LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- MoMA PS1 announced a full slate of programming and celebrations for its 50th anniversary year. To kick off the anniversary, last month the museum removed financial barriers to entry by launching free admission for all visitors, becoming the largest free museum in New York City. Hallmark anniversary programming includes the much-anticipated sixth edition of Greater New York, PS1s signature survey of New York artists, which will span the entirety of the building beginning April 16, 2026.
A large-scale public celebration of MoMA PS1s 50th Anniversary will take place on April 18, the opening weekend of Greater New York, featuring family programs, activations by community partners, local food vendors, and more. Additional programming in PS1s anniversary year also includes a major outdoor commission by Precious Okoyomon in the courtyard, a historic survey of Black artists working in abstraction, an archival exhibition examining the history of fashion at PS1, a publication on the museums Homeroom program, and the first US survey of Teresa Margolles, organized with The Museum of Modern Art. The anniversary year also includes a special season of Warm Up, the museums signature summer music series, and the 50th Anniversary Gala honoring founder Alanna Heiss and former MoMA Director Glenn Lowry.
GREATER NEW YORK 2026
April 16August 17, 2026
Performance Program: May 2, May 30, June 27
Spanning the entirety of the building, PS1s signature survey of artists living and working in the New York City area returns for its sixth edition, coinciding with the museums 50th anniversary. Greater New York 2026 brings into focus over 50 multidisciplinary artists in the formative years of their careers. This highly anticipated iteration will encompass site-specific commissions, new productions, and performances, alongside important recent works that address todays most urgent cultural concerns. Organized for the first time by MoMA PS1s full curatorial team, the exhibition emphasizes the forces that shape daily life in the city today, as well as strategies of resistance and adaptation in the face of increased surveillance, economic precarity, and shifting technologies. Greater New York 2026 registers an optimism and anxiety generated through artists attention to the layered, lived textures of New York City. A ticketed party celebrating the artists will be held on the evening of April 24, featuring live music and DJ sets.
50th ANNIVERSARY BLOCK PARTY
April 18, 2026
Held during the opening weekend of Greater New York, the 50th-Anniversary Block Party will feature activations by community partners, family activities, local food vendors, and music sets across the museums public plaza, courtyard, and galleries.
50TH ANNIVERSARY GALA May 12, 2026
MoMA PS1s 50th Anniversary Gala honors Alanna Heiss, founder, and Glenn D. Lowry, former David Rockefeller Director of The Museum of Modern Art. The host committee for the event is made up of artists from across the museums 50-year history, including Cecily Brown, Mary Heilmann, Ralph Lemon, Glenn Ligon, Julie Mehretu, Precious Okoyomon, Martin Puryear, Alan Saret, and Hank Willis Thomas.
COURTYARD COMMISSION: PRECIOUS OKOYOMON
Summer 2026Summer 2028
The Courtyard Commission series is a major new program that invites an artist to transform the museums courtyard for a period of two years. For the inaugural Courtyard Commission, Precious Okoyomon (Nigerian-American, b. 1993) will produce a living forest featuring a large-scale, interactive bear sculpture the artists signature motif which resembles an oversized childrens toy. The forest, developed in collaboration with the nursery issima, will grow into an ever-morphing woodland of trees, exotic flowers, weeds, and boulders. Visitors are invited to venture into the bear's body, where they can experience a multi-sensory installation before exiting through its mouth.
WARM UP
Summer 2026
The 50th-anniversary edition of Warm Up features expanded musical acts that nod to three decades of the program, the longest running music series in a museum. Since 1998, Warm Up has presented experimental and avant-garde music that forms an integral part of PS1s multidisciplinary programming across under-known subcultures, scenes, and communities. An influential series that amplifies emerging and legendary performers alike, Warm Up has presented renowned DJs and producers such as Honey Dijon, SOPHIE, DJ Spooky, Yasunao Tone, Easyfun, Arca, and Crystallmess. Today, the program foregrounds international and diasporic perspectives within emergent generations of experimental and club music. Building on the growing resurgence of nightlife genres, the series also contextualizes historic figures and regional sounds for new audiences. Warm Up offers an environment for unique encounters between local and international art and music audiences within the setting of a premiere cultural institution. Additionally, a host committee of five artists, musicians, and writers active across New York Citys club and independent music ecosystems will be announced.
PRINTED MATTERS NY ART BOOK FAIR
September 2427, 2026
Printed Matters NY Art Book Fair (NYABF) is a beloved celebration of artists books. Celebrating the 50th anniversaries of both MoMA PS1 and Printed Matter, NYABF 2026 will feature interdisciplinary artists, collectives, small presses, self-publishing artists, rare book dealers, institutions, and distributors. The 2025 NY Art Book Fair marked a long-awaited return to MoMA PS1, where it was held from 2009 to 2019, a pivotal decade that established NYABF as a cornerstone for the distribution of artists books and the preeminent gathering place to celebrate the form. NYABF also offers a discursive platform for engagement in the field of artists book publishing through book launches, lectures, exhibitions, discussions, performances, and workshops.
TERESA MARGOLLES
Fall 2026Winter 2027
In a collaboration with The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA PS1 will present the first US survey of artist Teresa Margolles (Mexican, b. 1963), including major installations and new work. The exhibition comprises large-scale sculptures, photographs, and video made over the past three decades throughout the museums expansive third-floor galleries. Trained as a forensic pathologist, Margolles has created a distinctive body of work that examines, with both compassion and rage, the implications of transnational violence, with particular attention to the US-Mexico border. Across media, her works focus on the traces of displacement, gender violence, and societal neglect. Through her long-term forensic research projects, minimalist vocabulary, and engagement with vulnerable communities, Margolles has coined a singular artistic language.
FASHION ARCHIVE AND HISTORY AT PS1
Fall 2026Winter 2027
Building on its multidisciplinary history, MoMA PS1 will present an exhibition that draws on archival material from the museums fashion program, which began in the late 1970s.
HARD ART
November 5, 2026March 2027
The fall season is headlined by Hard Art, an exhibition exploring the history of engagement with abstraction by Black artists. Featuring work from the 1970s through the present by over 40 artists, the show builds on the historic exhibition Afro-American Abstraction, curated by April Kingsley at PS1 in 1980. Hard Art inserts more conceptually driven practices engaged with abstraction often incorporating sculpture, video, or sound into a history largely dominated by painting and the legacy of modernism. Its title derives from Bradleys description of The DeLuxe Show, which leveraged abstractions perceived opacity and complexity as a prompt for deepened engagement with art. Organized thematically, Hard Art traces the legacy of artists such as Bowling, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ed Clark, Sam Gilliam, and Suzanne Jackson, juxtaposed with new and recent works by Torkwase Dyson, Nikita Gale, Rindon Johnson, Andy Robert, Carolyn Lazard, and SoiL Thornton. Together, these cross-generational conversations emphasize the enduring relevance and increasing urgency of abstraction in shaping the current political imaginary.
HOMEROOM: ARTISTS AGAINST THE BOMB
Fall 2026Winter 2027
Artists Against the Bomb (AATB), an international artistic campaign advocating for universal nuclear disarmament, will present an exhibition in Homeroom. Rooted in an urgent belief that meaningful change arises through collective action and public refusal, instead of solutions from the top, AATBs calls to action span posters, design, film, photography, literature, music, sculpture, and ephemera. Organized by Estudio Pedro Reyes and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize, the presentation in Homeroom will highlight contributions by artists with ties to MoMA PS1 including Regina José Galindo, Frieda Toranzo Jaeger, and Keith Haring alongside newly commissioned works.