Entertainment

/

ArcaMax

Yo, Adrian, 2026 will be a very 'Rocky' year for Philadelphia. In a good way

Earl Hopkins, The Philadelphia Inquirer on

Published in Entertainment News

PHILADELPHIA — 2026 marks the 50th anniversary of the release of the first "Rocky" film. To coincide, the Philadelphia Art Museum announced on Wednesday there will be an exhibition exploring how the "Rocky" statue, at the foot of the museum, brings people together.

“Rising Up: Rocky and the Making of Monuments” will open in April in the museum’s Dorrance Galleries.

The exhibition, curated by Monument Lab cofounder Paul Farber, will showcase over 150 works from more than 50 artists including Reading native Keith Haring, Rashid Johnson, Andy Warhol, Carrie Mae Weems, and Hank Willis Thomas, the artist behind the "All Power to All People" sculpture that stood on Thomas Paine Plaza in 2017. They will be joined by artists from Mural Arts Philadelphia’s Restorative Justice Program.

“Rising Up” will examine the changing role of monuments in creating spaces of recreation across time, with the "Rocky" statue by sculptor A. Thomas Schomberg at the heart of the exhibition.

Farber hopes the display will broaden conversations about identity, power, memory and community, themes central to public art and Philadelphia’s cultural history.

“We have a statue that 4 million people visit a year. That’s extraordinary. It’s a statue of the most famous Philadelphian that never lived, in a city full of boxers who were legendary champs. How do we reconcile both of those thoughts? Well, we have to dive into it and understand it,” Farber said.

The "Rocky" statue and Philadelphia Art Museum steps are visited by about 4 million people every year, the Philadelphia Visitor Center reported last year. The Art Museum averages about 800,000 yearly visitors, per the museum.

Researched for over five years and in development for two, "Rising Up" will include sculptures, paintings, video performances, film, photographs, prints, drawings, participatory experiences, new commissions and other works.

“This show is a testament to the vitality and passion of Philadelphia’s arts, culture, and sports communities,” Mayor Cherelle L. Parker said in a statement. “It is more than timely as we approach our monumental Semiquincentennial year.”

 

A publication, edited by Farber to accompany the exhibit, will include essays by Philadelphia artist Alex Da Corte, former Inquirer film critic Carrie Rickey, and newly-enshrined Philadelphia Eagles Hall of Famer Malcolm Jenkins, among others.

“Rising Up” will be on view through Aug. 2, 2026.

The Art Museum announcement comes at a not-so-celebratory moment for fans of RockyFest, the celebration instituted last year by the Philadelphia Visitor Center.

A year after the festival’s first run, organizers have canceled 2025’s festival and will pivot to a yearlong celebration in 2026, rather than offering a week of bus tours and fan experiences.

“Throughout 2026, we will highlight a series of major milestones and activations commemorating this iconic moment in Philadelphia and film history,” Kathryn Ott Lovell, president & CEO of the Visitor Center, said in a statement.

Lovell said next year’s “Rocky 50″ will include events currently in development, some of which will accompany the May release of Sylvester Stallone’s upcoming memoir, "The Steps."

A full 2026 calendar of events will be released at a later date, Lovell said.


©2025 The Philadelphia Inquirer. Visit inquirer.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus