MIT MUSEUM LAUNCHES INAUGURAL THEMATIC SEASON – TIME Opening September 2025


Carsten Höller, Janet Echelman, Liliane Lijn, James Carpenter, Colin Fournier lead thematic focus on TIME, a first for the museum.

The museum, shifting to a thematic calendar, will open with an initial 12-month focus on TIME. The first exhibition, Remembering the Future opens in September 2025. 

Circadian Rhythm by Kirell Benzi; Julien Gremaud for EPFL Pavilion

 

Exhibitions:
Remembering the Future, opening September 17
Lighten Up!, opening October 28, 2025 – Summer 2026

Public and events program:
After Dark, September 2025 – November 2025
Science Fiction film series, September 2025 – May 2026

 

As part of a new institutional initiative, MIT Museum has announced its first thematic season, dedicated to the concept of Time. Connecting exhibitions, installations, workshops, displays, education initiatives and community-building social events, the year-long TIME season marks a shift towards thematic programming that will use a variety of formats to foster conversation and spark creative thinking regarding the major topics of our times. TIME will be a year-long thematic focus, with two thematic seasons per year thereafter. 

From the climate crisis, to wormholes, to time travel, TIME will explore nearly a dozen subthemes, bringing together installations, exhibitions and events to provide a conceptual, educational and thoughtful look at our ever-changing understanding and complex relationship with the subject. 

Michael John Gorman, Director of MIT Museum said: ‘MIT Museum occupies a unique position in the cultural landscape with a far-reaching program that explores the big ideas and urgent questions in the world of science, technology, art and design. 

A public laboratory for MIT research and beyond, our new thematic approach will create connections between our disparate and varied areas of research, collections and programming to tell a bigger story, authentically connecting our audiences with the ideas and subjects that are shaping our future. We are thrilled to be working with Janet Echelman, Carsten Höller, and Liliane Lijn to kick off our first thematic season.’

Rendering of Remembering the Future by Janet Echelman; Courtesy of Studio Echelman

Remembering the Future
An installation by Janet Echelman in collaboration with MIT Associate Professor Caitlin Mueller
Launching: September 17, 2025 ​
Press preview and opening reception: September 17, 2025

Created during Echelman’s Visiting Artist residency at the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST) in collaboration with MIT Associate Professor Caitlin Mueller, Remembering the Future is a site-specific installation commissioned by the MIT Museum, inspired by Earth’s climate timeline, translating historical records and possible futures into sculptural form. 

Constructed from colored twines and ropes that are braided, knotted and spliced to create a three-dimensional form, the large-scale artwork will be suspended throughout the museum’s lobby and ascending staircase, providing a dramatic gateway into the museum and the wider season concept of TIME. 

The installation is informed by the work of Professor Raffaele Ferrari, Co-Director of MIT Lorenz Center, and unites artistic and experimental technical practice, visualizing Earth’s climate history from the last ice age to potential futures, prompting viewers to consider climate change, think about what it means to be human now and imagine what the future holds for the planet and all living things. 

Part of the project was rooted in the exploration of new digital tools, combining engineering, soft forms and architectural knowledge with an interactive digital twin serving as a test model of the innovative software developed specifically for this project. 

The artwork will also be supported by further video content showing the importance of Echelman’s work as soft interventions in public and urban spaces.

 

Lighten UP! ​
Exhibition dates: October 28, 2025 – Summer 2026
Opening Reception: October 28
Symposium: October 29

Bringing together 16 works by international artists including Liliane Lijn, Colin Fournier, and James Carpenter, Lighten Up! explores the secrets and importance of circadian rhythms and the importance of (day)light to our wellbeing and daily lives. Activated through immersive environments, soundscapes and lighting installations, the exhibition uses art as an entry point into the scientific field and the daily factors that impact our physical, mental, and behavioural changes each day. Featuring a mix of new, site-specific, and adapted works, the exhibition evokes emotional responses combined with scientific thinking as visitors move through the spaces. 

As part of the exhibition, celebrated artist Carsten Höller will exhibit in collaboration with MIT alumnus Adam Haar Horowitz and the MIT Museum Studio and Compton Gallery’s Seth Riskin. 

Lighten Up! Was curated by Professor Emeritus, Anna Wirz-Justice (Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Basel), Prof. Marilyne Andersen (Director of EPFL’s Laboratory of Integrated Performance in Design, LIPID), among other curators from the EPFL Pavilions. A full list of artists, curators and works will be revealed later this summer. 

 

After Dark Series ​
September 2025 – November 2026

MIT Museum’s monthly evening event series returns, bringing together talks, events, live demonstrations and interactive play centered on TIME. This adults-only series will see dedicated events celebrating different facets of TIME, combining programming with music, food and more. Debuting for the first time in September for adults ages 18 + 

Spacetime - September 11, 2025
Rhythm – October 09, 2025
Circadian Rhythm – November 13, 2025

 

Science Fiction Film Series
September 2025 – May 2026

Presented in collaboration with the Boston Science Fiction Film Festival, this four-part series will be focused on contemporary cinema and popular culture’s relationship with the concept of time travel and its exploration as part of utopian and dystopian storytelling.

Time After Time – September 26, 2025
Looper ​ – December 5, 2025

 

Cosmic Coda: A Journey Through Space, Time, and Discovery
September 29, 2025

Physicists Lisa Barsotti, David Kaiser, and Lyman Page join us at the MIT Museum for an evening of film and conversation exploring the documentary Cosmic Coda and LIGO’s groundbreaking discovery of gravitational waves.

 

Lighten Up! Symposium
October 29, 2025

This one-day event explores how living organisms connect with the natural cycles of light and dark, bringing together academic and artistic perspectives. Presented in collaboration with Swissnex.

 

AI and Your Time at Work
December 2, 2025

A conversation with MIT’s David Autor and Neil Thompson, moderated by Kara Miller, on how AI is reshaping the future of work. Presented with support from CSAIL Alliances. 

 

More exhibitions, events and collaborations due to be announced over the course of 2025.

 

ENDS


NOTES TO EDITORS:

 

About the MIT Museum:

The MIT Museum aims to connect curious minds to MIT’s unique culture of problem-solving and playful creativity, bringing together science, technology, art and design in surprising ways to explore our future. 

In addition to exhibitions, programs, a maker hub and learning labs, the museum invites visitors to take part in on-going research while demonstrating how science and innovation will shape the future of society. In October 2022, a reinvented MIT Museum opened in a new location in the heart of Kendall Square in Cambridge, MA.

Highlights of the Museum include freshly conceived exhibitions featuring objects from the Museum’s prodigious collections of over 1.5 million objects, along with loans of art and other objects; the Yuchun (1989) and Agustina Lee Family Exchange event space for public dialogue and conversation; the hands-on Heide Maker Hub, where audiences can create and invent; and an expanded Museum Store. 

The MIT Museum is open daily 10 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 

For more information, including accessibility and amenities, please visit mitmuseum.mit.edu

Address: MIT Museum, Gambrill Center, 314 Main Street (MIT Building E28), Cambridge, MA 02142.

Located next to the Kendall/MIT MBTA Red Line stop at the new Kendall Gateway to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Campus.

 

Madeline Johnson-Rao

Associate Director, Camron

Adam Mulder

Account Manager, Camron

 

 

 

 

 

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