I finally had a chance to visit the Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen. It is an amazing building and tremendous fun. I'll definitely visit again if I get a chance.
The exhibition "Tim Walker: Wonderful Things" was organized by London’s Victoria & Albert Museum, which invited Walker to create a series of photographs inspired by its archive. It is a wonderful immersive exhibition and a journey into the imagination.
This wonderful exhibition at the Musée Picasso explores the relationship between Maya and her father Pablo and includes the portraits Picasso made of her as a child and a wealth of drawings, photographs and archival documents.
Botanischer Wahnsinn at the Kröller-Müller Museum is a fascinating, intellectually demanding exhibition, which presents a selection of works by artists who examine the world of plants in a multiplicity of ways.
Ten simple rules for structuring papers. The physics of nothing. The Disunited States. Mental illness is not in your head. Horizontal gene transfer. Animal vocalization. The awfulness of open office spaces. Wolfgang Tillmans. Svetlana Alexievich. And more.
"Hockney’s Eye" is a small, but wonderful exhibition. It doubles as a David Hockney retrospective and an exploration of his ideas about artists' use of optical devices.
I loved Anne Imhof’s Natures Mortes at the Palais de Tokyo and had been looking forward to Youth at the Stedelijk Museum. The result is disappointing, to say the least.
I only visited the exhibition Golden Boy Gustav Klimt. Inspired by Van Gogh, Rodin, Matisse… because it serves as a retrospective of Klimt’s work. I left with a renewed appreciation of his work.
The exhibition Picasso and El Greco at the Kunstmuseum Basel explores the dialogue between the two artists. It is also an invitation to take a close look at the work of both artists.
The Kistefos Museum is an amazing museum and not just because of the recently opened The Twist art gallery. I spent nearly five hours exploring the park, the art galleries and the industrial heritage site.