Despite a floor plan with 82,000 square feet, exhibition galleries only comprise about 17% of the new space, placing as much emphasis on fostering education and community as on art. Education spaces and studios for the museum’s artists-in-residence occupy a large portion of the building. A lobby dominated by two staircases, one bleacher-style set sinking into the lowest floor and one leading to the galleries above, take up an immense amount of real estate.
Three major exhibitions are mounted to mark the Studio Museum’s reopening. To Be a Place chronicles the institution’s history through photographs, exhibition announcements, and historical documents. From Now: A Collection in Context presents 194 objects by 159 artists of varying prestige from the museum’s collection. The headline exhibition features an electric-light wall sculpture by Tom Lloyd, a recreation of the museum’s inaugural 1968 exhibition in a full circle moment.
Numerous other New York museums have also embarked upon building or expansion projects in the past few years. The Frick Collection’s renovation was unveiled earlier in 2025, the Met’s refreshed Michael C. Rockefeller Wing reopened in May, and Sotheby’s recently finished renovating the Breuer Building.










![DEl Kathryn Barton [Australian b. 1972] the more than human love , 2025 Acrylic on French linen 78 3/4 x 137 3/4 inches 200 x 350 cm Framed dimensions: 79 7/8 x 139 inches 203 x 353 cm](/sites/default/files/styles/image_5_column/public/ab15211bartonthe-more-human-lovelg.jpg?itok=wW_Qrve3)





