The Lie (1898), Félix Vallotton.

Private Lives: Home and Family in the Art of the Nabis, Paris, 1889–1900

From domestic bliss to secret affairs – the Cleveland Museum of Art explores the home lives of the Parisian avant-garde

16 Jul 2021
Installation view of ‘Karla Black: sculptures 2001–2021’, in the new warehouse space at Fruitmarket, Edinburgh. Photo: Tom Nolan

Fruitmarket

After a major expansion, the contemporary arts hub in Edinburgh reopens with a Karla Black retrospective

16 Jul 2021
Our Lady of Peace (detail; 1907), Evelyn De Morgan.

Pre-Raphaelite Artist of Hope: Evelyn De Morgan

De Morgan’s staunch pacifism was reflected in her symbolic paintings and sketches, now on view at Towneley Hall in Burnley

16 Jul 2021
Woman painter at her easel (detail; n.d.), Hanna Bekker vom Rath.

About Women: Female Destinies in the Böhme Collection

The Museum of the Lost Generation in Salzburg explores the lives of women artists whose careers were cut short by the Nazis

9 Jul 2021
Head of a walrus (1521), Albrecht Dürer.

Dürer Was Here: A Journey Becomes Legend

A museum in Aachen, where Dürer stopped over in 1520, retraces the artist’s footsteps on that voyage

9 Jul 2021
The Coronation of the Virgin (detail; 1358), Paolo Veneziano. The Frick Collection, New York

Paolo Veneziano: Art and Devotion in 14th-Century Venice

Panels from a long-dispersed altarpiece by the trecento painter are reunited at the Getty Center

9 Jul 2021
Hand-coloured photograph of Prince Arthur and Prince Leopold in the costume of the sons of King Henry IV (detail; 1857), commissioned by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert (photo taken by Leonida Caldesi).

Making History: Shakespeare and the Royal Family

An online exhibition explores the fascination Shakespeare’s plays have held for generations of British monarchs

9 Jul 2021
Gainsborough Old Hall.

Gainsborough Old Hall

One of the best preserved Tudor manors in England reopens after an extensive renovation

2 Jul 2021
Luma Arles; in the foreground is the town’s Roman amphitheatre. Photo: Iwan Baan

Luma Arles

The Swiss contemporary art foundation gets a glistening new home in the south of France, designed by Frank Gehry

2 Jul 2021
Allegory of War (1628), Peter Paul Rubens.

Bellum et Artes: Saxony and Central Europe in the Thirty Years War

A display in Dresden explores how artists fared in a turbulent era

2 Jul 2021

Paula Rego

The Portuguese-born painter’s masterfully unsettling canvases go on view in her largest UK survey to date, at Tate Britain

2 Jul 2021

Hôtel de la Marine

The former headquarters of the French navy in Paris opens to the public after a major revamp

25 Jun 2021
Lithograph depicting Rameses II on his chariot (19th century).

Musée Champollion

A new museum in the picturesque family home of the Egyptologist who deciphered the Rosetta Stone

25 Jun 2021
Photo: Corning Museum of Glass

Fire and Vine: The Story of Glass and Wine

A display of vessels for vino, from ancient times to the present, at the Corning Museum of Glass

25 Jun 2021
(detail; 1911), Giovanni Giacometti.

The Giacometti: A Family of Creators

Alberto was by no means the only talented artist of the clan – as this display at Fondation Maeght proves

25 Jun 2021

The Medici: Portraits & Politics, 1512–1570

The Met explores how the Florentine dynasty used art as a tool to assert their cultural and political power

18 Jun 2021
We can't do it without the rose (detail; 1972), Joseph Beuys.

I Transmit: 100 Years of Joseph Beuys

A Beuys treasure hunt in Munich, courtesy of the Pinakothek der Moderne

18 Jun 2021
Prières du matin et du soir (detail; 1748), written and bound for Louis-Joseph de Bourbon, prince de Condé, by Louis Pierre Vallain.

Bound for Versailles: The Jayne Wrightsman Bookbindings Collection

An outstanding collection of French volumes from the 18th century goes on display at the Morgan Library

18 Jun 2021
June 16-47 (still life) (detail; 1947), Ben Nicholson. Private collection.

Ben Nicholson: From the Studio

This show at Pallant House explores the British artist’s interest in still life – showing paintings alongside the studio objects that inspired them

18 Jun 2021
Marsh Marigold Night (before 1915; detail), Nikolai Astrup. Savings Bank Foundation DNB / KODE Art Museums and Composer Homes, Bergen

Nikolai Astrup: Visions of Norway

Paintings and woodblocks inspired by Nordic folklore get their first US showing at the Clark Art Institute

10 Jun 2021
Shutter Splinter (2021) Katharina Grosse. Commissioned by HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.

Helsinki Biennial

The city’s inaugural biennial takes place both on the mainland and a nearby island – plus, of course, online

10 Jun 2021
About a Girl (2005), Mamma Andersson.

Mamma Andersson

The Swedish artist’s strange compositions, culled from a range of sources, travel to Louisiana in Denmark

10 Jun 2021
Allegory of Fable (1879; detail), Gustave Moreau. Private Collection.

Gustave Moreau: The Fables

The French Symbolist’s colourful illustrations go on display at Waddesdon – for the first time in more than a century

10 Jun 2021
A fresco by Giovanni da Udine at the Villa Farnesina, Rome

Giovanni da Udine

The first show devoted to Raphael’s pupil, held in the castle he decorated in his home city

4 Jun 2021