The Instagram Effect
Photography has always been part of art history. From Vermeer capturing light on a Delft interior to Warhol mass-producing images of Marilyn Monroe, the relationship between the artwork and the camera has evolved constantly. Now, Instagram has democratised visual culture, turning every visitor into both audience and creator.
At Moco Museum, Studio Irma’s mirrored installations place the visitor inside the artwork. You are not outside looking in. You are part of it. The line between observer and participant dissolves. The act of taking a photograph becomes an extension of the experience, not an interruption.
Amsterdam as a Stage
Amsterdam is a city where old and new coexist with remarkable ease. Moco Museum sits on Museumplein alongside the Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museum, but it offers a fundamentally different experience. Where those institutions preserve the past, Moco engages with the present.
Studio Irma’s Diamond Matrix installation uses light and mirrors to create endless reflections, turning the visitor into an infinite series of selves. Banksy works like Laugh Now and Flower Thrower provide instantly recognisable backdrops that carry meaning far beyond the photograph.
From Photo to Reflection
There has been a generational shift in how people engage with art. The camera is now an extension of the self, not an intrusion. For many visitors, photographing and sharing art is itself a form of cultural participation and personal expression.
The museum becomes not only a place of learning or escape but a platform for meaning-making. Every photo shared is a conversation started. Every selfie in front of an artwork is a statement about what moved you, what surprised you, what made you stop and look twice.
At Moco Museum Amsterdam, seeing and being seen are not in conflict. They are part of the same experience.





