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Sprawling Expo Coming to MoMA PS1

Agnes Denes, Courtesy Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York “Wheatfield - A Confrontation: Battery Park Landfill“ (1982) by Agnes Denes.

Klaus Biesenbach, the chief curator-at-large at the Museum of Modern Art, and the director of MoMA PS1, the museum’s outpost in Long Island city, will devote the next sixth months to EXPO 1: New York, a sprawling exploration of the current state of the ecology and social and political change.

The festival’s centerpiece is “Dark Optimism,” a show by about 35 cotemporary artists based on the notion, attributed by the museum to the editor of Triple Canopy magazine, that we are on the brink of both the apocalypse and an unprecedented technological transformation that promise a brighter future. Adrián Villar Rojas, Meg Webster, Agnes Denes, Anna Betbeze and the Fluxus performance artist Joseph Beuys are among the artists whose works are included in the exhibition, which opens at MoMA PS1 on May 12 and runs through Sept. 2.

“EXPO 1: New York” focuses on some of the most pressing issues of the day,” Mr. Biesenbach said in a statement, “specifically recent ecological challenges set against a backdrop of economic and socio-political concerns that have made a dramatic impact on daily life.

Also among the festival’s offerings is an exhibition of Ansel Adams’s nature photography, drawn from MoMA’s collection; a group exhibition of New York-based young artists, cur! ated by Josh Kline, and EXPO Cinema, which the museum describes as “an evolving program” that will draw on film, video art, games, advertising, pop culture and material created by online visitors.

In addition to the art and video exhibitions at MoMA PS 1, the festival will include a component at the VW Dome 2 - a temporary cultural and educational center in the Rockways, at the southern end of the parking lot between Beach 94th and Beach 95th Streets. Lectures, art exhibitions, video screenings and performances will be presented at the dome in partnerships between the museum and arts organizations in the Rockaways and Queens County.

“Return the WrldCourtesy the artist, Marian Goodman Gallery, New York, and Kurimanzutto, Mexico “Return the World” (2012) by Adrian Villar Rojas was on view last year at Documenta 13 in Kassel, Germany.

The dome was built this month (the outer hull is expected to be completed today), and in April, MoMA PS1 will present a series of talks there, also streamed online, about architecture and the environment. The focus of the talks will be the 25 winning proposals selected from those submitted in response to the museum’s call for ideas about sustainable waterfront planning and construction, including alternative housing models, rebuilding the boardwalk, protecting the shoreline and community engagement. The proposals, which must ! be in for! m of a video under three minutes long, are due on March 15.

EXPO 1 will also include a series of daily lectures, starting May 12, by artists, writers, technologists, economists and ecologists, who will speculate about the future as they would like to see it. And the Argentinian architectural firm a77, which is known for building with recycled and salvaged materials, has been commissioned to build a colony for artists, architects and thinkers - who will inhabit it for the duration of the exhibition - in the courtyard of MoMA PS1.