Iiu Susiraja, Zoo, 2021 Reprophoto: Tobias Fischer/Moderna Museet
© Iiu Susiraja 2025

The Art of Collecting

Expanding the Moderna Museet Collection

Stockholm, 11.10 2025 – 17.1 2027

Experience artworks that Moderna Museet has recently acquired through purchase or received as gifts. In “Art of Collecting”, the audience encounter a selection of new Swedish and international acquisitions. The exhibition, where contemporary art dominates, highlights different dimensions of collecting and the choices that shape the Moderna Museet Collection for the future.

Moderna Museet has one of Europe’s foremost collections of international modern and contemporary art. Over the past five years, over 2,000 artworks have been added to the collection.

The exhibition “The Art of Collecting” presents around 40 of the new acquisitions – including paintings, installations, video works and sculptures, spread across the exhibition’s 660 square metres.

Growing in new directions

The artworks and practises that visitors encounter in the exhibition are examples of how the Moderna Museet Collection is growing in new directions, with new voices and different perspectives.

Here you will find Outi Pieski’s textile installation “Beavvit II” (2021), which brings to mind the changes in the sky and was created with inspiration from duodji – a Sami aesthetic expression that has both a functional and spiritual dimension, –, Hans Haacke’s “The Road to Profit Is Paved with Culture” from 1976 – a montage that critically examines cultural sponsorship as a strategy to strengthen brands and deflect criticism –, and Anna Odell’s acclaimed video installation “Unknown, Woman 2009–34970”, which depicts forced care in Swedish psychiatry through a staging.

Other examples are works by Peter Geschwind, Deana Lawson, Jockum Nordström, Rose B. Simpson and Iiu Susiraja.

The artworks’ path into the collection

What determines whether an artwork should and can be included in the collection or not? What does the decision-making process look like? What stories and voices should the collection contain? What gaps should be filled and what new stories should be included?

In the exhibition’s audio guide, the audience gets an insight into the museum’s often “invisible” work with the collection – the work that is done behind the scenes. The visitor is invited, through the perspective of various museum professionals, to explore the journey artworks make as they enter the Collection and are prepared to go on display in an exhibition: from considerations before a purchase or a gift, the curator’s perspective and the conservator’s analysis of a work, to the artwork’s placement on the shelf of the depository and its final position on display in the exhibition space ready to meet the audience.

Iiu Susiraja, Zoo, 2021 Reprophoto: Tobias Fischer/Moderna Museet
© Iiu Susiraja 2025
Jann Haworth, Rhinestone Ring, 1963–1964. Photo: Tobias Fischer/Moderna Museet
© Jann Haworth 2025
Chéri Samba, J'aime la Couleur, 2005. Photo: Tobias Fischer/Moderna Museet
© Chéri Samba 2025
Anna Odell, Uknown, Woman 2009-349701, 2009 © Anna Odell/Bildupphovsrätt 2025