Moderna Museet (The Museum of Modern Art), Stockholm, Sweden, is a state museum for modern and contemporary art located on the island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm, opened in 1958. In 2009 the museum opened Moderna Museet Malmö in Malmö.
On 8November 1993, six works by Picasso and two by Georges Braque, totaling more than £40 million, were stolen from the museum in a coup in which the burglars came in through the roof by night, copying a method from the 1955 French film Rififi (French: Du rififi chez les hommes).[8] All six of the Picasso paintings and one of the Braque paintings have been recovered.[9]
In 2005, former museum director Pontus Hultén bequeathed over 700 works of art to Moderna Museet, along with his archive and library. A few works of the collection are on display with the museum's permanent collection; many others are exhibited in the purpose-built Pontus Hultén Study Gallery.[4]
The museum was initially housed in Exercishuset on Skeppsholmen.[2]
From 1994 to 1998, it was temporarily moved to another location, the Spårvägshallarna,[11] in Stockholm while the new building on Skeppsholmen, designed by the Spanish architect Rafael Moneo, was built.[12] The Pontus Hultén Study Gallery was designed by Renzo Piano.
The museum organizes and is a venue for temporary contemporary art exhibitions throughout the year. In 2005, the museum hosted the onedotzero festival with the intention of attracting a new, younger audience to the museum with screenings, installations, talks and live VJ audio-visual events.[13]