Institute of Contemporary Art
| Type | Contemporary art museum |
|---|---|
| Address | 118 South 36th Street |
| Map | View on Google Maps |
| Neighborhood | University City |
| Phone | (215) 898-7108 |
| Website | Official site |
| Established | 1963 |
| Founder | University of Pennsylvania |
| Director | Amy Sadao |
| Hours | Wed-Sun 11 AM - 6 PM |
The Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) is a non-collecting contemporary art museum at the University of Pennsylvania in University City. It doesn't build a permanent collection. Instead, it devotes all its resources to showing new work and emerging ideas through exhibitions, publications, and educational programs. Since 1963, the ICA has been showing some of the most important artists of our time, hosting first museum exhibitions for figures who'd become giants of the art world: Andy Warhol, Laurie Anderson, and Robert Mapplethorpe.[1]
The building itself, designed by architect Adèle Naudé Santos, is striking in its simplicity. It offers 8,000 square feet of flexible gallery space. What sets the ICA apart? Free admission, period. The university and donors cover the cost, making serious contemporary art accessible to everyone. That matters. Their program emphasizes emerging artists, new commissions, and exhibitions that challenge you, that make you think about art and society differently.[2]
History
Founding
In 1963, the University of Pennsylvania started the Institute of Contemporary Art with a straightforward goal: show the most innovative and challenging art being made right now. From day one, they chose not to collect. They'd spend their money on exhibitions instead of acquisitions.
The Warhol Exhibition
Everything changed in 1965. Andy Warhol had his first museum exhibition there. It was a turning point, the kind of moment that changes how people see an entire movement. Pop Art went from being dismissed to being unavoidable. The crowds came. So did the controversy. That exhibition put the ICA on the map.
First Museum Exhibitions
The ICA's track record with emerging artists speaks for itself:
- Andy Warhol (1965)
- Robert Mapplethorpe (1978)
- Laurie Anderson (1983)
- Agnes Martin (1973)
- Cy Twombly (1975)
The Building
By 1991, the ICA moved to its current home, designed by Adèle Naudé Santos. The gallery spaces are intentionally flexible, built to accommodate whatever artists want to do. Video, installation, performance, sculpture. It all works.
Exhibitions
Non-Collecting Model
This approach isn't typical. Most museums collect. The ICA doesn't. Here's what that means in practice:
- All resources go toward presenting new work
- They'll take real risks on artists nobody's heard of yet
- Commissions get made. New projects get developed. Traveling exhibitions get built. Catalogs get published.
Exhibition Program
You'll typically see four to six exhibitions a year. Solo shows of emerging and established artists. Thematic group shows. New commissions and site-specific pieces. Video work, performance art, time-based media. The range is genuinely wide.
Recent and Notable Exhibitions
The museum's focused on issues that matter now. Identity and representation. Technology and new media. Social and political questions. Conceptual work. Process-based art. Artists from Philadelphia and the region get serious attention too.
Visiting the ICA
Hours
- Wednesday-Friday: 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
- Saturday-Sunday: 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM
- Closed: Monday and Tuesday
- Closed between exhibitions, so check the website first
Admission
- Free: Always. It's one of the best deals in the city.
Tips
- Budget an hour for your visit
- Look up current shows before you go. You don't want to show up between exhibitions.
- Contemporary art can feel strange at first. Be willing to sit with that feeling.
- Gallery talks and artist tours happen regularly, so check what's scheduled
Getting There
- SEPTA Trolley: Routes 10, 11, 13, 34, 36 stop at 36th Street
- SEPTA Bus: Routes 21, 30, 42 serve the area
- LUCY: The University City shuttle goes right there
- Walking: It's on Penn's campus at 36th and Sansom Streets
- Parking: Penn's garages aren't far away
Location
You'll find the ICA on the University of Pennsylvania campus in University City, right at 36th and Sansom Streets, close to the main campus entrance.
Nearby Attractions
- University of Pennsylvania (surrounding the museum)
- Penn Museum (ten-minute walk)
- 30th Street Station (fifteen-minute walk)
- University City, Philadelphia
Programs
Educational Programs
- Gallery talks and tours
- Artist lectures
- Symposia and discussions
- Programs for students
Publications
They produce serious materials:
- Exhibition catalogs
- Artist monographs
- Critical essays
- Online content
Artists
The ICA supports working artists through:
- Commissions
- Catalog production
- Residencies and studio visits
- Career development support
See Also
- University of Pennsylvania
- University City, Philadelphia
- Penn Museum
- Contemporary Art in Philadelphia
References
- ↑ "About ICA". Institute of Contemporary Art. Retrieved December 30, 2025
- ↑ "Institute of Contemporary Art". Visit Philadelphia. Retrieved December 30, 2025