Exhibitions

12 July
2025
:
,

The Bold and the Beautiful 16th-Century Prints and Drawings from the Myron Miller Collection

Museum of Fine Art Boston 465 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA, United States

Museum of Fine Art Boston

Artistic invention and adventurous experimentation characterized the art of Europe in the 16th and early 17th centuries. Fueled by the rediscovery of ancient Roman sculpture, and by a drive to recapture and compete with its grace, balance, and energy, artists experimented boldly with style and composition. Turning to the inherent drama of the human body […]

20 December
2025
:
,

Five Centuries of Works on Paper: The Grunwald Center at 70

Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, United States

Hammer Museum

Since its establishment in 1956 with a gift of prints from Los Angeles collector Fred Grunwald, the UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts has evolved into one of the nation’s foremost collections of works on paper. Over the decades, the Grunwald Center’s holdings have expanded through donations and acquisitions, and now comprise more than […]

8 January
2026
:
,

Painters, Ports, and Profits: Artists and the East India Company, 1750-1850

Yale Center for British Art 1080 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT, United States

Yale Center for British Art

This exhibition tells the story of artists from India, Britain, and China who worked in the era of one of the most powerful corporations in history. The British East India Company began in 1600 as a private trading enterprise but grew into a military and political force during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It waged […]

24 January
2026
:
,

Drawn to Venice

Legion of Honor, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Lincoln Park, 100 34th Avenue (at Clement Street), San Francisco, CA, United States

Legion of Honor, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Spanning the Renaissance to the Rococo period, this exhibition celebrates the vitality and originality of the arts in Venice and the Veneto region through more than 30 drawings and prints. In the 16th century, Venice became a thriving artistic center rivaling Rome and Florence. Patronage fostered creative competition among family workshops, such as the Bassano […]

28 January
2026
:
,

Viollet-le-Duc Drawing Worlds

Bard Graduate Center Gallery 18 West 86th St, New York City, NY, United States

Bard Graduate Center Gallery

Viollet-le-Duc Drawing Worlds is the first major U.S. exhibition dedicated to the life and work of visionary architect, designer, and theorist Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1814–1879). Bringing together nearly 150 drawings and objects, the majority of which have never before been on view in the U.S., the exhibition highlights Viollet-le-Duc’s prolific work as a draftsman and the […]

:
,

A View of One’s Own: Landscapes by British Women Artists, 1760-1860

The Courtauld Gallery The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, Strand, London, United Kingdom

The Courtauld Gallery

A View of One’s Own showcases landscape drawings and watercolours by British women artists working between 1760 and 1860, whose work represents a growing area of The Courtauld’s collection. These artists range from highly accomplished amateurs to those ambitious for more formal recognition. They have remained mostly unknown, and their works largely unpublished. When the Royal […]

31 January
2026
:
,

Carroll Dunham: Drawings, 1974–2024

Art Institute of Chicago 159 East Monroe Street, Chicago, IL

Art Institute of Chicago

Over the course of five decades, Dunham has engaged in wide-ranging formal and thematic experimentation across various media, yet his drawings represent a distinct, interconnected body of work. Dunham’s mature artistic career began in 1970s New York amid a scene dominated by Minimalist aesthetics. Using simple elements such as line, shape, and color, he made […]

3 March
2026
:
,

Virtue and Vice: Allegory in European Drawing

Getty Center 1200 Getty Center Drive, LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Getty Center

This rotation from Getty’s collection explores how European artists from the 16th to 19th centuries made drawings to criticize bad behavior as well as praise virtuous deeds. Drawings of proper and improper conduct range from straightforward examples (charity, lust, and greed) to complex allegories (virtue, decadence, and friendship). Whether warning against sinful ways or celebrating […]

29 March
2026
:
,

Raphael: Sublime Poetry

The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York City, NY, United States

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Dive into the artistic process of one of history’s most beloved and influential artists. A true titan of the Italian Renaissance, Raffaello di Giovanni Santi (1483–1520)—better known as Raphael—matched ambition […]

16 April
2026
:
,

Gothic by Design: The Dawn of Architectural Draftsmanship

The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York City, NY, United States

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Long before the towers of Gothic cathedrals could pierce the sky, architects outlined their vision and ambitions by creating intricate designs. The Gothic era, known for soaring structures like Notre-Dame […]

14 July
2026
:
,

Odilon Redon: Otherworldly Visions

Getty Center 1200 Getty Center Drive, LOS ANGELES, CA, United States

Getty Center

Odilon Redon (1840–1916) is known for his enigmatic art that celebrated the beauty of nature and mined the dreamlike depths of the imagination. Featuring an exceptional group of charcoal drawings, lithographs, and pastels from Getty’s collection, this exhibition presents the French artist’s fantastical world of haunting darkness and luminous color. Discover Redon’s singular vision and […]

20 September
2026
:
,

Spectacular Freedom: Andrew Wyeth and the Modern American Watercolor

The Cleveland Museum of Art 11150 East Boulevard, Cleveland, OH, United States

The Cleveland Museum of Art

This exhibition is the first to offer an in-depth exploration of American artist Andrew Wyeth’s watercolors—described by one critic as having a “spectacular freedom”—examining his relationship to the medium throughout […]

Scroll to Top
Sign up for our newsletter