A curated guide to the most important museum and gallery shows in major cultural cities
Updated: Summer 2026
Summer 2026 brings a dense global calendar of exhibitions across major art capitals, from landmark retrospectives in Paris and London to immersive installations in Venice and New York. Below is a curated selection of confirmed exhibitions across leading institutions worldwide.
Paris, France — Modern Masters and Contemporary Dialogues
In Paris, the Fondation Louis Vuitton presents a major Alexander Calder retrospective running from 15 April to 16 July 2026, showcasing his iconic kinetic sculptures and abstract structures.
The Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris hosts a comprehensive Lee Miller exhibition from 10 April to 2 August 2026, tracing her evolution from surrealist photography to wartime documentation.
The city’s contemporary gallery scene is also active, with Sterling Ruby at Gagosian Paris (12 June – 3 October 2026) and Tetsuya Ishida (10 June – 31 July 2026), both exploring material tension, identity, and psychological abstraction.
London, United Kingdom — Institutional Scale and Contemporary Energy
London’s summer programme is led by Anish Kapoor at the Hayward Gallery, running from 16 June to 18 October 2026, featuring a mix of new works and key historical sculptures.
The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition continues from June through August 2026, maintaining its role as one of the most open and diverse contemporary art exhibitions in Europe, with contributions across painting, sculpture, and installation.
Venice, Italy — The Global Centre of Contemporary Art
Venice becomes the focal point of the international art world with the 61st Venice Biennale, taking place from 9 May to 22 November 2026 across the Giardini and Arsenale.
Curated under the theme In Minor Keys, this edition brings together global artists working across sound, narrative, and spatial experimentation.
Alongside it, Marina Abramović presents a major exhibition at the Gallerie dell’Accademia from 6 May to 19 October 2026, reinforcing Venice’s position as a hub for immersive and performance-based work.
New York, USA — Gallery Density and Institutional Programming
New York’s summer season includes rotating exhibitions at the Peter Marino Art Foundation from May to October 2026, featuring artists such as Betty Parsons, Carla Accardi, Y.Z. Kami, and Robert Nava.
Key solo presentations include Kelly Akashi’s Heirloom (13 May – 25 July 2026) and Huguette Caland’s My Home (13 May – 25 July 2026), both reinforcing the city’s focus on material experimentation and conceptual depth.
Amsterdam, Netherlands — Contemporary Design and Curatorial Balance
In Amsterdam, the Stedelijk Museum presents its summer programme from June to September 2026, focusing on contemporary design, abstraction, and digital culture.
The Rijksmuseum continues its contemporary interventions throughout the season, creating dialogue between historical collections and modern artistic perspectives.
Tokyo, Japan — Digital Aesthetics and Spatial Minimalism
Tokyo’s Mori Art Museum presents its summer programme centred on digital aesthetics, minimalism, and spatial perception, reinforcing the city’s influence on contemporary visual language and design thinking.
Global Perspective — The Venice Biennale Effect
Across all regions, the Venice Biennale acts as the central axis of the 2026 art season, influencing curatorial strategies, gallery programming, and thematic direction worldwide.