The Modern Announces Free ART Break
Take an ART Break with family programming at the Modern while your school-aged children are on Spring Break, March 16-20.

Slow down, stop, and learn a little bit more about some of your favorite works from the Modern’s collection and special exhibition, Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers. Each ART Break station includes a conversation with a community artist and Modern docent, and a gallery project focusing on selected works in the galleries. For Family Studio on Monday and Friday, join your family and others in helping build collaborative works.
We have fun designed for the whole family to enjoy together. Get your creative energy flowing as you spend time with the Modern’s collection of paintings, photographs, sculpture, and video.

Photo courtesy of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
March 16 and March 20 from 11 am–3 pm
ART Break – Family Studio
Artist Instructor Doug Land.
March 17, 18, and 19 from 11 am–3 pm
ART Break
Artist Instructors Joshua Bryant, Xxavier Carter, Aliyah Cydonia, Tuba Koymen
On Monday, March 16, Café Modern will open the Modern Grill on the Café Terrace with hot dogs and chips available for sale from 11 am to 2 pm. KIDS eat FREE! Each child under 12 receives a FREE hot dog and bag of chips. On Tuesday, Café Modern will resume normal service.

Photo courtesy of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
SPECIAL EXHIBITION
Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers is the artist’s largest exhibition to date and his first major museum survey in more than a decade. Johnson, one of the most acclaimed artists of his generation, is internationally recognized for his multidisciplinary practice that spans painting, sculpture, film, and installation.
Tracing Johnson’s trajectory from his early experiments in photography and video to his recent materially complex paintings and assemblages, A Poem for Deep Thinkers engages art history, philosophy, and Black popular culture as frameworks for exploring the human psyche. The exhibition reflects on themes of history, identity, masculinity, parenthood, and self-care, underscoring Johnson’s role as both an interpreter of art history and a shaper of contemporary culture.
This exhibition brings together nearly 90 works, including black-soap paintings, spray-painted text pieces, monumental sculptures, film, and video. Highlights include a site-specific installation, an outdoor sculpture, and two works activated through live performance.


