MoMA PS1 Names 53 Artists for Ambitious Survey of New York’s Art Scene

MoMA PS1 has revealed the 53 artists who will participate in Greater New York, the Queens museum’s quinquennial devoted to New York City’s art scene.

Opening on April 16, this edition of Greater New York will mark PS1’s 50th anniversary, and rather than bringing on any outside curators, the museum has this time leaned on its staff to organize the show. The exhibition’s curatorial team includes director Connie Butler, chief curator and director of curatorial affairs Ruba Katrib, associate curators Jody Graf and Elena Ketelsen, assistant curator Kari Rittenbach, curatorial assistant Sheldon Gooch, and curatorial coordinator Andrea Sánchez.

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Unlike the Whitney Biennial, which has historically revolved around a theme chosen by its curators, Greater New York is defined by the location where its artists are based. This time around, the show is heavy on artists in the early and middle stages of their career. Largely bucking a trend seen at biennials around the world, it features just one dead artist: the painter Jay Carrier, who died not long before the exhibition was first announced last year.

This is the first time since 2010 that the Greater New York, now in its sixth edition, has coincided with the Whitney Biennial. There is minimal overlap between the two exhibitions’ artists lists, which share participants such as Taína Cruz and Akira Ikezoe.

Both shows precede yet another recurring New York art exhibition, the New Museum Triennial, which is slated to take place later this year.

In an email to ARTnews, Katrib said, “The artists participating in Greater New York 2026 reflect over a year of research and studio visits by the PS1 curatorial team, as well as the extensive artistic networks we examined in the process. Our lively conversations have led to an exhibition that captures a moment in time— a snapshot of artists shaped by, and actively shaping, this city: its rhythms, its layers, its potentials, its absurdities, and its challenges. They do so not through grand gestures, but with verve and intelligence.”

The artist list for the 2026 edition of Greater New York follows below.

Marie Angeletti (b. 1984, Marseille, France)

Sophie Becker (b. 1993, San Francisco, CA)

Jay Carrier (1963–2025, b. Six Nations Reserve)

Cevallos Brothers (b. Ecuador)

Chang Yuchen (b. 1989, Shanxi, China)

Devlin Claro (b. 1995, Queens, NY)

Mary Helena Clark (b. 1983, Santee, SC)

Taína Cruz (b. 1998, New York, NY)

Janiva Ellis (b. 1987, Oakland, CA)

Sophie Friedman-Pappas (b. 1995, New York, NY)

Covey Gong (b. 1994, Hunan, China)

Mekko Harjo (b. 1987, Los Angeles, CA)

Rachel Handlin (b. 1995, New York, NY)

fields harrington (b. 1986, Sacramento, CA)

Hardy Hill (b. 1993, Wilmington, DE)

Candace Hill-Montgomery (b. 1945, Queens, NY) 

Arlan Huang (b. 1948, Bangor, ME)

Akira Ikezoe (b. 1979, Kochi, Japan)

Esteban Jefferson (b. 1989, New York, NY)

Kite (b. 1990, Los Angeles, CA)

Coco Klockner (b. 1991, Cleveland, OH)

Marc Kokopeli (b. 1987, Seattle, WA)

André Magaña (b. 1992, Lagunitas, CA)

Vijay Masharani (b. 1995, Bay Area, CA)

Taro Masushio (b. Japan)

Win McCarthy (b. 1986, Brooklyn, NY)

Dean Majd (b. 1990, Queens, NY)

Metoac Indigenous Collective (est. 2025)

Dean Millien (b. 1972, Brooklyn, NY)

Ian Miyamura (b. 1991, Kailua, HI) 

Kameron Neal (b. 1992, Raleigh, NC)

Louis Osmosis (b. 1996, Brooklyn, NY)

Piero Penizzotto (b. 1998, Queens, NY)

Georgica Pettus (b. 1997, New York, NY)

Maria Elena Pombo (b. 1988, Caracas, Venezuela)

Nickola Pottinger (b. 1986, Kingston, Jamaica)

Farah Al Qasimi (b. 1991, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates)

Kameelah Janan Rasheed  (b. 1985, East Palo Alto, CA)

Red Canary Song (est. 2018, Queens, NY)

G. Rosa-Rey (b. 1955, Isabela, Puerto Rico)

Coumba Samba (b. 2000, New York, NY)

Cinthya Santos-Briones (b. 1983, Mexico)

Symara Sarai (b. 1994, Portland, OR)

Rezarta Seferi (b. 1990, Brooklyn, NY) 

Tiffany Sia (b. 1988, Hong Kong)

Sofía Sinibaldi (b. 1992, Guatemala City, Guatemala)

Kenneth Tam (b. 1982, Queens, NY)

Tom Thayer (b. 1970, Chicago Heights, IL)

Julia Wachtel (b. 1956, New York, NY)

Kristin Walsh (b. 1989, Emerald Isle, NC)

Poyen Wang (b. 1987, Taiwan)

Women’s History Museum (est. 2015, New York, NY)

Cici Wu (b. 1989, Beijing, China)

Correction, February 10, 2026, 10:10am: An earlier version of this article misstated that Coco Klockner was participating in both Greater New York and the Whitney Biennial this year. Akira Ikezoe is, in fact, featured in both exhibitions.