Tate Britain (United Kingdom) presents an exhibition exploring how British art has been shaped by migration. Featuring artists from Van Dyck, Whistler and Mondrian to Steve McQueen and Francis Alÿs, Migrations traces not only the movement of artists, but the circulation of art and ideas.
The Juan March Foundation presents Giandomenico Tiepolo (1727–1804). Giandomenico was the brother of Lorenzo Tiepolo, and both were the sons of Giambattista Tiepolo, the patriarch of their artistic dynasty. The three artists had moved to Madrid in 1762, where their principal task was the creation of decorative frescoes on various ceilings in the Royal Palace.
Organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Van Gogh up close is a traveling exhibition that features more than 70 works including 46 paintings by the Post-Impressionist artist. The show focuses on radical still lifes and landscapes that challenged tradition.
"In Claude Lorrain, nature declares itself eternal," Johann Wolfgang von Goethe noted enthusiastically on the French Baroque artist’s landscape paintings in 1818. Now, the Städel Museum in Frankfurt (Germany) shows one hundred and thirty works created at different points in Claude Lorrain's (c. 1600 or 1604/05–1682) career, among them thirteen paintings and numerous drawings and prints
The Centre for Fine Arts BOZAR in Brussels (Belgium) presents Cy Twombly. Photographs 1951-2010, an exhibition with more than 100 dry prints, generated from Polaroid photographs, which were selected in close cooperation with the artist himself prior to his death on July 5th, 2011.