Music / NewsBjörk announces first ever retrospective at MoMAThe Biophilia musician is heading up a ‘highly experimental’ exhibition which will span 20 years of workShareLink copied ✔️June 18, 2014MusicNewsTextZing Tsjeng Not content with acquiring her Biophilia app for its permanent collection, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York has announced that it will hold a full-scale Björk retrospective in March 2015. The exhibition promises to span 20 years of Björk's work, including everything from her groundbreaking visuals, music videos and films to her instruments and costumes (will we see the famous Alexander McQueen kimono from the Homogenic cover? We can only hope). Björk will co-write the retrospective with acclaimed Icelandic writer and ex-Sugarcubes member Sjón Sigurdsson, and the whole experience will culminate in a specially commissioned immersive film and music exhibit by 3D design company Autodesk and Andrew Huang, who conceived the mind-melting video for "Mutual Core". “Björk is an extraordinarily innovative artist whose contributions to contemporary music, video, film, fashion, and art have had a major impact on her generation worldwide,” said Klaus Biesenbach, MoMA's chief curator at large. “This highly experimental exhibition offers visitors a direct experience of her hugely collaborative body of work.” Björk is one of the few musicians to land their own MoMA retrospective – the last exhibition of this kind was 2012's celebrated Kraftwerk exhibition. Björk will open 7 March through 7 June 2015. Watch the Chris Cunningham-directed video for "All Is Full of Love" below: Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe rise of ‘Britainicana’: How Westside Cowboy are reshaping UK indieR!R!Riot is Taiwan’s pluggnb princessWhen did UK underground rap get so Christian? Why listening parties are everywhere right nowA night out with Feng, the ‘positive punk’ of UK UgDoppel-gäng gäng gäng: 7 times artists used body doublesWesley Joseph is the Marty Supreme of R&B (only nicer) How Turnstile are reinventing hardcore for the internet ageWill these be the biggest musical moments of 2026?Rising singer Liim is the crooning voice of New York CityFrench producer Malibu is an ambient antidote for the chronically online10 musicians to watch in 2026