The New Yorker Radio Hour

Rewriting Art History at the Studio Museum in Harlem

Nov 18, 2025
Thelma Golden, the influential Director and chief curator of the Studio Museum in Harlem, shares insights from her pivotal role in reshaping the institution. She discusses the importance of art in community spaces, highlighting Lorraine O'Grady’s work and its societal implications. The conversation touches on the museum's mission to uplift artists of the African diaspora amid cultural challenges. Golden also reflects on the ambitious $300 million rebuild and how her early career shaped her vision for museums as spaces for engaging identity and ideas.
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ANECDOTE

Reopening Tour Amid Construction

  • Thelma Golden guided David Remnick through the new Studio Museum during finishing installation and construction work.
  • She described the opening as both triumphant and immediate despite ongoing site activity.
INSIGHT

Location As Mission

  • The Studio Museum chose to remain in Harlem to root Black contemporary art in its community context.
  • The location affirms the museum's mission and resists relocating to tourist-heavy museum districts.
ANECDOTE

Frames Into The Street

  • Golden highlighted Lorraine O'Grady's 1983 parade performance photographs that brought frames into the street.
  • The work literally moved museum frames into public life to affirm art's power in the community.
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