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Traveling This Summer? Here Are the Shows You Can’t Miss in 5 Cities Across the United States
From New York to Los Angeles, here are the must-see museum shows to hit while you're on the road this summer.
From New York to Los Angeles, here are the must-see museum shows to hit while you're on the road this summer.
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If you’re lucky enough to be visiting a new city this summer but don’t want to check every museum website to figure out what to see, never fear—we’ve got you covered. Below, we’ve selected the must-see shows in five major cities across the United States. Enjoy the shows, and the air conditioning.
On view at the New Museum, 235 Bowery, New York, through October 6, 2019
The Frick isn’t normally a destination for contemporary art. But sculptor and author Edmund de Waal has created a series of site-specific porcelain, gold, marble, steel, and glass objects in response to the permanent collection and gallery spaces in the jewel-box museum. The monochromatic vitrines are positioned next to lavish paintings and gilded furniture, and the unlikely juxtapositions are discussed by the artist himself in a series of audio clips available for download online, along with clips of music that inspired each work.
On view at The Frick Collection, 1 East 70th Street, New York, through November 17, 2019
On view at the Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, New York, through September 22, 2019
The title of this exhibition is taken from architect Robert Venturi’s catty retort to Mies van der Rohe’s Modernist maxim “less is more.” The exhibition explores how artists, including those affiliated with the Pattern and Decoration movement of the 1970s, sought to push back against the dominance of Minimalism. No one could argue that the works on display here—an exuberant range of architecture, ceramics, design and painting—are boring.
On view at ICA Boston, 25 Harbor Shore Drive, Boston, Massachusetts, through September 22, 2019
The MFA pairs Jackson Pollock’s largest and perhaps most important work, the 20-foot-long Mural (1943) commissioned by legendary arts patron Peggy Guggenheim, with a newly commissioned work by German artist Katharina Grosse, who creates large-scale installations with an industrial spray-painter. Pollock’s Mural belongs to the University of Iowa Museum of Art (last year renamed the Stanley Museum of Art), which has been closed since a devastating 2008 flood destroyed its main building.
On view at MFA Boston, Avenue of the Arts, 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts, July 1, 2019–February 23, 2020
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of the death of Pierre-Auguste Renoir, the Clark has staged the first exhibition dedicated exclusively to the great Impressionist’s nudes. Renoir is better known for painting innocent-looking children and quaint party scenes, but he once said that “in all honesty what I love to paint the most is the nude woman.”
On view at the Clark Art Institute, 224 South Street, Williamstown, Massachusetts, through September 22, 2019
Ursula von Rydinsvard’s monumental wooden sculptures are imbued with a larger-than-life presence, their abstract forms often seemingly poised to spring into motion. Her first show in Washington, DC, includes large-scale cedar works as well as works in paper pulp, linen, and leather.
On view at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, 1250 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC, through July 28, 2019
The exhibition, which takes its title from a line from author Richard Wright as well as Isabel Wilkerson’s landmark book about the Great Migration, explores the refugee crisis through the work of 75 artists from around the world. The show juxtaposes Jacob Lawrence’s seminal “Migration Series” (1940–41)—a gem of the Phillips Collection—with contemporary works from such far-flung countries as Algeria, Belgium, and Brazil. The show has been organized in partnership with the New Museum and is curated by New Museum assistant director Massimiliano Gioni and Natalie Bell.
On view at the Phillips Collection, 1600 21st Street NW, Washington, DC, through September 22, 2019.
Louis Vuitton menswear artistic director, Off-White CEO, and frequent Kanye West collaborator Virgil Abloh returns to his hometown for his first solo museum exhibition. A tireless creative whose output includes fashion, furniture, graphic design, architecture, painting, sculpture, and photography, Abloh is something of a modern-day Renaissance man, as evidenced by the multidisciplinary nature of his genre-bending retrospective.
On view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 220 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, through September 22, 2019
The Art Institute of Chicago’s first Eduoard Manet exhibition in over 50 years is also the first to look extensively at the late career of the great artist, known as the father of the Impressionists. The show, which features his paintings of fashionable women, includes Le Printemps (1881), also known as Jeanne (Spring), which set an auction record for the artist when it was purchased for $65.1 million by the Getty Museum in Los Angeles—the exhibition’s co-organizer and second venue—in 2014.
On view at the Art Institute of Chicago, 111 South Michigan Avenue , Chicago, Illinois, through September 8, 2019
Philadelphia punk rocker and outsider artist Justin Duerr began drawing hyper-detailed scrolls in pen and marker in 1999. Since 2008, Duerr has been connecting these large-scale narrative works with the goal of creating a massive cycloramic mural that reconnects to the initial scroll. So far, he’s up to 26 scrolls that collectively measure over 80 feet in length, with plans to continue for the rest of his life.
On view at Intuit: The Center for Outsider and Intuitive Art, 756 North Milwaukee Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, through January 12, 2020
West Coast denizens will get to check out British artist Sarah Lucas’s egg-cellent survey this summer following its well-reviewed run at New York City’s New Museum. Lucas’s body of work spanning the last three decades touches on themes of sexuality, gender, and identity with a distinctly surreal, punk-rock flavor. Her confrontational tableaux made from cigarettes, vegetables, and stockings are an antidote to friendly, candy-colored Instagram art.
On view at the Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, California, through September 1, 2019
Bolivian-American artist Donna Huanca is getting her first large-scale museum show in the US at LA’s Marciano Art Foundation, where she will debut a new site-specific installation that features her skin paintings and a series of carved steel sculptures, for which she is best known. These static objects plus sensory-engaging performances will take on the “aura” of the Marciano’s building, which was once a former Scottish Rite Masonic Temple.
On view at the Marciano Art Foundation, 4357 Wilshire Blvd, through December 1, 2019
To celebrate its 40th anniversary, MOCA invited several LA-based artists to organize a series of exhibitions drawn from its top-notch permanent collection. The first in line is master of collage Elliott Hundley, who has managed to whittle down the thousands of objects in storage to just 39. Fittingly, his exhibition reflects on the history of collage and assemblage art through works by artists including Bruce Conner, Sister Corita Kent, and Martin Kippenberger.
On view at MOCA, 250 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, through September 16, 2019