Ruth Asawa Retrospective at MoMA: Lessons in Dedication and Form
My husband and I hit a big milestone this week: 25 years together. Naturally, we celebrated in NYC, and I spent time at MoMA reconnecting with art that fuels my creative practice.
Celebrating 25 Years in NYC
No matter how many times I visit New York City, it always fuels me—the art, the movement, the people, even the sensory overload (5th Ave, I'm looking at you 😂). It's the kind of place that reminds me why I chose this artist life.
Between meeting friends and exploring the city, I made time for what always feels like a creative recharge station: the Museum of Modern Art.
The Ruth Asawa Retrospective at MoMA
Nothing captured me quite like the Ruth Asawa Retrospective. If you haven't experienced her work in person, I can't recommend it enough. Her looped-wire sculptures are mesmerizing—delicate yet powerful, minimal yet complex.
The exhibition showcases decades of her innovative work, from her iconic hanging wire forms to her public art projects and drawings. Seeing the breadth of her practice in one space is both humbling and inspiring.
Ruth Asawa: A Story of Resilience
Her story alone is astounding. Born to Japanese immigrant parents, Ruth Asawa was unjustly incarcerated with her family during World War II. Even then, she continued drawing and creating, holding onto art as a lifeline during one of America's darkest chapters.
Later, at Black Mountain College—the legendary experimental art school—she was mentored by visionaries like Josef Albers and Buckminster Fuller. Her curiosity about everyday materials led her to develop the intricate looped-wire sculptures she's now celebrated for.
Inspired partly by basket-weaving techniques she learned in Mexico, her forms blur the line between sculpture, drawing, and shadow. They feel alive, breathing with the light, transforming as you move around them.
Wire Sculpture as Drawing in Space
What makes Asawa's wire sculptures so compelling is how they function as three-dimensional drawings. The wire creates lines in space, and the shadows cast by the forms create secondary drawings on the walls and floor.
It's sculpture, drawing, and light installation all at once—a complete reimagining of what sculpture can be. The transparency of the wire allows you to see through multiple layers simultaneously, creating depth and complexity from the simplest of materials.
Lessons in Dedication and Experimentation
As an artist, seeing that kind of dedication and experimentation hits differently. I found myself studying the way her pieces breathe with the light—how something so minimal can be so powerful.
It reminded me how important it is to:
• Stay curious about materials and process
• Explore beyond your comfort zone
• Let materials guide you rather than forcing them
• Find beauty in simplicity and repetition
• Persist through adversity and challenge
Asawa's work demonstrates that profound art doesn't require expensive materials or grand gestures—it requires vision, dedication, and a willingness to explore.
The Influence on My Practice
While my work in geometric abstract painting is quite different from Asawa's wire sculptures, I see parallels in our approaches. Both of us work with repetition, geometric form, and the interplay of light and shadow. Both of us are interested in how simple elements can create complex visual experiences.
Her dedication to craft and her ability to find endless variation within a constrained vocabulary of materials and techniques is something I aspire to in my own painting practice.
Why MoMA Never Disappoints
The Museum of Modern Art consistently presents exhibitions that challenge, inspire, and educate. Whether it's historical retrospectives like the Ruth Asawa show or cutting-edge contemporary work, MoMA offers the kind of deep engagement with art that every artist needs.
For anyone visiting New York City, MoMA is essential. For artists, it's a masterclass in dedication, innovation, and the power of vision.
Experience the Exhibition
I took a few photos, but they don't come close to capturing the depth or delicacy of her work. The experience itself was the real inspiration—the way the sculptures move with air currents, the shadows they cast, the meditative quality of standing in their presence.


If you're in New York, make time for this exhibition. If you're an artist, it's required viewing.
Explore Geometric Abstract Art
If you're drawn to art that explores form, light, and geometric precision, I invite you to explore my collection of geometric abstract paintings. While my medium is different from Asawa's, the dedication to craft and exploration of form connects our practices.
View Geometric Abstract Art Collection
Follow along on Instagram for studio updates and reflections on art and inspiration.
