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(New York, May 28, 2025)—The Metropolitan Museum of Art will reopen its Arts of Africa galleries on May 31, 2025. The galleries have been closed to the public since summer 2021 as part of a major redesign and renovation of the Museum’s Michael C. Rockefeller Wing.
The reenvisioned installation reintroduces visitors to The Met’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 will present original creations spanning from the medieval period to the present, including artworks such as a 12th-century fired clay figure shaped in Mali’s Inland Delta of the Niger River to the fiber creation Bleu no. 1 (2014) by Abdoulaye Konaté (born 1953, Diré, Mali), a critically acclaimed innovator based in Bamako. A fourth of the works, which are recent acquisitions and gifts from donors to celebrate this capital project, will be on display at The Met for the first time.
This major project to transform the interior of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing and reintroduce the permanent collection was undertaken in partnership with Kulapat Yantrasast of WHY Architecture in collaboration with Beyer, Blinder, Belle Architects LLP, and with The Met’s Design Department. The reconceived galleries anchor the extraordinary works within regional architectural vernaculars and pay tribute to Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks as well as highlight connections to other major world traditions. The new galleries, which are immediately adjacent to those for Greek and Roman art and European sculpture and decorative arts, underscore the deep connections with global artistic traditions represented across The Met.
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. The eight-year project’s many advisors include Kwame Anthony Appiah, Professor of Philosophy and Law at New York University; Mamadou Diouf, Leitner Family Professor of African Studies at Columbia University; Ndubuisi C. Ezeluomba, Curator, African Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; Daouda Keita, Director, National Museum Mali; and Sam Challis, Head of the Rock Art Research Institute at Witwatersrand University, Johannesburg, South Africa. A new layer of content produced for this project to afford expanded contextualization is a digital initiative that introduces Africa’s distinctive cultural landmarks and was undertaken in partnership with the World Monuments Fund (WMF) and Ethiopian-American filmmaker Sosena Solomon.
“The Met’s extraordinary collection of African art has been a wellspring of inspiration and knowledge for audiences from across New York City and beyond since 1982,” said Max Hollein, the Museum’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “These newly transformed galleries illuminate well-known works of art and new acquisitions, contextualized within groundbreaking scholarship and an array of perspectives from an international cohort of experts and researchers. This reimagined presentation of the achievements of visual artists from Africa provides a revelatory experience and a deeper understanding of this expansive survey of masterpieces.”
Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, said, “There is no place with a longer history of art than Africa—it is the very source of artistic creativity. More recently, African sculpture inspired a revolution in representation at the dawn of the 20th century. Beyond their unparalleled longevity and inventiveness, the traditions presented in these galleries constitute the heritage of a critical mass of incomparably diverse New Yorkers, who reside in what is a center of the art world. It is only fitting that the genius of African artists evident in these galleries occupy a place of distinction at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.”
Jacob K. Olupona, Professor at the Faculty of Divinity and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University, who is among the expert voices featured on the new audio guide, commented at the capital project groundbreaking: “The objects must act as springboards, bringing to life the ideas and belief systems, through our interaction with them. The Museum is an appropriate place to have meaningful dialogue about the heritage and beliefs of the peoples of Africa and their contributions to human civilizations, and to showcase the mosaic of creation and expression that Africa offers both this city and the world. One common trend reflected in cosmologies across the African continent is that our world was created in the intermingling of the cosmic forces of good and bad, and these galleries allow us to have these conversations, to explore the ideas and objects that have helped humanity survive this long, and to consider what will become.”
Gallery Design and Experience
Points of entry into the new Arts of Africa galleries highlight “Ancient Africa,” “Africa and Atlantic Coast Engagement,” and “Africa and Eastern Frontiers.” At each of those major thresholds notable contemporary works are in dialogue with The Met’s world-class art historical survey of highlights from across the African subcontinent. The works by Abdoulaye Konaté, El Anatsui, and Joël Andrianomearisoa have drawn inspiration from those historical forms of expression.
