SAN FRANCISCO, CA (February 26, 2026, updated March 5, 2026)– The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announces Jacob Hashimoto: Giant Arc, the largest installation of the multimedia artist’s career, mixing more than 75,000 hand-built kites made of bamboo and Japanese paper suspended together into a cloud canopy. The enveloping site-specific exhibition will cover the museum’s ground floor admission-free Roberts Family Gallery from floor to ceiling and wall to wall.
Hashimoto has built large-scale installations using kites for sites around the globe for the past 30 years, including recent exhibitions Path to the Sky at the Santa Maria della Scala, Siena, Italy, 2025; Not After a Million Years at the Nordiska Akvarellmuseet, Skärhamn, Sweden, 2024; and The Fractured Giant at the Boise Art Museum, Boise, Idaho, 2022, as well as permanent projects for Stanford University Graduate School of Education in Palo Alto, CA; Jefferson Health in Philadelphia, PA; the US Embassy, Windhoek, Namibia; the BNA Nashville International Airport in Nashville, TN; and Tokiwabashi Tower in Tokyo, Japan, among many others. Giant Arc at SFMOMA builds on these previous projects to form an increasingly complex and undulating canopy that will span the entirety of the Roberts Family Gallery.
In addition to incorporating elements seen in previous works, Hashimoto will utilize tens of thousands of new elements built specifically for this installation that incorporate patterns and designs inspired by the Bay Area’s natural environment and the history of San Francisco.
Visible through two-story windows facing Howard Street, Giant Arc will engage museum visitors and passersby alike. Visitors to the Roberts Family Gallery will have the opportunity to walk, sit or lie under the canopy to experience the immersive, multifaceted installation.
“Our mission at SFMOMA is radical hospitality for all—these efforts include filling over 45,000 square feet of free public space with irresistible contemporary art,” said Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA. “Jacob Hashimoto’s enveloping and breathtaking commission in our free-to-visit Roberts Family Gallery promises to welcome visitors of all ages, imbuing all who experience it with a sense of wonder and awe.”
“This giant arc of kites, color and pattern will be at once chaotic and meditative, playful and considered—a generous artwork that invites viewers to spend time in the gallery.
It will be an enticing, intriguing overture to the museum itself,” said Hashimoto about the project. “The gravity of Giant Arc is its universality . . . This essential nature allows people to find what they might need in the work—mysteries if people want them, stories if people desire them, narratives to spin and twist, experimental maps and aerial geographies to explore.”