around a white table looking at a book.
Collaboration

MEPPI is a broad initiative to promote the preservation of photograph collections in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula through the Eastern Mediterranean.

Conservator Sophie Scully and two curatorial fellows gather around a table in the Paintings Conservation studio. One of the fellows looks at a Flemish painting through a microscope while the others observe.
Collaboration
Paintings Conservation staff regularly partner with colleagues in cultural heritage institutions on conservation and preservation projects.
The ARCHE collaboration logo depicting a series of linked arch bridges.
Collaboration

The ARCHE partnership improves our scientific understanding of the material dimension of museum collections.

The Met Licensing Program collaborates with leading brands to share the beauty of the Museum’s unparalleled holdings with art lovers around the world. Together we endeavor to create exceptional products that take inspiration from artworks and techniques seen in The Met collection. The proceeds from every Met licensed product support the Museum’s collection, study, conservation, and presentation of 5,000 years of art.

Warm and inviting living room featuring curved sofas, a round table with flowers, elegant lighting, and styled decor elements.

Browse our award-winning collaboration with the international furniture, lighting, and home décor brand which thoughtfully reimagines historic works of art as designs for modern living.

Red hardcover book titled "ABC: An Alphabet Book of Art," featuring colorful letters and three artistic images on the cover.

Discover a range of charmingly illustrated children's books that take inspiration from 5,000 years of art, history, and culture in The Met collection.

A collection of colorful artwork in gold frames mounted on a gray wall.

Explore designs by the Japanese lifestyle brand translating highlights from The Met collection into joyful everyday essentials.

A stylish living room features a framed art TV displaying a vibrant jungle scene, complemented by a plush green sofa and plants.

Experience works from across The Met’s 19 curatorial departments from the comfort of home with the Samsung Art Store.