The new permanent installation foregrounds the creativity of artists across the subcontinent in relation to enduring, dynamic historical traditions. A major emphasis in the reintroduction is on authorship and biographies featured in labels accompanying the creations of some 40 recognized masters of individual artists, ranging from Ọlọ́wẹ̀ of Ìsẹ (ca. 1873–1938, EfonAlaaye, Nigeria) to Samuel Fosso (born 1962, Kumba, Cameroon) and Joël Andrianomearisoa (born 1977, Antananarivo, Madagascar). The art on display encompasses works from Mali to South Africa created from the 12th century to the last decade in a diversity of media ranging from wood sculpture and textiles to photography. The infusion of new works throughout introduces the creative expertise of female artists specializing in ceramics, textile dyeing, beadwork, and basket weaving. Throughout this new selection sculptural landmarks are integrated with the brilliant palettes of regional textile corollaries.
As visitors make their way toward The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, beyond the Marble column from the Temple of Artemis at Sardis (about 300 BCE) in the Greek and Roman Art galleries, the threshold to the Arts of Africa galleries will invoke the earliest traces of visual expression developed as far back as 100,000 years ago through an in-gallery video by Sosena Solomon, an award-winning social documentary film and multimedia visual artist, in collaboration with WMF and filmed in February 2024 at the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Tsodilo Hills. The ancient pictorial traditions featured in the video remain an integral accent introduced by indigenous Khoisan painters with natural pigments to rock surfaces across the southern African landscape.
Within the primary entrance to the Arts of Africa galleries, visitors encounter an animated map that provides an overview of the deep histories of regional polities, trade networks, and population movements that have informed cultural centers and artistic and technological developments across the continent. Beginning with the waves of migrations from eastern into southern Africa by the Khoisan as early as 150,000 BCE and extending to the shifting boundaries of present-day nation-states, this new digital feature underscores the complex economic, linguistic, and political formations connecting communities within Africa to each other and to the wider world.
WHY Architecture’s redefinition of the main gallery’s interior, with its soaring ceiling spanned by a succession of horizontal baffles that suggest ribbing, pays homage to one of Africa’s most celebrated structures, the Great Mosque of Jenne in Mali. Classified as a World Heritage Monument by UNESCO, the landmark—selected to inform the overall design—is a spectacular feat of adobe architecture. In-gallery footage filmed by art historian Susan Vogel presents the annual civic refurbishment of that living structure’s facade. Its grandeur is evoked by the majestic open central gallery anchored on either side by subsections that constitute discrete “chapters” within the survey of artistic traditions presented. Each of these more intimate lateral gallery spaces is introduced by a brief history of that region. The distinct character of the built environments developed in these cultural centers is underscored visually in the display through foregrounding signature architectural elements.
The introductory chapters of the Arts of Africa galleries to the left and right—“Through African Lenses” and “The Deep History of the Sahel”—feature contrasting idioms. In the first of these, a wall is dedicated to thematic selections of photographic works that give a sense of mastery of that medium only decades after its invention while also placing them in dialogue with works in other media. The focus of the rotations for this display in the wing’s inaugural year is the original approach to self-portraiture by three individuals. The iconic photographs sourced from the landmark promised gift of photographs from the collection of Artur Walther and the Walther Family Foundation range from those of Seydou Keïta (1921/3–2001, Bamako, Mali), made during the independence era, to a recent portrait by Zanele Muholi (born 1972, Umlazi, South Africa). These photographs will be juxtaposed with works from The Met’s collections and other critical loans to explore the evolution of self-portraiture from photography’s earliest days. The acclaimed series African Spirits (2008) by Samuel Fosso (born 1962, Kumba, Cameroon) is highlighted along the length of the threshold between the Rockefeller Wing and the Modern and Contemporary Art galleries. In this tribute to heroes of the fight for freedom and justice of the African diaspora, Fosso adopts the personae of Martin Luther King Jr., Tommie Smith, Angela Davis, Patrice Lumumba, Léopold Sédar Senghor, and Aimé Césaire, among others.
