Contemporary Art Institutions in Moscow

A focused reading of museums, foundations, and institutional contemporary art in Moscow.

What sets the institutional field in Moscow apart is less its scale than its source of funding: the venues that define the contemporary agenda were endowed by private fortunes rather than the state. The Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, founded by Dasha Zhukova with backing from Roman Abramovich, and the V-A-C Foundation's GES-2 House of Culture, financed by the industrialist Leonid Mikhelson and set inside Renzo Piano's conversion of a power station facing the Kremlin, serve as the city's two anchors for research-driven, cross-disciplinary programming spanning exhibitions, performance, publishing, and residencies. Within the wider structure of contemporary art in Moscow, public and municipal bodies work in a more conservative register: the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, the first state institution devoted to twentieth- and twenty-first-century art, draws on its permanent holdings and a historically weighted curatorial line, while the Multimedia Art Museum concentrates on photography and time-based media. The asymmetry sharpened after 2022, when the private flagships bore the brunt of international withdrawal: Garage suspended its global exhibition calendar and turned toward its own archive of late- and post-Soviet Russian art, shifting the institutional emphasis from outward-facing display toward collection, study, and education, while galleries in Moscow absorbed more of the pressure to sustain contemporary practice.

Explore Moscow

A local guide to Moscow, with links to its galleries, institutions, and wider Russia art context.

Artists, Exhibitions and Curators in Moscow

Exhibitions, artistic practices, and curatorial approaches connected to the city’s institutions.

The clearest measure of how Moscow's institutions have absorbed isolation is Garage's decision, in 2024, to begin assembling its own collection of Russian art made since 1980 and to put it on view through the long-running Open Storage display. For a museum that spent its first decade importing international names and building a research archive of unofficial Soviet-era art, the turn toward holdings and documentation marked a deliberate narrowing; the leadership change in 2025, when Daria Kotova succeeded Anton Belov after fifteen years, confirmed a move from spectacle toward stewardship. GES-2, shaped by its artistic director Francesco Manacorda around the Soviet house-of-culture model, has held to interdisciplinarity, commissioning works that fold exhibition, theatre, music, and dance into single productions and foregrounding Russian practitioners such as Sergey Sapozhnikov, whose photographic and staged projects draw on his base in Rostov-on-Don. Programming across these venues now leans on field research, regional artists, and transhistorical pairings rather than the international circuit; a recent MMOMA survey, gathering figures from Erik Bulatov to the Recycle Group, likewise reads the present through a longer national lineage.

Institutions in Moscow

Museums, foundations, and non-profit spaces contributing to contemporary art in Moscow.

Garage Museum of Contemporary Art

Garage Museum of Contemporary Art

Museum Gorky Park, Moscow Research-drivenArchive-basedInstitutional

Major museum in Moscow dedicated to contemporary art, research, publishing, and public programs, with an archive and collection focused on Russian art from the 1980s onward.

Garage remains a key research infrastructure for understanding recent Russian art in an international context.

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Multimedia Art Museum

Multimedia Art Museum

Museum Ostozhenka, Moscow Archive-basedTime-based mediaEstablished

Museum in Moscow focused on photography, video, multimedia, and contemporary visual culture, presenting exhibitions that connect historical image archives with current lens-based practices.

MAMM is central to Moscow’s photographic culture, linking archival depth with contemporary media discourse.

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Ekaterina Cultural Foundation

Ekaterina Cultural Foundation

Foundation Kuznetsky Most, Moscow InstitutionalEstablishedNon-profit

Founded in 2002, this non-profit foundation in Moscow presents exhibitions, publications, and collection-based projects connecting Russian contemporary art with broader historical and cultural frameworks.

Its collection-oriented model gives Moscow’s private foundation sector a rare archival and public-facing weight.

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Stella Art Foundation

Stella Art Foundation

Foundation Moscow City GlobalNon-profitEstablished

Private foundation supporting Russian contemporary art through exhibitions, collection activity, and cultural collaborations, with a long-standing commitment to promoting young artists in Russia and abroad.

Its patronage model connects Moscow’s private collecting culture with international exhibition ambitions.

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V-A-C Foundation

V-A-C Foundation

Foundation Bolotny Island, Moscow Cross-disciplinaryInstitutionalResearch-driven

Established in Moscow in 2009, V-A-C Foundation supports contemporary art and knowledge production through exhibitions, publishing, education, and interdisciplinary cultural projects.

V-A-C’s influence lies in treating contemporary art as a broader system of public knowledge.

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MARS Center for Contemporary Art

MARS Center for Contemporary Art

Art Space Meshchansky, Moscow Digital artNew mediaCross-disciplinary

MARS is an art space in Moscow specializing in multimedia, immersive environments, VR, and technology-based projects, with roots in the city’s alternative contemporary art history.

Its long commitment to digital and immersive media gives Moscow a distinct new-media anchor.

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Center for Creative Industries Fabrika

Center for Creative Industries Fabrika

Art Space Basmanny, Moscow IndependentHybrid spaceResidency

Based in a former industrial complex, Fabrika is a hybrid art space and creative cluster with studios, residencies, exhibitions, printing facilities, and cross-disciplinary production programs.

Fabrika sustains Moscow’s production ecology by linking studios, residencies, and exhibition activity.

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Cube.Moscow

Cube.Moscow

Art Space Tverskoy, Moscow Local sceneHybrid spaceCommercial

Art platform in central Moscow bringing together galleries, independent artists, exhibitions, performances, talks, and collector-oriented events within a compact contemporary art marketplace.

Cube reflects a flexible commercial model for emerging galleries and independent artists in Moscow.

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Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art

Winzavod Center for Contemporary Art

Art Space Basmanny, Moscow Education-focusedLocal sceneHybrid space

One of Moscow’s largest private contemporary art centers, Winzavod brings together galleries, studios, educational programs, workshops, and exhibition spaces within a former industrial complex.

Winzavod remains a structural hub for Moscow’s gallery ecosystem and emerging art infrastructure.

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This is a curated selection. Explore the full network of contemporary art venues on the map.

This Moscow guide is part of the 1 Cubic Meter global contemporary art mapping project, which documents galleries, institutions, foundations, and independent art spaces through curated city-specific research.

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About 1 Cubic Meter 1 Cubic Meter

1 Cubic Meter is an editorial map of contemporary art venues and exhibitions, built city by city to document where contemporary art is produced, presented, supported, and encountered.

The project is built on a principle of horizontality, both geographic and qualitative. It gives attention to scenes outside the established circuit alongside the major capitals, and approaches a small artist-run space with the same editorial care as a long-standing institution. Each entry is the outcome of editorial selection, a curatorial reading of contemporary art across painting, sculpture, installation, performance, moving image, and other current practices.

We maintain the map continuously, with its focus kept entirely on contemporary art.