A seated Companion sculpture by KAWS captures Moco Museum’s approach perfectly. It is instantly recognizable, emotionally direct and designed to stop visitors in their tracks.
David Nikel
A trip built around Vincent van Gogh means Amsterdam. Following Pablo Picasso leads to Barcelona. But one of Europe’s most talked about modern art museums now spans multiple cities, giving travelers three chances to experience it.
Modern Art Done Differently
Step inside a Moco Museum and it becomes immediately clear this is not a traditional art institution.
There are no long corridors of chronological works or dense curatorial text panels. Instead, visitors move quickly between rooms filled with bold statements, recognizable names and immersive installations designed to provoke an instant reaction.
It is a museum-like experience built for the way people consume culture today: visually, quickly and often through a phone screen.
Since opening its first location in Amsterdam in 2016, Moco has expanded to Barcelona and London. That relatively rapid growth has helped position it as one of Europe’s most talked-about modern art brands, particularly among younger travelers.
The formula is deliberate. Exhibitions lean heavily on instantly recognizable artists such as Banksy, Andy Warhol, and Jean-Michel Basquiat, combined with digital installations and immersive environments that encourage visitors to move, interact and share online.
And share they do. Moco’s Facebook and Instagram accounts count more than half a million followers between them. So the formula works, but it also raises questions about what a museum is supposed to be.
Modern Art In Barcelona
In Barcelona, that formula arguably comes into its own. Set in a historic palace in the El Born district, the museum immediately contrasts old and new.
A historic building of the El Born neighborhood hosts Moco Barcelona.
David Nikel
Stone walls and courtyard spaces give way to vivid contemporary works and digital installations, creating a sense of constant transition between eras and styles.
Works by Banksy anchor much of the experience, offering the kind of immediate recognition that draws visitors in. Pieces by Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat reinforce that sense of cultural familiarity.
Yet the museum is not simply a greatest-hits collection. Digital installations and immersive rooms shift the pace, encouraging visitors to engage physically as well as visually.
In one moment, you are studying a framed artwork. In the next, you are surrounded by color and motion.
Why It’s So Popular
Moco’s appeal is easy to understand. It removes many of the barriers that can make modern art feel inaccessible.
There is little expectation of prior knowledge. Explanations are short and direct. The focus is on how the work makes you feel, not how it fits into an academic narrative.
That approach resonates strongly with a generation used to consuming content visually and quickly. It also fits neatly into the rhythm of a city break, where time is limited and attention is divided between multiple attractions.
There is also a practical element. With locations in major tourist cities and relatively compact layouts, Moco offers a high-impact experience that can be completed in a short visit.
A modern take on mortality at Moco Barcelona, where Banksy’s ‘Grim Reaper’ keeps watch as time ticks on… with a smile.
David Nikel
In that sense, Moco is not just competing with other museums. It is competing with everything else on a traveler’s itinerary.
The Criticism Behind The Buzz
That popularity has not gone unnoticed, and neither has the criticism. Within parts of the European art world, Moco is often viewed with skepticism.
Critics argue that the museum prioritizes spectacle over substance, presenting works in a way that emphasizes visual impact rather than deeper understanding.
One particularly harsh critic was Eddy Frankel who said in The Guardian that Moco’s presentation of modern art could be “what we deserve.”
Referring to the exhibition at Moco London by singer Robbie Williams, Frankel added that “maybe this is what happens when the arts are decimated, when funding is stripped from vital, high-quality spaces.”
The reliance on big-name artists is another point of contention. By focusing on globally recognized figures such as Andy Warhol, Banksy and Jean-Michel Basquiat, the museum creates an experience that feels familiar, but not necessarily challenging.
In an opinion piece for Frieze, Phin Jennings said that “Moco serves up art like fast food with a lurid aesthetic and patronizingly simple descriptions designed to stir the appetite of as large an audience as possible.”
Others point to the commercial model. As a privately owned museum with relatively high ticket prices, Moco operates very differently from publicly funded institutions such as Tate Modern or Centre Pompidou, where research, conservation and education sit at the core of the mission.
The criticism can be summed up simply: Moco makes modern art accessible, but at the cost of depth.
That tension is what makes Moco interesting. It challenges traditional ideas of what a museum should be, replacing quiet contemplation with movement and immediacy. For some, that represents a dilution of artistic value. For others, it is a necessary evolution.
In Barcelona, the effect is particularly striking. The museum feels aligned with the city itself. It’s energetic, creative and unafraid to mix styles and influences.
Whether that makes it a better museum is open to debate. What is harder to dispute is its impact.
For now, Moco’s footprint remains relatively small, with just three European locations in Amsterdam, Barcelona and London. Whether you leave impressed or unconvinced, you are unlikely to leave indifferent.