On the opposite side of the gallery divide, a selection of works represents idioms mastered across present-day Mali from the medieval times to the last century. The premium placed on a diversity of media, from fired clay and woven textiles to wood sculpture, defines the approach of this gallery rehang. Among the featured works are examples of the vast repertoire of Dogon ceremonial masks worn in burial performances and to mark the end of mourning. Included are quotidian forms such as that of the walu (roan antelope) admired for its beauty and strength, as well as forms associated with abstract concepts, such as the towering 110-centimeter-high Imina Na (Great Mask) that served to commemorate an entire generation. Contextualization of the sculptural elements is afforded through the display of a full kanaga masquerade ensemble as well as in-gallery footage of a 2012 performance filmed in Djiguibombo village in the Bandiagara Escarpment and directed by Dr. Polly Richards and the National Museum of Mali. Subsequent chapters are devoted to the visual arts from centers across west, central, and southern Africa that feature the following constellations of highlights.
A spectacular royal throne is a centerpiece among the outstanding creations produced by artists from across Cameroon’s Grassfields region. Commissioned during the late 19th century by Njoutou, the leader of Bansoa, this elaborate seat of office encased in blue beadwork features a royal couple holding forth insignia of leadership standing above a leopard. It is one of only a few examples of its kind in a U.S. museum, and such elaborately decorated thrones represent the most exalted art form historically associated with monarchs in Grassfields principalities.
Among the artistic landmarks displayed at The Met for the first time is a door commissioned for the Ise palace in southwestern Nigeria during the first decade of the 20th century. Yoruba city-states have produced an extraordinary concentration of sculptural talent, and in anticipation of the renovation of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, representation of their achievements has been immeasurably strengthened through notable gifts to the collection, such as this Yoruba portal, that is being exhibited at The Met for the first time. Its author was a leader among these, recognized locally through praise poetry as well as by art historians in a monograph and at The Met through several key works. His name was Ọlọ́wẹ̀ of Ìsẹ (ca. 1873–1938, Efon-Alaaye, Nigeria).
At the epicenter of the Africa galleries are works relating to the Kongo civilization. The longevity of its engagement with the West will be evident in works as diverse as 17th-century Kongolese representations of Christ commissioned by its leadership to densely carved spiraling imagery detailing the violence of the slave trade engraved on ivory tusks produced for European consumption. An electrifying presence is the Kongo Mangaaka Power Figure, a commanding personification of a mighty force of law and order poised to spring into action. Portrayed as a monumental chiefly figure, its assertive stance and gesture of leaning forward with hands placed akimbo on the hips were intended to preemptively challenge those who might transgress. Carved by a Kongo master sculptor, Mangaaka served as a vessel into which the nganga, or priest, responsible for its consecration and activation summoned Mangaaka’s immaterial presence. The dense accumulation of metal additions to the surface is a record of occasions when the force was activated.
In 1980, Met curator Susan Mullen Vogel organized the exhibition The Buli Master and Other Hands to introduce The Met’s first notable African art acquisition: a lupona, or Luba royal seat of office, from the mineral rich Katanga region of southeastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Prioritized for its attribution to a pre-20th century master, the work remains an icon of the collection. During the mid-20th century, Flemish anthropologist Frans Olbrechts identified a number of works from Central Africa as the creative output of a master of “the long-faced style,” or master from the town of Buli (1947). Olbrechts questioned the anonymity of African artists and advocated for intensive firsthand interviews and field research. The Buli Master corpus has since grown to some 20 works believed to be the output of Ngongo ya Chintu and several generations of his workshop based at the crossroads of the Luba and neighboring Hemba regions.
