(New York and Paris, October 21, 2025)—At a press conference in Paris today, The Metropolitan Museum of Art announced that it will unveil a new suite of sculptures by Liu Wei (born 1972, Beijing, China) next year in the niches of its Fifth Avenue facade, marking the artist’s first major project in the United States. Liu, known for his monumental and evocative sculptural installations, will bring his observations of the present to the urban and historical contexts of The Met. The Genesis Facade Commission: Liu Wei will be on view from September 17, 2026, through June 8, 2027.
The exhibition is presented by Genesis.
“Liu Wei’s sculptures for The Genesis Facade Commission are sure to reflect the curiosity, innovation—and even humor—he is known for," said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “This commission also reflects the spirit of The Met’s Tang Wing for Modern and Contemporary Art, opening in 2030, where global perspectives and boundary-pushing artistic practices like Liu Wei’s will be at the heart of how we present art of our time. We are honored to work with Liu Wei to expand the possibilities of the iconic Fifth Avenue facade with his first major project at an American institution.”
“For this commission, Liu Wei will use his dynamic language of reconfiguration and assemblage to address conflicts and contradictions in society,” said Lesley Ma, Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met and curator of the project. “For me, his work always compellingly pierces through perceptions of reality with a blend of rawness and refinement. I look forward to seeing how he challenges our expectations for the classical niches and for public sculptures.”
“The Genesis Facade Commission allows us to continually rethink how The Met introduces itself to each visitor and to the world. Liu Wei’s clever remixes of readymade motifs transform the everyday into the miraculous, and his sculptures’ beguiling interplay between contemplation, surprise, and revelation is also the very business of The Met,” said David Breslin, Leonard A. Lauder Curator in Charge of the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art. “As we look ahead to the opening of the new Tang Wing in 2030, The Genesis Facade Commissions stand as The Met’s most visible and dynamic platform for contemporary art, bringing our present and future ambitions to the fore.”
“To dialogue with the tremendous legacy of human civilization through The Met’s Genesis Facade Commission makes me so excited and anxious,” said Liu Wei. “What a challenge and a blessing.”
Liu Wei’s project for The Met’s Fifth Avenue facade will be the seventh in a series of commissions for the historic exterior, and it is the third under the multiyear partnership with Genesis to support the annual contemporary art commission. His new works for the niches will play with perspective and scale and address cycles of rupture, resistance, mending, and creating in history. Instead of a totalizing narrative, Liu will present composite sculptures made with a variety of materials that provoke complex feelings and reactions amid uncertainties in contemporary life.
This project is the latest in The Met’s series of contemporary commissions in which the Museum invites artists to create new works of art, establishing a dialogue between the artist’s practice, The Met collection, the physical Museum, and The Met’s audiences. These commissions—featuring artists Wangechi Mutu, Hew Locke, Carol Bove, Nairy Baghramian, Lee Bul, and most recently, Jeffrey Gibson—are a cornerstone of The Met’s expanding Modern and Contemporary Art department, which continues to grow in scope through new acquisitions, exhibitions, and the development of the Tang Wing—opening in 2030—which will offer a transformative new space for engaging with art from 1890 to today.
About the Artist
Since the late 1990s, Liu Wei (BFA, 1996, oil painting, China Academy of Art, Hangzhou) has addressed realities of our time through a wide range of media—from photography and painting to video, sculpture, and installation. A key figure of a pioneering generation of artists from China who sought to define “conceptual art” on their own terms against the backdrop of rapid societal
transformation, Liu has developed an oeuvre that challenges art historical tropes of abstraction, figuration, and the readymade. Known for his virtuosic command of sites and scale, he reconfigures fragments from the urban environment, historical sources, and bodily forms to create sculptural installations that evoke awe and agitation. With a sense of urgency, his work captures and critiques the reoccurring conflicts and contradictions in society with which we must contend.
The Genesis Facade Commission at The Met will be Liu’s first major presentation in the United States, following solo exhibitions in important museums in Beijing, Shanghai, Seoul, and Cleveland in the past decade. He has been featured in prestigious and historic group exhibitions, including the inaugural China Pavilion at the 51st Venice Biennale (2005); Shanghai Biennial (2004, 2010); Lyon Biennale (2007, 2015); Sharjah Biennial (2013); Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World, Guggenheim Museum, New York, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2018); The Allure of Matter: Material Art from China, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2019); and the 58th Venice Biennale (2019), among others. Liu lives and works in Beijing, China.
About Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met
The Met’s engagement with art from 1890 to the present spans movements in modernism to contemporary practices from around the world and is represented across numerous curatorial departments. To house this renowned collection of 20th- and 21st-century art, the Museum is undergoing a full reimagining of the current modern and contemporary art galleries, to be renamed the Oscar L. Tang and H.M. Agnes Hsu-Tang Wing. Designed by architect Frida Escobedo, the first woman to design a wing in the Museum’s 155-year history, the 126,000-square-foot, five-story wing will provide more than 70,000 square feet for the display of art and include approximately 18,500 square feet of outdoor space spread across the fourth- and fifth-floor terraces. Set to open in 2030, the wing will seamlessly connect with the rest of the Museum while also addressing accessibility, infrastructure, and sustainability needs. More information is available on The Met’s website.
Credits
The Genesis Facade Commission: Liu Wei is conceived by the artist in consultation with Lesley Ma, Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met.
The exhibition will be featured on The Met’s website, as well as on social media via the hashtags #GenesisFacadeCommission and #MetLiuWei.
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October 21, 2025
The Met Names Liu Wei as The Genesis Facade Commission Artist for 2026
Four site specific sculptures by the Beijing-based artist will be revealed in fall 2026.
This is The Met’s seventh annual facade commission and the third under the Museum’s multi-year partnership with Genesis.
Contact: Julie Niemi, Ann Bailis
Communications@metmuseum.org