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Here are all the art exhibits coming to the Metropolitan Museum of Art this fall 2024

Explore the Italian Renaissance, ancient Egypt and 1700s Paris.

Rossilynne Skena Culgan
Things to Do Editor
Met Museum
Photograph: Shutterstock
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This fall, explore the Italian Renaissance, ancient Egypt, and 1700s Paris without ever leaving the Upper East Side. The Metropolitan Museum of Art will dig into these topics and many more in a powerhouse exhibition series this fall. 

"Only at the Met does the fall exhibition program feature not just a handful of major exhibitions, but more than a dozen, showcasing art, ideas, and themes from around the world and across history," the Met's Director Max Hollein said in a press release announcing the schedule of shows through December 2024. Here's what's coming to the Met this fall. 

RECOMMENDED: The best museum exhibitions in NYC right now

The Met fall 2024 exhibition schedule 

The Genesis Facade Commission: Lee Bul, Long Tail Halo 

Opened September 12

These four new sculptures combining figurative and abstract elements have found a home at The Met Fifth Avenue’s facade niches. They're visible from the street level, so you can enjoy them even without a ticket.

Mexican Prints at the Vanguard

Opened September 12

This show explores the significance of prints to artistic identity and practice in Mexico. It also digs into the resonating power of graphic arts addressing social and political issues.

Mandalas: Mapping the Buddhist Art of Tibet

Opening September 19

See imagery of Himalayan Buddhist devotional art through more than 100 paintings, sculptures, textiles, musical instruments, and an array of ritual objects

Materialized Space: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph

Opening September 30

This will be the first major exhibition to examine the career of the influential 20th-century architect. A proponent of concrete and Brutalist methodology, he designed Halston’s spectacular town house and Yale’s iconic Art and Architecture Building. The Met calls him "one of the most significant, yet underrecognized architects of the 20th century."

Paris through the Eyes of Saint-Aubin

Opening September 26

Explore Paris in the 18th-century through the eyes of Gabriel de Saint-Aubin, whose prolific sketches chronicle the full spectrum of daily life in the French capital.

Siena: The Rise of Painting, 1300–1350

Opening October 13

The first major exhibition in the United States focusing on early Sienese painting, this show will examine a period of phenomenal artistic innovation and activity at the dawn of the Italian Renaissance including seminal paintings by Duccio, Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti, and Simone Martini. 

Floridas: Anastasia Samoylova and Walker Evans

Opening October 14

By concurrently presenting works by photographers Anastasia Samoylova and Walker Evans, this exhibition explores how two artists of different generations have sought to understand the state's complexity and contradictions. 

Jesse Krimes: Corrections

Opening October 28

This show will pair works made in federal prison by the artist with 19th-century photographs by French criminologist Alphonse Bertillon, who developed the first modern system of criminal identification. 

The American Wing at 100

Opening November 8

The museum will reinstall its iconic galleries as a reflection on the history of collecting American art.  

Flight into Egypt: Black Artists and Ancient Egypt, 1876–Now

Opening November 17

Explore the many ways in which Black artists and other cultural figures have engaged with ancient Egypt as a source of inspiration and identity.

The Great Hall Commission: Tong Yang-Tze, Dialogue

Opening November 21 

See two monumental works of Chinese calligraphy created for the museum's historic entry space by one of the most celebrated artists working exclusively in Chinese calligraphy today. 

Colorful Korea: The Lea R. Sneider Collection

Opening December 2

Walk through a collection of paintings, ceramics, furniture, textiles, and funerary and ritual objects, highlighting the pervasiveness of auspicious symbolism and the unpretentious dynamism in Korean art.

sculpture at Met's rooftop
Photograph: By Ian Kumamoto

On view now

  • Collecting Inspiration: Edward C. Moore at Tiffany & Co. through October 20
  • The Roof Garden Commission: Petrit Halilaj, Abetare through October 27
  • Mary Sully: Native Modern through January 12, 2025
  • Ink and Ivory: Indian Drawings and Photographs Selected with James Ivory through May 4, 2025
  • The Three Perfections: Japanese Poetry, Calligraphy, and Painting from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection through August 3, 2025

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