Since the inauguration of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing in 1982, scholarship has increasingly emphasized the careers and achievements of modern and contemporary artists from Africa engaged with international art movements in parallel to those producing for vibrant living regional traditions. The inaugural special exhibition organized for the wing’s new In-Focus gallery contextualizes the gift to The Met of Tabaski, a masterpiece by Senegalese Modernist Iba Ndiaye (born 1928, St. Louis, Senegal–2008, Paris, France), who drew inspiration from diverse source material across the Museum—including images by Rembrandt, Goya, Degas, and Soutine, and key works of African sculpture, textiles, and metalwork. Iba Ndiaye: Between Latitude and Longitude will be on view May 31, 2025, to May 31, 2026, and will be accompanied by an international symposium on February 28. Ndiaye is a foundational figure of African Modernist painting, yet his contributions remain largely unknown to the American public. This reassessment of his legacy at The Met, one of the major institutions whose collections he studied, takes place 55 years after his creation of Tabaski. More information is available in the exhibition press release.
Planning and Partnerships
Mamadou Diouf, Leitner Family Professor of African Studies and the Director of Columbia University’s Institute for African Studies and key advisor to The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, has lauded the renovation: "The extraordinary tapestry produced by the assemblage of ancient and contemporary works, exposing inherited and creative African arts and cultures, reveals the various expressions that continue to carve out a place for themselves in a changing world. The Met's undertaking is an invitation to revisit the continuous re-composition of a diverse human community, privileging the African narratives and commentaries.”
Throughout the development, planning, and execution of this ambitious capital project, central to The Met’s effort to enrich and expand the interpretation of the works on display has been collaboration between its curatorial team and national and international experts. Major benchmarks for those discussions occurred at workshops convened at the Pocantico Center in 2015 and 2023 and at the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown in February 2020. In addition to fresh research presented within the galleries through labels, wall text, animated maps, and video, the content is enriched through an audio guide featuring expert commentary by an interdisciplinary cohort of 30 leading authorities in the humanities.
In 2022, The Met and the World Monuments Fund (WMF) announced a collaboration to document a dozen major cultural landmarks in Africa that are featured as a layer of digital content highlighted in the galleries and fully accessible online. The resource provides audiences with a more expansive view of the richness of intangible artistic and architectural expression on the continent and provides broader context for understanding the Museum’s collection of sub-Saharan African art. Together, The Met and WMF jointly selected sites across sub-Saharan Africa that span antiquity to the 20th 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, in partnership with cultural experts in Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Madagascar, South Africa, Republic of Benin, Botswana, Uganda, and Togo. Beginning at the “Ancient Africa” threshold with an introduction to the legacy of Khoisan paintings on rock shelters, the films create bridges between the galleries and local communities whose luminaries share their expertise on the significance of major cultural sites and the challenges posed by their conservation. Short versions of three of the films are featured in the galleries—“Historic Towns of Kilwa Kisiwani and Songo Mnara, Tanzania;” “Bronze Casters of Igun Street, Benin City, Nigeria;” and “Tsodilo Hills, Botswana”—and all will be available in their entirety online and accessible via a QR code in the galleries. More information about the films is available here.
As part of a signed with Nigeria’s National Commission of Museums and Monuments (NCMM) in 2021, The Met is collaborating with NCMM to assist in developing a documentation and education initiative for its National Museum, Lagos. The effort is designed to support stewardship of its outstanding permanent collection, which is among the world’s most important repositories of African art, and to enhance access to this resource as an education tool to benefit the Nigerian public. In March 2024, The Met, the U.S. Mission to Nigeria, and Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) announced that The Met and NCMM received a grant from the U.S. Mission to Nigeria to design a centralized, digital database that will allow NCMM to develop a secure inventory of cultural objects. Currently, staff at both institutions are jointly designing and launching a pilot project with 100 masterpieces from the National Museum, Lagos collections.
Read more about The Met’s collaboration with NCMM here.
