New York in May 2026 feels like the city is in full creative swing: major museums are deep into their 2026 programs, and galleries across Chelsea, the Lower East Side, and Uptown are packed with new openings. For a Hakyarts‑style reader, this is a great month to see how bold, contemporary programming lives alongside historical blockbusters—and to steal visual ideas for your own prints and interior styling.
MoMA: Marcel Duchamp and Beyond
The Museum of Modern Art remains one of the anchors of the city’s art calendar, and May 2026 is no exception.
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Marcel Duchamp
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MoMA’s retrospective on Marcel Duchamp runs from April 12 to August 22, 2026, making it a prime May highlight. Spanning nearly 300 pieces across six decades, the show revisits his Cubist beginnings, radical readymades, and enduring influence on modern and contemporary art.
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For print‑oriented readers, this is a masterclass in composition, minimal intervention, and conceptual clarity: a lot of visual language you can translate into restrained, idea‑driven wall art.
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Frida and Diego: The Last Dream
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Another MoMA standout, running from May 14 to June 5, 2026, is Frida and Diego: The Last Dream, a joint exhibition celebrating Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera created in conjunction with the Metropolitan Opera’s production of El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego.
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The mix of painting, design, and operatic narrative makes this visually rich and emotionally layered, good for readers who like strong color and storytelling.
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MoMA PS1 – Greater New York 2026
Out in Long Island City, MoMA PS1 offers a very different flavor: raw, experimental, and local‑focused.
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Greater New York 2026
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This sixth edition of the quinquennial Greater New York survey runs from April 16 onward, with a performance program stretching into May and June. It features 53 artists and collectives from the New York area, with over 150 works in a mix of media, from painting and photography to animation, scenography, and site‑specific installation.
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The show is organized around daily life in the city, surveillance, accelerating technology, and strategies of resistance—themes that lend themselves to socially conscious, slightly edgy interior art.
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This is a strong pick for readers who want to see where contemporary art is actually happening in the city, not just where it’s being canonized.
Metropolitan Museum of Art – Renaissance and Contemporary
The Met continues to swing between classical masterpieces and contemporary gestures.
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Raphael: Sublime Poetry
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Raphael: Sublime Poetry runs from March 29 to June 28, 2026, covering the Renaissance master’s drawings, prints, and paintings.
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For a Hakyarts‑style reader, this is a reference point for harmony, composition, and soft color palettes—perfect for softening a more minimal, modern wall arrangement.
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Public and street‑scale interventions
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While the Met grounds its classical program, the city’s public‑art ecosystem is quietly shifting the mood:
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The Public Art Fund’s 2026 program includes works like Woody De Othello: Guardian Spirit in Brooklyn Bridge Park, running from May 5, 2026, through March 8, 2027—a large, accessible, and often playful counterpoint to museum‑based art.
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This kind of free, city‑embedded work is ideal for anyone who wants to “feel” the local art scene without a museum ticket.
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May Gallery Openings: A Snapshot
Beyond the big institutions, New York’s May 2026 gallery calendar is famously dense.
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Chelsea, Tribeca, and the Lower East Side
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Listings platforms show dozens of gallery exhibitions opening or peaking in May, from painting surveys (Willem de Kooning, emerging painters) to younger‑artist solo shows and conceptual group projects.
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For a short trip, you can easily build a “gallery crawl” in one neighborhood, then reward yourself with a museum visit the next day.
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