Museums have a reputation for saving their “serious” exhibitions for the winter, spring, and fall—the Whitney Biennial, the Shchukin Collection at the Fondation Louis Vuitton, the David Hockney retrospective at the Tate, for instance. Summer, when patrons and donors and critics are on vacation, is supposedly the time for low-budget follies.
But spared the spotlight of international scrutiny or the pressure of serving as a ticket-office bonanza, many museums make use of their excellent, often unseen permanent collections to create quiet, highly creative shows that are well worth a visit.
The following 10 exhibitions are all cases in point: They range in scope and scale and content, but each, in its own way, is proof that summer is still a season for art.
Eduardo Arroyo: Dans le Respect des Traditions at the Fondation Maeght, Saint-Paul de Vence, France
The Fondation Maeght, a private exhibition space perched on a mountainside in the south of France, has been a destination since it was founded in 1964 by the art dealers Marguerite and Aimé Maeght. Its permanent collection, which includes a terrace full of sculptures by Giacometti and a “labyrinth” designed by Joan Miro, is always a draw, but its temporary shows are equally good.
El 1/7 el artista de la galeria #EduardoArroyo inaugura "Dans le respect des traditions" en
Fondation #Maeght https://t.co/TGbLNxQU43 pic.twitter.com/wVSEUL5rW1— Galeria Carles Taché (@GaleriaTache) June 15, 2017
This collection of work by the Spanish painter Eduardo Arroyo (b. 1937 in Madrid) showcases one of the giants of postwar painting who, for whatever reason (geography, and the fact that they can’t be easily categorized, most probably), has been undervalued by the art world for decades. That probably won’t last long.
Eduardo Arroyo up now through November 19.
The Henkin Brothers: A Discovery at the Hermitage, St. Petersburg
Rarely has an exhibition made more sense, or seemed more clever, than the juxtaposition of photographs by the brothers Evgeny and Yakov Henkin. Born in Rostov-on-Don, a port city in southern Russia on the border of Ukraine, in 1900 and 1903, respectively, the brothers split up after the October Revolution, one moving to Berlin, the other Moscow.
The exhibition entitled "The Henkin Brothers:A Discovery.People of 1920s-30s Berlin and Leningrad" opens this summer https://t.co/XdtMbKD9c6 pic.twitter.com/YqgIt8oiiN
— The State Hermitage (@hermitage_eng) March 29, 2017
The Hermitage, a museum known for its unparalleled collection of old master paintings, has organized an exhibition that contrasts the trajectory (and parallels) of the two brothers’ lives as their respective cities transitioned from the comparatively ebullient 1920s to the increasingly despotic and bellicose 1930s.
The Henkin Brothers on view now through September 24.
China and Egypt: Cradles of the World at the Neues Museum, Berlin
In a very different example of contrasting timelines, this show comprises 250 objects spanning nearly 4,000 years and charts the development of the two earliest and most sophisticated societies on the planet. The exhibition’s objects include a full Chinese burial suit made out of jade blocks from about 200 B.C.E., a perfectly preserved polychrome Egyptian stella from about 1350 B.C.E., and a gorgeously filigreed 13th century B.C.E. Chinese wine vessel in the shape of an ox, on loan from the Shanghai Museum.
Exhibit to open July 6 at #NeuesMuseum on ‘#China and #Egypt. Cradles of the World’ https://t.co/DVnibyYjTW #egyptology pic.twitter.com/AnSf46T53S
— Thomas H. Greiner (@thogreiner) July 4, 2017
A bonus: the Neues Museum’s beautifully designed interiors by starchitect David Chipperfield.
China and Egypt on view now through December 3.
Female Images from Biedermeier to Early Modernism at the Leopold Museum, Vienna
In a prime example of a museum making excellent use of its extensive permanent collection, the Leopold Museum, Vienna’s pantheon of Germanic modernism, has dug into its own holdings and organized a thematic show around “female images.” While any mandate that sweeping runs the risk of falling flat, reassessing the evolution (or lack thereof) of depictions of gender feels timely.
Damals und jetzt.
Instagram Fotowettbewerb zur Ausstellung 'Frauenbilder' im @Leopold_Museum https://t.co/UyyKixbcbZ pic.twitter.com/o7bXFJk4pl
— Instagramers Austria (@igersaustria) July 7, 2017
The first part of the show is organized around themes (mother and child, young/old, formal portraits, etc.), while the latter part includes works created by female artists.
