As the director of the International Program department at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Jay Levenson leads a team that connects the museum to an international network of artists, scholars, and institutions. In 2009, his team launched Contemporary and Modern Art Perspectives (C-MAP), a research and exchange initiative devoted to art in a global context with a current focus on Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, and Latin America. What is the role of the International Program department at MoMA, and how has the department changed since you first joined in 1996? The International Program at MoMA was founded in 1952 as the department that would organize international traveling exhibitions, as part of the museum’s new outreach efforts. The International Council, a donors group begun the following year, provides independent support for the department. For years, the International Program had a very distinguished record of organizing traveling exhibitions. About the time I started working at MoMA, the museum wanted to centralize the administration of traveling shows in the Exhibitions department. I agreed that it seemed like the correct solution, but that meant that I had to come up with a new mission for my department. My thought was that the department had always aimed to connect the museum with the entire world and that I should take this opportunity to think of new programs that could better accomplish that mission in a changed environment. When the department began, there were very few modern and contemporary museums outside the United States, and making MoMA’s collection available internationally was a generous goal. By the late 1990s, however, there was an ever-growing number of modern-art museums around the world, and many other U.S. museums were traveling their exhibitions internationally.