Conservation and Documentation
Conservation has been an integral part of this project from its inception, and treatments were undertaken by The Met’s Department of Objects Conservation on nearly 550 works from Africa, employing cutting-edge technologies including multiband imagining, computed x-radiography, laser scanning, and 3D printing to promote the preservation of the collections, while enriching the visitor experience.
Conservators and scientists contributed to the initial design process by advising on environmental parameters, including light levels, relative humidity, case design, and exhibition materials. Technical examinations in partnership with scientists and imaging specialists have clarified the light and humidity levels and the materials and techniques used to manufacture objects, as well as signs of use, enhancing understanding of cultural practices and exchange.
Residencies
The Met continues to engage with museum professionals, scholars, and researchers in Africa through residencies that support new research and the presentation of works in public displays. These African art residencies build on decades of academic fellowships at The Met for a distinguished international cohort of Africanists, working directly alongside the African art collection. Recent residencies include:
—, Head of Exhibitions, Directorate of Antiquities, Sites and Monuments at the National Museums of Kenya (residency dates: March–July 2023)
— Chizoba Joy Ephraim, Principal Curator at the National Museum, Lagos, Nigeria (residency dates: March–April 2023)
— Elgazafi Yousif Eshag Abdallah, Sudan’s National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums (residency dates: April–June 2024)
—Wilbard Lema, Head of Research, Curation and Conservation at the National Museum of Tanzania (residency date: April–June 2024)
— Tawanda Mukwende, an archaeologist and lecturer in Archaeology and Heritage Management at Great Zimbabwe University in Masvingo, Zimbabwe (residency dates: September–December 2024)
— Adekunle Temilade Adeniji, doctoral student at Queen's University in Canada (residency January –June 2025)
— Phillip Segadika, Head of the Archaeology and Monuments division, Botswana National Museum residency: March–June 2025)
Read more about these residencies here.
The Arts of Africa Collection
In 1969 Nelson Rockefeller announced the gift of his collection of some 500 works from sub-Saharan Africa to The Met. The Met’s galleries devoted to the arts of Africa were inaugurated in 1982 as part of the newly built Michael C. Rockefeller Wing. The installation marked a radical expansion of the canon of art presented by the Museum and has celebrated the cultural achievements of African artists and innovators for the past 40 years. Following the arrival of art from sub-Saharan Africa in The Met’s collection, major exhibitions ranging from the Buli Master and Other Hands (1980) to Master Hand: Individuality and Creativity Among Yoruba Sculptors (1997) have addressed the identity of African artists as forces of innovation within their own traditions and beyond.
The Met’s original core of mostly figurative sculpture from West and Central Africa was expanded by gifts of the Lester Wunderman collection of Dogon art and the Klaus Perls collection of royal art from the Kingdom of Benin. As recently as this year, a major gift of works by Carol Kenney will infuse the survey presented in the galleries with greater depth. Today the scope of the collection encompasses works relating to some 206 cultures identified with 39 nations.
To learn more about the history of the department, visit Making The Met: 1870–2020 and The Nelson A. Rockefeller Vision: Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas
African Art Across The Met Collection
During the closure of the Africa galleries, African arts from the Museum’s collection were featured in displays across The Met through October 6, 2024, and featured in the exhibition The African Origin of Civilization. For the first time in The Met’s history, masterpieces from the Museum’s collections from west and central Africa were presented alongside art from ancient Egypt.
As part of the initiative to introduce works from the permanent collection in dialogue with those of the institution at large, during this capital project The Met displayed highlights of its Africa collection in other permanent collection galleries, including Islamic Art (Galleries 455 and 456), Medieval Art (Gallery 304), Arms and Armor (Gallery 376), and European Sculpture and Decorative Arts (Gallery 550). These installations remained on view through February 2025.
For further reading on The Met’s ongoing engagement with the arts of Africa, see Africa in Focus.
About The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
The Met’s Michael C. Rockefeller Wing—40,000 square feet on the Museum’s south side—includes the three distinct collections of the arts of Africa, the ancient Americas, and Oceania, displaying them as discrete elements in an overarching wing that is in dialogue with the Museum’s collection as a whole.
