A painting from Rajasthan from around 1780 of the Gaja-Laksmī, the goddess of good fortune
© The Trustees of the British Museum
As the art world prepares to head to Frieze New York, museums and galleries are unveiling a new host of summer blockbusters. These are the exhibitions opening in May that caught our eye.
Friendship, love, inspiration and rivalry are running themes in an exhibition at Pallant House Gallery that charts how artists have portrayed one another. Spanning painting, sculpture, installation, photography, drawing and printmaking, Seeing Each Other: Portraits of Artists includes depictions of more than 130 artists by at least 80 different hands, all working in Britain from the early 20th century until now. More
Ishbel Myerscough’s Two Painters (2025), of the artist with longtime friend and fellow artist Chantal Joffe
Courtesy of the artist and Flowers Gallery
“This kind of imagery is now part of day-to-day life,” says the curator Sushma Jansari of the types of objects included in the British Museum’s new exhibition Ancient India: Living Traditions, which presents devotional art of three of India’s great religions: Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism. “These are faiths practised by almost two billion people around the world. Our show is about the commonalities, our shared cultural heritage,” she says. For Jansari, this commonality is expressed most articulately through devotional art that goes back to the ancient roots of the religions, which still finds its way into current ritual and practice—hence the show’s title. More
A second-to third-century pink sandstone sculpture of a scowling Yaksha, a male nature spirit
© Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
A motorised spear turns at the centre of Rebecca Horn’s installation Cutting Through the Past (1992-93), housed at the Castello di Rivoli near Turin. It pierces five wooden doors in a 360-degree motion somewhere between “a caress” and “a surgical cut”, says the museum’s chief curator, Marcella Beccaria. This is not only the first major exhibition in Italy to be dedicated to Horn, but the first since her death last September, aged 80. “We felt an urgency to look at the legacy of Rebecca’s work—for the first time without the possibility of counting on Rebecca herself,” Beccaria says. More
Cutting Through the Past (1992-93) features in Horn’s show at the Castello di Rivoli
© Renato Ghiazza 2016
A major retrospective opening this month at The Jewish Museum in New York, Ben Shahn, On Nonconformity, honours the artist’s lifelong activism. The show includes 175 artworks and objects from the 1930s to the 1960s, divided into sections dedicated to Shahn’s early Social Realism; art made for the US government’s New Deal agencies; mid-1940s posters and graphics; works created during and after the Second World War; responses to McCarthyism and the Atomic Age; his support of the civil rights movement; and his later interest in spirituality and Jewish identity. More
Ben Shahn’s East Side Soap Box (study for Jersey Homesteads Mural) (1936) © 2025 Estate of Ben Shahn/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Photo: John Parnell © The Jewish Museum, New York

When does the past end and the present begin? That is the difficult question posed this month at Berlin’s Deutsches Historisches Museum, in an exhibition that revisits how Europeans in the period immediately following the Second World War tried to make sense of the catastrophe in a number of remarkable, ambitious and often wildly popular museum shows. More
The show Warsaw Accuses featured empty frames and works earmarked for Nazi looting
Photo: Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie
From Artemisia to Abramović, Old Masters to Olmecs, and Richter to Roman antiquities—here are next year's must-see shows
Show about the Hijrah—Muhammad's journey from Mecca to Medina—at Saudi Arabia’s Ithra Museum will go on a five-year world tour
The Art Newspaper's pick of the top shows to see around the world this month
The new year's must-see shows include Vermeer and Botticelli blockbusters; major Jasper Johns and Yayoi Kusama retrospectives; and sweeping surveys on Iran, slavery and queer art

source