The Statue of Liberty Museum is located on
Liberty Island in
New York City. The museum opened on May 16, 2019,[1] and is focused on the creation, meaning, and history of the
Statue of Liberty (formally Liberty Enlightening the World), a large statue by
Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi which the people of France gave to the people of the United States in 1886.
Exhibits
The original torch, carried by Liberty from 1886 to 1984, is located in the museum. The museum includes exhibits relating to the statue's construction and history, and a theater where visitors can watch an aerial view of the statue.[2][3][4] The exhibits include more than 500 photographs and graphics from more than 100 different sources. Examples include rare historic photos of the statue's construction from the
Musée Bartholdi in
Colmar, France, and sketches of early designs for the pedestal from the
Library of Congress.[5] The exhibition was designed by the New York firm ESI Design.
Construction of the new Statue of Liberty Museum started in early October 2016. The $70 million 26,000-square-foot (2,400 m2) museum can accommodate all of the island's daily visitors, while the former museum could hold only 20 percent.[2] The museum was designed by
FXCollaborative and is integrated with the parkland around it.[3] Upon the museum's opening, tour guides were banned from certain parts of the island, including part of the museum.[7][8]
In media
The construction of the museum, and Diane von Furstenberg's role in its funding, are featured in the 2019 documentary Liberty: Mother of Exiles.[9]