13 Hidden Gems at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Our first guide, presenting 15 masterpieces of European Painting, barely scratched the surface of the vast collection held at the Metropolitan Museum...
MJ Rivera 20 April 2026
With the collection spanning more than 7,000 artworks, the American Folk Art Museum, located in Manhattan, New York, celebrates some of the most creative self-taught artists and unique examples of American folk art. We had a chance to ask the museum staff about their favorites from the collection. Here they are—the American Folk Art Museum staff picks!
Committed to expanding the boundaries of American art history, the American Folk Art Museum has played a key role in bringing self-taught artists into focus. With works spanning four centuries, from traditional folk art to contemporary Outsider Art, the museum celebrates creative expression of individuals often outside the system of formal artistic training. Its collection offers a nuanced view of national identity, faith, ingenuity, and community.
Since 1961, the Museum has celebrated the creativity of individuals whose singular talents have been refined largely through personal experience rather than formal artistic training.
Austin Losada, Art Bridges Fellow
Patrick J. Sullivan, An Historic Event, Wheeling, West Virginia, 1937, oil on canvas, American Folk Art Museum, New York City, NY, USA. Gift of the Estate of Maria and Conrad Janis.
When I first arrived at the Museum three years ago, we had just received a gift that included two paintings by Patrick J. Sullivan (1894–1967). What incredible luck. Scholars believe that Sullivan completed only fifteen works on canvas during his life. He painted sparingly, but meticulously, and for someone with so few works under their belt, he had an unusually defined personal style. He described his paintings as “parables in picture form” (AMAZING), and accompanying each work was a “theme” that described the work’s meaning and symbols. In this painting, Sullivan takes up a contemporaneous event: King Edward VIII’s abdication in order to marry American socialite Wallis Simpson.
The painted subject and symbolic elements are interesting, for sure. But what really draws me to the work is Sullivan’s mastery over compositional balance and formal effects, the latter of which is really hard to capture on camera. Sullivan’s canvases are thick, textured affairs. His occupation as a house painter provided him with material knowledge of commercial paint that informed his artistic approach. He successively layered paint and, in some areas, sanded it down to create rough, bumpy, and confrontational surfaces. It is a delight to sit with in person.
Lisa Machi Ortiz, Assistant Registrar & Collections Database Manager
Lee Godie, Untitled (Lee in a Large Hate), Chicago, Illinois, 1970s, ballpoint pen on photograph, American Folk Art Museum, New York City, NY, USA. Gift of Charles B. and Janice M. Rosenak.
Lee Godie (1908–1994) was famous for selling her works on the steps of the Art Institute of Chicago as a French Impressionist, marketing herself as “Lee Godie—Artist.” This work stands out among her other self-portraits taken in a photo booth machine, as she has not applied additional makeup or accessories. She presents herself straight forward to the camera with her palette, declaring herself as Artist.
Natalie Beall, Senior Educator and Manager of Student Engagement
Scottie Wilson, Scottie’s Art Gallery, No. 2, London, England, 1949, pen, ink, gold crayon on paper, American Folk Art Museum, New York City, NY, USA. Gift of Audrey B. Heckler. Photo by American Folk Art Museum.
Scottie Wilson‘s (1891–1972) drawings have always appealed to me for their distinctive style and inventive subject matter. His mask-like faces, animal groupings, and invented plant forms seem to belong to their own world, and his seductive use of cross-hatching and near-symmetry pulls me in every time. I think of this piece as a map to Wilson’s artistic world, where the main figure (presumably the artist himself) displays a mini-exhibition containing the various motifs in his work. Since Wilson often staged his own shows and worked outside of the gallery system, the creation of a self-determined art gallery is even more fitting.
Anna Karayorgi, Shop Administration and Merchandise Specialist
Joe Coleman, Sunday Go to Meetin’ (Vest from the artist’s outfit), Various cities, USA, 1984–ongoing; pins, pendants, reliquaries, personal memorabilia on fabric. Collection of Joe Coleman and Whitney Ward. Photo by Juho Liukkonen / Night Visions International Film Festival.
I chose Joe Coleman’s (b. 1955) “Sunday Go to Meetin’.” I love that Joe Coleman’s “Sunday Go to Meetin'” presents the practice of collecting as a work of visual art in itself. Looking at it reminds me of looking through an I Spy book, and it also makes me consider my own charm collection as something more meaningful. I also find the use of clothing as a canvas fun, accessible, and relatable.
Tess Wagman, Social Media and Communications Manager
Nicole Appel, Hamburgers, Heels, and High Couture, New York City, 2014, colored pencil and graphite on paper, American Folk Art Museum, New York City, NY, USA. Gift of the artist in honor of Deborah Hillburn. Photo by Adam Reich.
I love the world that Nicole Appel (b. 1990) creates in this drawing. The arrow of the In-N-Out sign becomes a kind of map, guiding the eye through a landscape of burgers, sundaes, and dresses. The longer you look, the more surprising combinations emerge: pink heels perched atop a strawberry cone, or a blue dress melting into a chocolate swirl. Every form is given the same level of detail and care.
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