80 Museum Exhibitions and Biennials to See in Fall 2025

Make way for new museums far and wide this fall. The Museum of West African Art will fully open in Benin City, Nigeria, and the Almaty Museum of Arts will launch its program in Kazakhstan, where it has the ambition of growing the country’s art scene. Meanwhile, in New York, two museums are reopening: the Studio Museum in Harlem and the New Museum, the latter of which hasn’t announced an opening date for its building. Both have been closed for years while they expand, and both have been sorely missed.

But shiny, new museums aren’t the only big attractions this fall, since old museums are pulling out all the stops as well. Adjectives like “rare” and “must-see” are trotted out all too often in press materials, but they are the most accurate words to describe the Louvre’s Jacques-Louis David retrospective, the kind of show not likely to happen again anytime soon. The Met is staging an ancient Egyptian blockbuster, and two museums in Florence will join forces for a Fra Angelico survey.

Yet not all is old at old museums, either: the Royal Academy of Arts, one of London’s most storied institutions, is staging a retrospective for Kerry James Marshall, who is among the greatest painters of our time. Within that same city, Tate Britain is doing a retrospective for Lee Miller, continuing a Surrealist moment that began last year on the movement’s centenary. Also of note for Surrealism fans: a Wifredo Lam retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, a Leonora Carrington retrospective at the Palazzo Reale in Milan, and a gargantuan survey of the movement’s impact on American art of the 1960s at the Whitney Museum in New York.

More recently, –isms have gone out the window, and movements have grown more diffuse. Hence the number of shows this season contending with styles that are hard to pin down: a globally minded survey of minimalist art (not to be confused with the Minimalist movement) in Paris; an exhibition about relational aesthetics, one of the most elusive stylistic developments in recent art history, in Rome; and a London mega-show about the development of modernism in Nigeria during the postwar era. These shows act as a reminder that art history is always in the process of being redrafted.”

Below, a look at 80 museum exhibitions and biennial to see this fall.

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