In the warm, welcoming new David Geffen Hall beloved musical works by the old masters coexist harmoniously alongside newly minted pieces by 20th- and 21st鈥揷entury giants. The same exhilarating mix of periods and styles can be found in the visual art that graces the transformed hall. Here鈥檚 a brief tour of the two major pieces on exhibit in the hall鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;inaugural season, as well as the 鈥減ermanent collection.鈥�

Two pieces were commissioned for the hall鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;reopening by Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in collaboration with The Studio Museum in Harlem and Public Art Fund.
1. Those heading down Broadway from the north can鈥檛 help but see the hall鈥檚 largest artwork, San Juan Heal (2022) 漏 by Nina Chanel Abney. The colorful collage pays homage to San Juan Hill, the largely Black and Puerto Rican neighborhood razed in the 1950s to make way for Lincoln Center. Two of its thirty-five panels depict San Juan Hill鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;own Thelonious Monk and Barbara Hillary, the first Black woman to reach the North and South Poles.
2. Once in the Karen and Richard LeFrak Lobby, you鈥檒l encounter the 50-foot-long video installation that dominates the Hauser Digital Wall (when concerts aren鈥檛 being streamed) 鈥� An Eclectic Dance to the Music of Time (2022) 漏 by Jacolby Satterwhite (courtesy of the Artist and Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York), a half-hour video tribute to the performing arts. Sinuous dancers twirl through a fantastical streetscape filled with representations of artistic forebears, including Leonard Bernstein, Marian Anderson, and musical prodigy Philippa Schuyler as well as present-day performers. (Fun fact: Satterwhite often incorporates drawings by his mother, Patricia Satterwhite, into his installations.) Eagle-eyed art lovers will also spot pieces that had been displayed before, now in new locations in this completely reimagined setting.

3. Stand on the Josie Robertson Plaza and look up at the Leni and Peter May Terrace to see Seymour Lipton鈥檚 Archangel (1964) and Dimitri Hadzi鈥檚 K. 458 The Hunt (1964), a pair of imposing bronzes that were moved from the lobby to the new location for greater visibility. In a New York Times interview, Lipton called Archangel 鈥渁 sort of Hallelujah sculpture鈥� inspired by Handel鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Messiah. Hadzi鈥檚 work was inspired by an eponymous Mozart string quartet.
4. Tucked into a corner of the lobby sits David Smith鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Zig IV (1961, opposite, bottom), a Cubist-inspired angular structure of intersecting steel plates. Although renowned as a sculptor, Smith always thought of himself as a painter 鈥� thus, the abstract painting that covers the surfaces of this three-dimensional work.

5. The Hearst Tier 1 is a mini sculpture gallery displaying impactful musicians. On the east side you will find Auguste Rodin鈥檚 1909 bust of Gustav Mahler, who led the Philharmonic from 1909 to 1911. According to Mahler鈥檚 wife, Alma, the composer hated sitting for portraits, which he considered 鈥渢ime wasted away from his work.鈥�
On the west side, Antoine Bourdelle (a student of Rodin鈥檚) is represented with the Tragic Mask of Beethoven (1901). The sculptor worshiped Beethoven, once remarking, 鈥淓very cry from this deaf man who was listening to God struck straight to my soul.鈥�
You鈥檒l also see Sir Jacob Epstein鈥檚 1928 bust of bass-baritone Paul Robeson, who made six appearances with the Philharmonic in the 1930s and 鈥�40s. The two men met in New York in 1927 and became fast friends, visiting jazz clubs in Harlem, and Robeson sang lullabies to Epstein鈥檚 little girl.
See a full gallery of the art pieces at the new David Geffen Hall below.