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“Strike MoMA” Tour Ends With Confrontation Between Museum Security and Protesters

A walking tour of Midtown Manhattan organized by activists of the “Strike MoMA” advocacy campaign culminated in a standoff between security personnel and protesters at the Museum of Modern Art in New York today, April 30. After protesters were denied entry to the museum, the confrontation escalated when a demonstrator and former MoMA worker said she was assaulted by one of the museum’s security staffers.

Over 50 people gathered at Columbus Square shortly after 3pm for a “Ruins of Modernity Tour.” The action was the fourth installment in a 10-week series known as “Strike MoMA,” led by a number of advocacy groups to protest private philanthropy at the museum and demand a more equitable institution.

Over the last four weeks, members of a coalition called the International Imagination of Anti-National Anti-Imperialist Feelings (IIAAF) have been organizing talks and actions in a plaza across from the museum to envision a “post-MoMA future.” In particular, the groups target the museum’s dependency on controversial billionaire donors like Leon Black, whose financial ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein led to his resignation as board chair (though he remains a trustee).

Protesters unfurled banners reading “Strike MoMA” and “Protest Modernity.”

Accompanied by a loudspeaker and a marching band, the demonstrators made stops at the headquarters of BlackRock, an investment company owned by MoMA trustee Larry Fink, and “Billionaires’ Row,” a series of ultra-luxury residential skyscrapers, among other sites. They were escorted by a police force and blocked traffic at several intersections throughout Midtown.

The group made stops at several sites in Midtown, including the headquarters of BlackRock, before heading to MoMA.
Around 50 people gathered at Columbus Circle for the “Ruins of Modernity Tour.”

The group planned to conclude the walk with a tour inside MoMA itself. But upon arriving to the museum, around 4:15pm, a number of security personnel guarding the locked doors blocked their entry, citing instructions by museum leadership to do so. Visitors unaffiliated with the protest waiting to be let in, even those who had purchased tickets ahead of time, were also denied entry.

IIAAF had announced plans to conduct a tour of the museum, and demanded free entry, in an email to Glenn Lowry last week. (Shortly after Strike MoMA began its campaign, the museum implemented a policy that limits access to its lobby and garden to ticket holders, citing the rise in gun violence in the country as the reason.)

The group did not receive a response. Two weeks earlier, in an email leaked to Hyperallergic, the director had told staff that “MoMA respects the right to protest.”

Security personnel at the museum denied entrance to the demonstrators.

During the protest, four of the activists attempted to enter the museum via its nearby staff entrance a few doors down. One of them, who worked as an educator at MoMA for eight years, told Hyperallergic that she was struck in the face by a male guard several times until she fell to the floor. Several eyewitnesses who spoke to Hyperallergic confirmed the incident.

“Now, it’s personal,” said one of the protesters, who witnessed the attack.

MoMA has not responded to Hyperallergic’s request for comment.

At the entrance of the museum, the activists unfurled banners that read “Strike Modernity” and “Strike MoMA.” They proceeded to relocate to a small plaza across the street, where several group members gave speeches.

A demonstrator holds placards reading “Decolonize This Museum” and “When We Breathe We Breathe Together”

“Artists need to be present, heard, and included in these mausoleums, and bring life back into them,” said KC, an artist and student at Hunter College who attended the action. “These places have to be more in tune with community. They should be used not to divide, but instead to bridge the community.”

A plaque made by the group Artists for a Post-MoMA Future had been installed at the plaza. “This is not an artwork,” the plaque read. “This is a de-occupation of privately-owned public space. Right here, at this very moment, art workers, organizers, activists, thinkers, friends, lovers, and teachers are free to imagine an exit from the institution of MoMA and the systemic harm it perpetuates.”

A text by Artists for a Post-MoMA Future displayed in a plaza across from the museum.
Protesters relocated to a plaza across the street to continue the action.

“Glenn Lowry received a letter from us a week ago, but he’s such a coward that he let his security bear this confrontation,” said artist and activist Shellyne Rodriguez, addressing the crowd that gathered outside the museum. “This is what they do, they push Black and Brown people to the front.”

“This was the first time we knocked on their door, but it won’t be the last,” a member of Strike MoMA declared toward the end of the action.

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