As early as 1873, Mexican stone sculpture and Peruvian ceramics were gifts to The Met from diplomats and artists, including one of the Museum’s founders, the American painter Frederic Church. During the 1950s and 1960s, the American statesman and philanthropist Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller assembled a fine-arts survey of non-Western art traditions that included the ancient Americas as well as areas of the world not represented in the Museum’s collection, notably African and Oceanic art. In 1969, it was announced that Rockefeller’s collection would be transferred to The Met as a new department and wing. Opened to the public in 1982, the addition was named after Nelson Rockefeller’s son, Michael C. Rockefeller, who was greatly inspired by the cultures and art of the Pacific and pursued new avenues of inquiry into artistic practice during his travels there. Among the wing’s signature works are the striking Asmat sculptures he researched and collected in southwest New Guinea.
Adjacent to the new Arts of Africa galleries, the new Arts of Oceania galleries include signature monumental works from New Guinea as well as a suite of more intimate spaces dedicated to island cultures. Stone and metalwork from the ancient Americas are concentrated in the new Arts of the Ancient Americas galleries, where filtered daylight from Central Park enters through a custom-designed, state-of-the-art sloped glass wall on the south facade. A new gallery devoted to light-sensitive, ancient American textiles presents a 2,000-year history of exceptional achievements in tapestry and other fiber arts. The reenvisioning of each of these suites of galleries builds on international planning workshops and consultation with dozens of local and international leaders in the arts and humanities. Recorded interviews with an interdisciplinary cohort of experts and well-known thought leaders and personalities will be featured in audio guides, podcasts, and new digital content.
For more information about the new Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, please visit The Met’s website.
Related Programs
The Met will host an opening festival to celebrate The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing on Saturday, May 31, beginning at noon. The day of festivities will begin with three vibrant performances reflecting the arts and cultures of Africa, the ancient Americas, and Oceania. The day will feature engaging activities for visitors of all ages, including film screenings, artist demonstrations, hands-on art-making opportunities, and meaningful conversations with museum volunteers stationed throughout the permanent collection galleries. For a full list of activities and events, please visit The Met's website. During The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing’s inaugural year, an international convening planned for February 28, 2026, will be devoted to the legacy of Iba Ndiaye, a leading Modernist born in Saint Louis, Senegal. More information will be announced.
On April 25, 2025, The Met hosted a program about African art at The Met and included a discussion of the films by Sosena Solomon. The filmmaker was joined by Helene Cooper, correspondent, The New York Times; Phillip Segadika, Chief Curator for Archaeology and Monuments, Botswana National Museum; Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator in Charge, The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, The Met; and moderated by Anakwa Dwamena, journalist.
On Thursday, May 29, at 6 p.m., the films will be premiered during the 32nd edition of the New York Africa Film Festival at Brooklyn Academy of Music. Nine of the films will be screened and presented with a panel discussion featuring Solomon along with editor Lucas Groth, Audio Visual Specialist (Videography) in The Met’s Digital Department; and Stephen Battle Senior Regional Director, Africa, WMF. As part of the opening festival celebration for The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing on Saturday, May 31, all 12 films will be shown at the Museum and there will be a discussion at 3 p.m. with regional experts interviewed in the films together with Sosena Solomon and Stephen Battle, Senior Regional Director, Africa, WMF. There will also be a series of screenings in Africa; further details will be announced.
The Senegalese musical superstar Baaba Maal will perform at The Met in the Grace Rainey Rogers Auditorium in spring 2026. More details about this program will be announced.
