The Thyssen-Bornemisza presents five centuries of art depicting our complex relationship with the natural world
Watercolours from the Met’s own collection show that John Singer Sargent wasn’t the only member of his family who was handy with a brush
Nineteenth-century photographs are joined by hand-coloured contemporary images by Vasantha Yogananthan at the Rijksmuseum
The Impressionist’s masterful depictions of people – especially men – at work and play go on display at the Art Institute of Chicago
The Musée des Arts Décoratifs draws on its considerable holdings to demonstrate why the couturier was known as ‘Le magnifique’
Van Gogh’s compositional style and intensity of vision were a formative influence on Anselm Kiefer, as this show at the Royal Academy makes clear
The Post-Impressionist’s home in Aix-en-Provence is the subject of this exhibition at the Musée Granet
The artist transforms the ground-floor of Dia Bridgehampton with prints and hand-painted designs that blend figuration and abstraction
The Fondation Beyeler presents paintings, sculptures and hyper-realistic drawings by the Latvian American artist
At the Frick, three enigmatic works by the Old Master depict women of status and their maids
The public and Royal Academicians alike can submit work to the world’s longest-running open exhibition
A survey at the National Portrait Gallery in London explores the artist’s bracingly conceptual approach to painting
Tate Britain’s pairing of two very different painters reveals that the artists have more in common than is usually thought
The Pompidou’s last show before it closes for five years is a wide-ranging retrospective of the photographer’s work
The Saint Louis Art Museum presents textiles from or inspired by the Islamic world feature in a free exhibition
This dazzling exhibition at the Barberini brings together some 100 works to demonstrate the variety of the Impressionist master’s art
The V&A tells the story of how disabled, deaf and neurodivergent people have shaped and inspired modern design over the last 80 years
In Berlin, the Alte Nationalgalerie’s restaging of a 1905 exhibition in Paris shows how both artists were developing their own sculptural languages
Salzburg’s DomQuartier presents portraits by painters who were forced to get more creative after the advent of photography
The artist pairs her paintings of eerily abstracted faces and bodies with archaeological objects from the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens
The Frist Museum considers the mercantile republic as a melting pot, where foreign fashions, customs and food were readily absorbed
The Morgan Library shows that, although she didn’t own a camera until she was 48, Cameron nudged photography into the realm of fine art
The Prado’s survey of one of the great painters of 16th-century Venice also considers his influences – and the artists he influenced in turn
Even as the military dictatorship repressed civil society in the 1960s, artists resisted the pressure to conform