NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Arts 2025 Film Benefit, presented by CHANEL, will honor Academy Award-winning writer, director, and producer Sofia Coppola on November 12.
Coppola has written and directed nine feature films, winning the Best Original Screenplay Academy Award in 2004 for Lost in Translation, which she also directed. Five of Coppolas films are in MoMAs collection: The Virgin Suicides (1999), Lost in Translation (2003), Marie Antoinette (2006), Somewhere (2010), and The Bling Ring (2013). Coppola, a long-standing artistic collaborator and ambassador for CHANEL, was the subject of a 2004 film exhibition, A Work in Progress: The Films of Sofia Coppola; helped organize a 2013 exhibition dedicated to the work of her longtime collaborator Harris Savides; and has been featured in MoMAs Contenders series multiple times, most recently in 2023 with the film Priscilla.
Developing long-term relationships with artists is one of the profound privileges and responsibilities for an institution like MoMA. Sofia Coppola has been a part of the Museum's artist family since her emergence as an acclaimed director over 25 years ago, said Rajendra Roy, MoMAs Celeste Bartos Chief Curator of Film. We celebrated her in 2004 as a part of our Work in Progress series, and we are thrilled to welcome her back now as a field- leading icon.
MoMA will also present Sofia Coppola: A Tribute from October 30 through November 16, screening all nine of Coppolas feature films, as well as her short film Lick the Star (1998) in the Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters.
CHANEL has been a proud sponsor of The Museum of Modern Arts annual Film Benefit since 2011, and has served as lead sponsor of film at MoMA since 2021. As a longtime patron of art and cinema, CHANEL is committed to supporting film as one of arts most potent mediums by creating opportunities to elevate and amplify the voices of films most talented and audacious storytellers and through the preservation of cinemas legacy worldwide. CHANEL is delighted to partner with MoMA to share the Museums vast film collection and preserve this critical art form for future generations by restoring some of the industrys most treasured works.
Founded in 1935, MoMAs Department of Film cares for more than 30,000 films and 1.5 million film stills, and has one of the strongest international film collections, ranging from classics to the most innovative and experimental works of today. The Film Benefit enables the continued maintenance and growth of this important collection, as well as virtual programming and an ambitious schedule of film series, premieres, festivals, and retrospectives. Previous MoMA Film Benefit honorees include Samuel L. Jackson, Guillermo del Toro, Penélope Cruz, George Clooney, Laura Dern, Martin Scorsese, Julianne Moore, Tom Hanks, Cate Blanchett, Alfonso Cuarón, Tilda Swinton, Quentin Tarantino, Pedro Almodóvar, Kathryn Bigelow, Tim Burton, and Baz Luhrmann.