Credits
We thank all who have made possible the renovation of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, including leadership commitments from The Carson Family Charitable Trust, Kyveli and George Economou, Bobby Kotick, Drs. Daniel and Marian Malcolm, Adam Lindemann and Amalia Dayan, Samuel H. and Linda M. Lindenbaum, Samuel and Gabrielle Lurie, The Marron Family, Naddisy Foundation, the City of New York, the Estate of Abby M. O’Neill, Andrall E. Pearson and Rappaport Family, the Estate of Ruth J. Prager, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer, Carlos Rodríguez-Pastor and Gabriela Pérez Rocchietti, Alejandro and Charlotte Santo Domingo, and the Skarstedt Family. Major support was provided by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lockwood Chilton, Jr., Mariana and Raymond Herrmann, Mary R. Morgan, and Laura G. and James J. Ross.
Events and programming related to the reopening of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing are made possible by the Breyer Family Foundation, the Ford Foundation, Samuel and Gabrielle Lurie, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and the Thompson Family Foundation. Additional support is provided by Stephen M. Cutler and Wendy N. Zimmermann, Kyveli and George Economou, Ed and Dale Mathias, the Mex-Am Cultural Foundation Inc., and two anonymous donors.
The renovation of the galleries was overseen by Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, and Doris Zhao, Project Manager.
The Arts of Africa team is led by Alisa LaGamma, Ceil and Michael E. Pulitzer Curator of African Art and Curator in Charge of The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, Jenny Peruski, Assistant Curator; and Sandro Capo-Chichi, Senior Research Associate.
The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing team includes David Rhoads, Christine Giuntini, Lauren Posada, Raychelle Osnato, Damien Marzocchi, Jessi Atwood, Matthew Noiseux, Paige Silva, and Lydia Shaw.
The conservation of these collections was overseen by Lisa Pilosi, Sherman Fairchild Conservator in Charge, Objects Conservation, with conservators Dawn Kriss, Sara Levin, Amanda Chau, Teresa Jiménez-Millas, Marijn Manuels, Carolyn Riccardelli, Chantal Stein, Marlene Yandrisevits, with additional help from the Department of Objects Conservation, as well as a team of conservation preparators dedicated to The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing collection: Matthew Cumbie, Johnny Coast, David Dawson, Sasha Newkirk, Lindsay Rowinski, Nina Ruelle, and staff preparators Warren Bennett, Andrew Estep, Jacob Goble, Laila Lott and Frederick Sager.
The Met’s Design team, overseen by Alicia Cheng, Head of Design, includes Patrick Herron, Alexandre Viault, Tiffany Kim, Maanik Chauhan, Sarah Parke, Amy Nelson, Rebecca Forgac, Eva Perez and Brian D. Schneider.
The Met’s Digital team, overseen by Douglas Hegley, Chief Digital Officer, includes Paul Caro, Hannah Chen, Skyla Choi, Mandy Kritzeck, Erin Stella and Sarah Wambold.
The design of The Michael C Rockefeller Wing was led by WHY Architecture, in collaboration with The Met’s Design Department. Beyer Blinder Belle was the executive architect and led the design of the exterior sloped glazing wall. The construction was managed by AECOM Tishman. The team collaborated with engineers including Kohler Ronan, Thornton Tomasetti, and Arup. The cases were fabricated by Goppion. The design and construction process was led by Justin Mayer (Senior Project Manager, Capital Projects) and Mabel Taylor (Associate Project Manager) of The Met's Capital Projects Department overseen by Brett Gaillard (Head of Capital Projects).
About The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded in 1870 by a group of American citizens—businessmen and financiers as well as leading artists and thinkers of the day—who wanted to create a museum to bring art and art education to the American people. Today, The Met displays tens of thousands of objects covering 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy. The Museum lives in two iconic sites in New York City—The Met Fifth Avenue and The Met Cloisters. Millions of people also take part in The Met experience online. Since its founding, The Met has always aspired to be more than a treasury of rare and beautiful objects. Every day, art comes alive in the Museum’s galleries and through its exhibitions and events, revealing both new ideas and unexpected connections across time and across cultures.
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Updated May 28, 2025
Arts of Africa, Gallery 341, The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Photo by Bridgit Beyer