
The story
The Museum of Modern Art opened in November 1929, nine days after the Wall Street Crash, which tells you something about the nerve behind it. It was founded by three women, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, Lillie P. Bliss and Mary Quinn Sullivan, who were frustrated that New York's great museums would not take living, modern artists seriously. They started in a few rented rooms on Fifth Avenue with a loan show of Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cézanne and Seurat, and the idea caught on fast.
Its first director, Alfred H. Barr, then 27, gave the young museum its shape. He argued that modern art was one connected story running from Post-Impressionism through Cubism and abstraction, and he built departments not only for painting but for film, photography, design and architecture, which most museums treated as beneath them. That is why a chair, a helicopter or a typeface can share the institution with the paintings.
And the paintings are among the most reproduced on earth. Van Gogh's Starry Night, with its rolling night sky, was bought in 1941. Down the halls are Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, the jagged 1907 canvas that opened the door to Cubism, Monet's wall-filling Water Lilies, Dalí's melting clocks in The Persistence of Memory, and Warhol's soup cans. The building itself has been rebuilt and enlarged several times on the same block of West 53rd Street, most recently in a 2019 expansion that added galleries and put more of the collection on view.
Collection
42 works
The Starry NightVincent van Gogh, 1889
The Sleeping GypsyHenri Rousseau, 1897
Broadway Boogie WoogiePiet Mondrian, 1942
Suprematist Composition: White on WhiteKazimir Malevich, 1918
The City RisesUmberto Boccioni, 1910
The DreamHenri Rousseau, 1910
Hope IIGustav Klimt, 1907
Dynamism of a Soccer PlayerUmberto Boccioni, 1913
L'Atelier RougeHenri Matisse, 1911
Opus 217. Against the Enamel of a Background Rhythmic with Beats and Angles, Tones, and Tints, Portrait of M. Félix Fénéon in 1890Paul Signac, 1890
Twittering MachinePaul Klee, 1922
La Goulue at the Moulin RougeHenri de Toulouse-Lautrec, 1890
The BatherPaul Cézanne, 1885
The Moon and the EarthPaul Gauguin, 1893
Bride and groomAmedeo Modigliani, 1915
The Channel at Gravelines, EveningGeorges Seurat, 1890
Piano LessonHenri Matisse, 1916
Reclining NudeAmedeo Modigliani, 1917
The ParkGustav Klimt, 1909
The Seed of the AreoiPaul Gauguin, 1892
The StormEdvard Munch, 1893
Turning Road at MontgeroultPaul Cézanne, 1898
View from the Dunes with Beach and Piers, DomburgPiet Mondrian, 1909
At the Milliner'sEdgar Degas, 1882
Dance (I)Henri Matisse, 1909