The museum will draw on sound, film, visuals, instruments, costumes and performance to chronicle the Icelandic singer’s 20-plus years as an imaginative and colorful solo artist.

A Wednesday news release says the exhibit will include Bjork’s collaborations with video directors, photographers and fashion designers, a narrative that’s both biographical and fictitious written by the singer and Icelandic writer Sjón Sigurdsson, and a newly commissioned music and film experience.

The retrospective is being organized by Klaus Biesenbach, MoMA’s chief curator at large, and runs March 7 to June 7 in 2015.