The Studio Museum in Harlem, the museum dedicated to Black art, reopens once again this weekend after a massive renovation. Through the decades, the museum has stayed dedicated to exploring art by artists of African descent in a way that’s both “hyper local and super global,” as Thelma Golden, the museum’s chief curator explained.
Closed for construction since 2018, the building is set to reopen with a seven-floor, 82,000-square-foot footprint that doubles the space for groundbreaking exhibitions. “This building says to the world: Harlem matters. Black art matters. Black institutions matter,” the museum’s board chairman Raymond J. McGuire said.
Visitors are invited to see these exhibits and more as of Saturday, November 15. Admission will be free for everyone that day and include art-making workshops, performances, games, giveaways and DJ sets. Celebrations will continue on Sunday, November 16, when the museum will begin its weekly day of free programming for all ages, Studio Sundays, which feature art-making workshops, guided family tours, gallery talks and storytime sessions.

























