NYC Cultural Affairs Commissioner Tom Finkelpearl and Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) Commissioner Nisha Agarwal announced that the artist Tania Bruguera will serve as an artist-in-residence for one year at MOIA. In this newly created residency, she will help the office engage communities with large numbers of undocumented residents about IDNYC, New York City's municipal ID program. This collaboration aims to educate undocumented residents about the services the City has created with IDNYC and build upon the close relationship that has already been established between the IDNYC program and the city's rich cultural community. Bruguera will use her creative practice and understanding of NYC's immigrant population to help MOIA connect with communities that are often suspicious of government agencies. The residency, which will commence later in July, is supported by private funding from the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation and public funds through the Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA). In the other side, the Museum of Modern Art of New York –MoMA- announces the acquisition of Untitled (Havana 2000), a major performance and video installation that was conceived for and shown at the VII Bienal de La Habana in 2000. The first in a series made by the artist and presented in cities around the world between 2000 and 2009—with each piece in the series featuring a different performance addressing the sociopolitical memory of the city in question—it is a landmark of the artist's early career, and the first work by Bruguera to enter MoMA's collection. Untitled (Havana, 2000) was acquired through The Modern Women's Fund Committee and the Committee on Media and Performance Art Fund.