She Was Never Just Marilyn: At 100, Her Influence Is Still Relevant — Marilyn Monroe at MoMA
Why does Marilyn Monroe keep reappearing, fully intact, a century after her birth? Because Marilyn Monroe was never a fixed person. She was a construction built with such precision that it outlived the life it came from.
This year marks 100 years since Norma Jeane Mortenson was born. The name is almost incidental now. What remains is Marilyn—soft focus, platinum, controlled breath, a gaze that understood exactly where it landed. The greatest role she ever played was herself.
The Museum of Modern Art is not revisiting Monroe as nostalgia. Its film series, Marilyn Monroe: Celluloid Dream, opening March 12, positions her where she has always belonged—inside the machinery of image-making. On screen, Monroe does not simply appear. She calibrates. Every pause, every line, every shift in tone carries intention.
Monroe studied at the Actors Studio under Lee Strasberg, refining a method that allowed her to move between comedy and fragility without breaking either. Film historians at the British Film Institute have pointed to her timing in Some Like It Hot as evidence of a performer working with exacting discipline rather than instinct alone.
That construction is where “blonde ambition” begins. Not as cliché, not as shorthand for desirability, but as authorship. Monroe shaped how she would be seen, then held that image in place under relentless scrutiny.

Visual artists understood this immediately. Andy Warhol did not paint Monroe as a woman. He multiplied her as an image. His Gold Marilyn Monroe, now on view at MoMA, isolates her face against a shimmering field, flattening depth into surface until the person disappears and the icon remains.
Filmmaker David Lynch would later describe Monroe as a kind of ghost inside cinema itself, suggesting that her presence lingers in characters built on illusion and fracture. His observation is not abstract. Monroe established a visual and emotional language that other works continue to borrow from.
She became a reference point rather than a reference.
Public conversation continues to orbit the same contradiction. Monroe is circulated as an ideal—studied, replicated, admired. At the same time, she is revisited as a figure shaped by systems that extracted value from her image while limiting her control over it. Data from Pew Research Center shows that contemporary discourse increasingly centers on authorship and agency, questions that align directly with how Monroe is being reassessed.
“Marilyn Monroe is not frozen in time. She is revised every time someone looks.”
This etherealism is what keeps her active. Cultural analysis in The Journal of Popular Culture identifies Monroe as a figure whose meaning shifts across generations because her image was never fully resolved.

At 100, Monroe does not feel distant. She feels familiar in a way that is difficult to locate. The soft glamour. The studied vulnerability. The awareness of being watched. These are now standard visual languages.
Monroe’s images and presence circulate on screen, in galleries, conversation,to be used again and again.
Norma Jeane Mortenson had a life. Marilyn Monroe was built to be a fantasy. The programming proves to be still relevant.
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