In Downtown LA, MOCA’s ‘MONUMENTS’ turns America’s toppled past into urgent art

MONUMENTS exhibit at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA and The Brick.
(l-r) Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument, Baltimore, Maryland splashed with red paint following the Unite the Right rally, August 13, 2017. The monument was removed on August 16, 2017. Credit: Picture Architect/Alamy. "Unmanned Drone,' Kara Walker, 2023. Photo by Ruben Diaz.

When ICE was conducting unconstitutional raids across the country earlier this year, the people of Los Angeles took to the streets and made it clear that things needn’t look pretty on the outside if the system itself is crumbling within. After all, a little constructive destruction is the best way to get people talking. 

It comes as no surprise, then, that the Museum of Contemporary Art in Downtown LA is hosting the MONUMENTS exhibition to make the  United States confront its ugly past. Co-presented with The Brick, the show is composed of statues that were initially raised as symbols of glory, only to be toppled by the shifting tides of modern sensibilities. 

Installation view of "MONUMENTS" at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA.
Installation view of “MONUMENTS” at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Courtesy of The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and The Brick. Photo by Fredrik Nilsen.

Co-curated by Hamza Walker, Bennett Simpson, and artist Kara Walker, the project presents these relics in their most literal form: bruised and battered by the evolution of morality, which is in stark contrast to the sanitized memories of the Confederacy (among other disgraces) that allowed them to be erected in the first place. 

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MONUMENTS encompasses a compilation of the “vandalism” that set the country’s healing process in motion following the Charleston church massacre, the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, and Bree Newsome’s removal of the Confederate flag from the South Carolina State House. Nearly 200 monuments were subsequently toppled, forcing Americans to reconsider whom we honor and why. This colossal cultural shift is precisely what the exhibition puts under the microscope. 

Preliminary Installation view of "MONUMENTS " at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA & The Brick, Los Angeles.
Preliminary Installation view of “MONUMENTS ” at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA & The Brick, Los Angeles. Courtesy of The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA). Photo by Stefanie Keenan for Getty Images.

The exhibition also features new works by Bethany Collins, Karon Davis, Abigail DeVille, Stan Douglas, Kevin Jerome Everson, and Kara Walker, as well as borrowed works by Martin Puryear, Hank Willis Thomas, Andres Serrano, and others. These items have been positioned alongside monuments that have been decommissioned across the US, from Baltimore to Montgomery to Richmond, and beyond.

The uncomfortable yet necessary imagery illustrates a sense of hope fighting against a cumbersome history that may feel impossible to escape, but slowly surrenders its power.

Karan Singh is a Los Angeles-based multidisciplinary journalist. After three years in the publishing industry as a copy editor, he pivoted careers in 2021 to start reporting on the arts and culture circuit.

Fast facts: ‘MONUMENTS’

Installation view of MONUMENTS, October 23, 2025–May 3, 2026 at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Courtesy of The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and The Brick.
Installation view of MONUMENTS, October 23, 2025–May 3, 2026 at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Courtesy of The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and The Brick. Photo by Fredrik Nilsen.

Downtown LA’s MOCA hosts decommissioned statues alongside new works. MONUMENTS asks: Who deserves to be remembered, and who deserves to fall?

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