Every artwork holds a memory, and every city both consumes and reshapes identity. In the case of Japanese American sculptor Isamu Noguchi, New York proved capable of doing both. To honour a creative bond that left an indelible mark on his artistic vision, The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum has inaugurated the exhibition Noguchi’s New York, an investigation that seeks to convey the complexity of this relationship through works, models, photographs, and archival materials.
The aim of Kate Wiener, curator at The Noguchi Museum in Queens, is to highlight a trajectory through which the influence of New York’s material, social, and political fabric on Noguchi’s work can emerge—despite a career marked by travels between Paris, Tokyo, and Mexico City. From 1922, when he arrived in the city at the age of seventeen, until his death in 1988, the metropolis remained a constant interlocutor—at times complicit, often hostile—which he persistently sought to reshape through his vision of urban space.
The exhibition begins with Noguchi’s early years in New York—his portrait busts, his MacDougal Alley studio, and his connections with the city’s avant-garde—and moves toward the major public commissions that helped define the urban landscape of Manhattan: Red Cube, the Sunken Garden at Chase Manhattan Bank Plaza, and News, the plaque for the Associated Press Building, his first public commission realized in the United States. Alongside these are photographs and materials documenting works that were completed but later altered or destroyed, such as his interiors for the Time & Life Building and the public work Shinto for the lobby of the Bank of Tokyo in downtown Manhattan.
One of the most compelling sections, however, focuses on unrealised projects: playgrounds, plazas, and gardens conceived as environments for spontaneous and unstructured experimentation. Models for playgrounds—Play Mountain, Contoured Playground, and the United Nations playground—brought to life in the museum galleries through short animated films, reveal a Noguchi who conceived sculpture as collective space, as a civic possibility. Yet many of these projects encountered political resistance: Robert Moses, the city’s powerful urban planner and parks commissioner, systematically blocked his proposals.
The museum’s curatorial approach thus amplifies a sense of “lost futures” that runs throughout the exhibition, offering a glimpse of a possible New York—an alternative to the one that was ultimately built. In this light, Noguchi’s New York includes an additional section of materials related to recently discovered projects and commissions, including a contoured sculpture garden for MoMA and play equipment designed for the monkeys at the Bronx Zoo.
…What made me do things [for New York]?...It’s not just a job. Cause I really don’t do it for money… It's simply a kind of gesture towards a faithfulness to one's idealism…
Isamu Noguchi
Exhibition: Noguchi's New York Curated by: Kate Wiener Location: Noguchi Museum, New York, United States Dates: February 4 through September 13, 2026
Opening image: Red Cube, Isamu Noguchi, 1968