Female Images from Biedermeier to Early Modernism on view now through September 18.
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power at the Tate Modern, London
Perhaps it requires a British arts organization to truly interrogate what it meant to be a black American artist. This sweeping show—which includes work by Romare Bearden, Norman Lewis, Sam Gilliam, and more than 50 others—seeks to articulate a relatively fresh narrative from the race riots of the 1960s through the early 1980s and the establishment of the Black Power movement.
Equally refreshing, the show includes work from the birth of Black Feminism, along with less overtly political pieces, like the aesthetic photography of Roy DeCarava, the first black photographer to win a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Tickets for #SoulOfANation: Art in the Age of Black Power are now on sale! Open from July at Tate Modern https://t.co/dWbVDiQNfa pic.twitter.com/WSnjffbLQa
— Tate (@Tate) April 28, 2017
Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power opens July 12 and runs through October 22.
Fred Forest at the Centre Pompidou, Paris
Fred Forest, a French artist born in 1933, became famous (or at least art world famous) in the 1970s for his conceptual, performative, and largely incomprehensible practice. Forty years later, the theory behind much of his art remains muddled, but his embrace of new technology—he was a leading practitioner of video art—has begun to appear dramatically ahead of its time.
Given that Forest has largely disappeared from recent contemporary discourse, the Pompidou’s show is part retrospective and part introduction to a younger audience that wasn’t alive when he was first scandalizing (or sending up) the art world.
Fred Forest opens July 12 and runs through August 28.
Sarah Lucas: Good Muse at the Legion of Honor, San Francisco
Sarah Lucas has been an art market juggernaut for the better part of 25 years, having first appeared on the scene with her peers Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin in the early 1990s under the umbrella of the much-maligned moniker Young British Artists. Unlike her peers, though, Lucas has managed to evolve, persistently creating art that feels fresh, challenging, and fun.
There's a new lady of the Legion and she's serving the naked truth. 'Sarah Lucas: Good Muse' opens next weekend. https://t.co/z2TITOgkyN pic.twitter.com/9ApIDLioXJ
— Legion of Honor (@legionofhonor) July 5, 2017
This show at the Legion of Honor is the result of the museum’s invitation to Lucas to create new works that “dialogue” with works from its exhibition Auguste Rodin: The Centenary Installation, which closed in April. Many of those works will remain on view alongside Lucas’s sculpture.
Sarah Lucas: Good Muse opens July 15 and runs through September 17.
Cristóbal de Villalpando: Mexican Painter of the Baroque at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
The Met might be in the throes of a much-publicized budget crisis and management shakeup, but you wouldn’t know it from the quality of its 2017 exhibitions.
One of the most exciting displays is a colossal painting by Cristóbal de Villalpando (c. 1649–1714), a Mexican Baroque painter. The painting is more than 28 feet tall and depicts two biblical scenes (Moses and the brazen serpent, and the Transfiguration of Jesus). Ten additional works round out the show, but the massive painting is the star: This is the first time in more than 300 years that it’s left Mexico.
Cristóbal de Villalpando opens July 25 and runs through October 15.
Playing with Fire: Paintings by Carlos Almaraz at LACMA, Los Angeles
It’s entirely reasonable that Carlos Almaraz’s reputation is intertwined with Los Angeles: He founded a Chicano artist collective in the city in the 1970s and subsequently created a series of prominent murals in East L.A. depicting the struggle for Chicano civil rights.
But his paintings, which are bright, vivid, and often verge on the surreal, practically beg for an international audience. This show—the first major retrospective of his work—includes more than 60 pieces from 1967 until his death from AIDS-related complications in 1989.
Playing with Fire: Paintings by Carlos Almaraz opens August 6 and runs through December 3.
The Sculpture Park at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark
No roundup is worth its salt without a glaring exception, and there's no better exception than the Louisiana Museum’s outdoor sculpture park. Truly, it’s one of the most beautiful summertime destinations for art viewership on the planet.
Set on a rolling lawn overlooking the Öresund Sound, the park contains more than 60 sculptures dotted amid trees, flowers, and meandering paths. The park is about a half- hour drive from downtown Copenhagen and well worth the trip.
The sculpture park is open year round.
This article was provided by Bloomberg News.