Orange County Museum of Art. The Orange County Museum of Art is a modern and contemporary art museum presently operating in a temporary space at South Coast Plaza Village in Santa Ana, California. The museum's collection comprises more than 4,500 objects, with a concentration on the art of California and the Pacific Rim from the early 20th century to present. Exhibits include traditional paintings, sculptures, and photography, as well as new media in the form of video, digital, and installation art. The museum was founded in 1962 as the Balboa Pavilion Gallery by 13 women who rented space in the Balboa Pavilion building in order to exhibit modern and contemporary art. By 1968 the institution became known as the Newport Harbor Art Museum, and in 1972 moved to a nearby, larger location. In 1977 the museum opened its doors in Newport Beach on San Clemente Drive in Fashion Island. In 1997, the museum was remodeled and renamed the Orange County Museum of Art. On May 31, 2018, officials unveiled the design for the museum's new building at Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa created by Morphosis. The sale of the former Newport Beach site was announced on May 15, 2018. Groundbreaking for the three-story building took place in September 2019, with a projected opening in 2022. With nearly 25,000 square feet of exhibition galleries, approximately 50 percent more than in the current location, the new 52,000-square-foot museum will allow OCMA to organize major special exhibitions alongside spacious installations from its collection. It will also feature an additional 10,000 square feet for education programs, performances, and public gatherings, and will include administrative offices, a gift shop, and a cafe. The structure was topped out on October 6, 2020. OCMA opened its temporary space at South Coast Village on October 3, 2018 which has served as its interim home during the construction of the permanent Segerstrom Center facility. Known as OCMA Expand Santa Ana, the site features exhibition seasons of approximately six months each in duration. The museum was temporarily closed on March 14, 2020 in accordance with quarantine efforts in response to the COVID-19 breakout in the United States. The facility was once again shuttered on November 16, 2020 admist what local health officials described as a second wave of the virus in Orange County. The museum originally announced that the seasons would continue through at least March 2021; however, COVID-19 related delays have made the future timeline of the temporary site unclear. The Orange County Museum of Art has organized exhibitions of contemporary art, including the first surveys of Vija Celmins, Chris Burden, and Tony Cragg, as well as major exhibitions of work by Lari Pittman, Gunther Forg, Charles Ray, Guillermo Kuitca, Bill Viola, Inigo Manglano-Ovalle, Catherine Opie, Mary Heilmann, and Jack Goldstein. Thematic exhibitions of contemporary art have ranged from Objectives: The New Sculpture which presented the work of Grenville Davey, Katharina Fritsch, Robert Gober, Jeff Koons, Annette Lemieus, Juan Munoz, Julian Opie, and Haim Steinbach; Girls' Night Out, which presented work by Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Elina Brotherus, Dorit Cypis, Rineke Dijkstra, Katy Grannan, Sarah Jones, Kelly Nipper, Daniela Rossell, Shirana Shahbazi, and Salla Tykka; and State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970, presenting an in-depth study of California artists in the 1960s and 1970s. The museum has also organized and hosted exhibitions of modern art and design such as Edvard Munch: Expressionist Paintings, 1900-1940, The Interpretive Link: Abstract Surrealism into Abstract Expressionism: Works on Paper, 1938-1948, The Figurative Fifties: New York Figurative Expressionism, American Modern, 1925-1940: Design for a New Age, Picasso to Pollock: Modern Masterpieces from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Villa America: American Moderns 1900-1950, Birth of the Cool: Art, Design, and Culture at Midcentury, and Illumination: The Paintings of Georgia O'Keeffe, Agnes Pelton, Agnes Martin, and Florence Miller Pierce. In 1984 the Museum launched the California Biennial, focusing on emerging artists in the state. In 2013, that program evolved into the California-Pacific Triennial, the first on-going exhibition in the Western Hemisphere devoted to contemporary art from around the Pacific Rim. The museum has co-organized exhibitions with the Renaissance Society, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Grey Art Gallery, and its exhibitions have traveled to more than 30 museums throughout the United States and in Europe.