Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Byname:
- the Met
- Date:
- 1870 - present
- Areas Of Involvement:
- Met Gala
- How Do You Get an Invite to the Met Gala?
News •
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the largest and most comprehensive art museum in New York City and one of the foremost in the world. The museum was incorporated in 1870 and opened two years later. The complex of buildings at its present location in Central Park opened in 1880.
Building and galleries
The Met’s main building facing Fifth Avenue, called since 2016 the Met Fifth Avenue, was designed by Richard Morris Hunt and completed in 1902. McKim, Mead, and White designed certain later additions. The American section, added in 1924, included the 1823 marble facade saved from the demolished U.S. Branch Bank on Wall Street. The remainder of the 20th-century additions were completed by the architectural firm of Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates. They included the Robert Lehman Wing (1975), with its Old Masters and Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works; the wing (1978; previously called the Sackler Wing) housing the museum’s famous Temple of Dendur, a monument given by Egypt; the American Wing (1980), a four-acre addition that was wrapped around the original building and contains the largest collection of American arts in the world; the Michael C. Rockefeller Wing (1982), which housed the arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas; the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing (1987), which displays modern and contemporary art; and the Henry R. Kravis Wing (1990), which contained sculpture and decorative arts of Europe up to the early 20th century.
Several of the museum’s galleries, including a number designed by Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates, were updated in the 21st century. A renovated and reconceived group of 15 galleries featuring the “art of the Arab lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, and later South Asia”—one of the most comprehensive collections of its type—was opened in 2011. The multiyear renovation of the Rockefeller Wing was completed in 2025, presenting the art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas as independent collections. Meanwhile, between 2016 and 2020 the Met hosted its modern and contemporary art exhibitions in the former location of the Whitney Museum of American Art, a Marcel Breuer-designed building at East 75th Street and Madison Avenue. In 2024 the Met announced plans to construct a new wing for its 20th- and 21st-century art collections. The building was designed by Mexican architect Frida Escobedo, the first woman to design a wing for the museum, and was expected to open in 2030.
Collections
The Met has important collections of Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, East Asian and Middle Eastern, Greek and Roman, European, pre-Columbian, New Guinean, Islamic, and American art, including architecture, sculpture, painting, drawings, calligraphy, prints, photographs, glass, bronzes, ceramics, textiles, metalwork, lacquerwork, furniture, period rooms, arms and armor, and musical instruments.
The Costume Institute and the Met Gala
The Met is also home to the Costume Institute, a curated collection of objects representing fashionable dress from the 15th century to the contemporary period. It was formed when the Museum of Costume Art, a separate institution that was founded in 1937, merged with the Met in 1946. At the time the Costume Institute was primarily a research center, but in 1959 it became a full curatorial department, which presented exhibitions and wrote publications. Since its inception, however, the Costume Institute has been the only curatorial department at the Met required to raise its own operating funds. The Met Gala was thus established in 1948 to finance the work of the institute and remains the primary source of the department’s funding in the 21st century.
Libraries
The Thomas J. Watson Library, built in 1964 primarily for the use of the museum staff and visiting scholars, has one of the most complete art and archaeology reference collections in the world. It is the largest of a network of dedicated libraries in the museum, including the Irene Lewisohn Costume Reference Library and the Robert Lehman Collection Library, but only the Nolen Library is open to the public.
The Met Cloisters
European art of the Middle Ages is found on display in both the Central Park complex and at the Met Cloisters, the Met’s museum of medieval art in Fort Tryon Park, northern Manhattan.