Moco Museum artists featured across permanent and rotating exhibitions

Moco Museum Amsterdam brings together artists who shaped modern culture and those shaping it today. You’ll see familiar names, bold ideas, and works that still feel relevant. This page will help you understand who’s on display and how to enjoy the art at your own pace.

World-famous artists who have permanent exhibits at Moco Museum Amsterdam

Banksy artworks displayed at Moco Museum London exhibition.
Andy Warhol's dollar sign artwork at Moco Museum, Amsterdam.
Basquiat-style artwork at Moco Museum, featuring abstract face and vibrant colors.
Visitors viewing Keith Haring artwork at Moco Museum Barcelona.
Colorful mural by Yayoi Kusama at Moco Museum London featuring abstract faces and patterns.
Visitors discussing art in the Sully Wing of the Louvre Museum, featuring the Faith Ringgold Exhibition.
KAWS and Banksy artworks displayed at Moco Museum, Amsterdam art tour.
Sculpture of children and pig from Jeff Koons' Ushering in Banality Exhibit at Stedelijk Museum.
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Banksy

Banksy’s works mix sharp humour with political bite. At Moco, you may see pieces like Girl with Balloon, Flower Thrower, and Laugh Now, offering familiar images that hit harder when viewed together indoors.

Andy Warhol

Warhol’s pop art turns everyday icons into art history. At Moco, works such as Marilyn Monroe prints and Campbell’s Soup reflect his obsession with fame, repetition, and how images shape what we value.

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Basquiat’s paintings feel raw and urgent, filled with symbols and text. At Moco, works like Untitled Skull and Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump show his mix of street energy and personal storytelling.

Keith Haring

Haring’s bold lines and simple figures carry strong messages about love, power, and activism. At Moco, pieces like Radiant Baby and Untitled figures feel playful at first, then surprisingly serious once you pause.

Yayoi Kusama

Kusama’s work focuses on repetition and obsession. At Moco, you may encounter Infinity Net paintings or pumpkin motifs, inviting you to slow down and notice how small patterns can completely change a space.

Damien Hirst

Hirst explores life, death, and control through clean visuals. At Moco, works such as Spot Paintings and butterfly compositions contrast bright colour with heavy themes, making them easy to view but harder to forget.

KAWS

KAWS blends pop culture with fine art using familiar cartoon forms. At Moco, sculptures and paintings featuring Companion figures feel playful, yet slightly uneasy, reflecting how childhood imagery often carries adult emotions.

Jeff Koons

Koons elevates everyday objects into glossy art icons. At Moco, works inspired by Balloon Dog and reflective surfaces play with scale and perfection, encouraging visitors to question what makes something valuable or meaningful.

Rotating exhibitions and temporary artist features

Robbie Williams

Robbie Williams presents deeply personal artworks shaped by fame, mental health, and self reflection. His exhibition at Moco features works like Pride, Self Portrait, and text based pieces that feel honest and unfiltered, offering a rare look at vulnerability behind a public persona.

Six N. Five

Six N. Five’s temporary exhibition at Moco focuses on immersive digital environments that feel quiet and surreal. Works such as Still Life and room scale installations blend soft light, architecture, and motion, inviting visitors to slow down and step into carefully crafted digital worlds.

Frankey

Amsterdam based artist Frankey brings his playful street language indoors at Moco. His temporary displays include small sculptures and site specific installations inspired by city life, showing how humour, timing, and clever placement can turn ordinary spaces into moments of surprise.

Andrés Reisinger

Andrés Reisinger’s exhibition explores the meeting point of digital art, design, and emotion. At Moco, works like the Hortensia Chair visuals and dreamlike interior scenes examine desire and comfort, questioning how digital objects can feel personal, intimate, and emotionally familiar.

Tips for exploring the artists at Moco Museum

  • Start with modern masters: Begin upstairs with modern artists first. Their visual language makes contemporary works easier to understand once you recognise recurring themes and ideas.
  • Read labels selectively: Focus on labels near unfamiliar artists. Skip the obvious names initially. Context helps more with newer works than with artists you already recognise.
  • Watch recurring symbols: Notice repeated symbols like crowns, dots, or cartoon figures. They connect different rooms and help you spot how artists speak to each other visually.
  • Pause in digital rooms:Spend extra time inside digital installations. Movement and sound often reveal details you miss when walking through too quickly.
  • Revisit one artwork: Before leaving, return to one piece you liked early on. It often feels different after seeing the rest of the museum.

Frequently asked questions about Moco Museum artists

Moco Museum features a mix of world famous modern artists and rotating contemporary creators. The exact artist lineup can change depending on current exhibitions and seasons.