Monday, June 29, 2026

In the Very Bowels of Changes: Surrealism and Antifascism

Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw 

26.06.2026–10.01.2027


Max Ernst, Toyen, Leonora Carrington, Pablo Picasso, Remedios Varo, Kurt Seligmann, André Masson, Roberto Matta, Franciszka and Stefan Themerson



Since its emergence in the 1920s, Surrealism has confronted a number of political movements that contradicted the ideals of equality and freedom. Surrealists would condemn Europe’s colonial project, organize themselves against fascists, fight in the Spanish Civil War, join the resistance during World War II—to be denounced as “degenerate” by the Nazis, face internment or persecution, flee Europe to escape extermination or, as was the case of many, die on the battlefields or in camps. Their resistance was art itself. Through poetry, painting, photography, collage, and exhibition-making they strived to expose flaws in the supposedly rational language of the supposedly rational civilization of the West.

Victor Brauner, Totem de la subjectivité blessée II (Totem of Wounded Subjectivity II), 1948. Legs de Mme Jacqueline Victor Brauner en 1986. Centre Pompidou, Paris, Musée national d’art moderne – Centre de création industrielle. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2024. Foto: Image Centre Pompidou

Victor Brauner, Totem de la subjectivité blessée II (Totem of Wounded Subjectivity II), 1948. Legs de Mme Jacqueline Victor Brauner en 1986. Centre Pompidou, Paris, Musée national d’art moderne – Centre de création industrielle. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2024. Foto: Image Centre Pompidou

As fascism gained ground in Europe, Nazification of Germany progressed, World War II and colonial wars broke out—Surrealists wouldn’t budge; the movement’s protagonists remained radical in their ideological and political choices. At the same time, these upheavals resulted in extraordinary encounters and a truly global solidarity: linking Prague with Coyoacán, Mexico; Cairo, with the Spanish Republic; Marseille, with Martinique’s Fort-de-France; Puerto Rico and Paris, with Chicago; and London, with New York. Surrealist thought and action have had an all-encompassing simultaneousness to them. Accordingly, the exhibition unfolds as a map rather than a timeline. The intent here is to present Surrealism as an international movement invested heavily in society and politics—in line with how its members perceived it.



As an artistic and political movement, Surrealism had an international reach and internationalist beliefs. Rooted in art and literature, it cherished much wider ambitions: to revolutionize society and redefine life itself. Today, we are again living in times of turmoil and, regrettably, we see that Surrealists’ most urgent demands—those of freedom and equality—remain unsatisfied. Accordingly our exhibition, rather than just recounting the past as distant history, is also an important lesson for the present, says Magda Lipska, one of the curators.


First presented in Munich, the exhibition now grows in Warsaw to include an additional chapter in Surrealist history, one written in Poland: it is the international collection of the a.r. group, which was assembled in the early 1930s and brought together works of such Surrealists as Max Ernst, Kurt Seligmann, and Hans Arp. We also revisit Poland’s art around 1948, drawing inspirations from Surrealism’s anti-colonialist and antifascist stance to deal with experiences of war and Holocaust. Exiled Polish artists are featured too: Franciszka and Stefan Themerson as well as Teresa Żarnower, adds co-curator Dorota Jarecka.


Surrealists demanded absolute freedom, and wanted it to permeate every section of society. Emancipation, to them, meant life liberated from any imperative on the part of the state, the nation, the church, or the bourgeoisie. And it was this openness about the political and the artistic being linked together that attracted many emancipatory movements to Surrealism. The student demonstrations of May 1968, post-war anti-totalitarian campaigns in Eastern Europe, and even the Black Liberation Movement in the United States were all inspired to an extent by Surrealist methods and beliefs. The exhibition traces these struggles as it attempts to revise the widespread preconception of Surrealism as a style in painting only meant for representing dreams, fantasies, and magic; doing away with the notion of a Surrealist canon, once again it poses this provocative question: “What is Surrealism?”


But Live Here? No thanks:

Surrealism and Anti-fascism







Curated by Dorota Jarecka and Magda Lipska, in collaboration with Stephanie Weber, Adrian Djukić, Karin Althaus, and Paweł Polit

PICASSO – BACON What It Feels Like to Be Human

ALBERTINA, VIENNA

September 18, 2026 to January 31, 2027

In a compelling juxtaposition, the large-scale exhibition showcases the two most important figurative painters of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso and Francis Bacon.

Deeply influenced by Picasso, Bacon resolved to become a painter. Throughout his life, he would grapple with this great father figure—and ultimately strive to surpass him. For the second half of the 20th century, Bacon aspired to be what Picasso had been for the first: a chronicler of humanity in all its fragmentation. Both artists placed human existence at the center of their visual world. Both were preoccupied with the human body—torn apart, reassembled, and reinvented with radical force. In their distorted depictions, they portray pain, desire, and vulnerability, holding up an unflinching mirror to the modern soul. Themes such as crucifixions, screams, bullfights, nudes, and the "tears of Eros" reveal, for both, the drama of life.

Although Picasso himself was not influenced by Bacon, he followed Bacon's career closely. Over 100 works from international museums and private collections illustrate, in a striking juxtaposition, the commonalities in the oeuvres of the two masters and Picasso's significance for the subsequent generation of artists.

IMAGES



Pablo Picasso: Dora Maar, 1940
64 × 46 cm, oil on paper (© Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026, © Photo: bpk/Nationalgalerie, SMB, Museum Berggruen/ Jens Ziehe)

Pablo Picasso: Three Lamb Heads, 1939,

65 × 81 cm, oil on canvas (Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía © Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026)

Pablo Picasso: Mother and Child (Study for Guernica), 1937,

130 × 195 cm, oil on canvas (Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía © Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026)

Pablo Picasso: Figure on a Seashore, 1929

, 129.9 × 96.8 cm, oil on canvas (© Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026, © Photo: bpk / The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Pablo Picasso: Bathers with Ball, 1928,

33.1 × 19.2 cm, oil on canvas (© Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026, Photo: Moderna Museet / Stockholm)

Pablo Picasso: Seated Bather, 1930

163.2 × 129.5 cm, oil on canvas (© Succession Picasso / Bildrecht, Vienna 2026, © Photo: "Digital image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence, 2026")

Francis Bacon: Figure Study II, 1945/46

145 × 129 cm, oil on canvas (National Gallery of Scotland, on loan from Huddersfield Art Gallery © The Estate of Francis Bacon / All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026)

Francis Bacon: Self-Portrait, 1972,

35.5 × 30.5 cm, oil on canvas (Private Collection © The Estate of Francis Bacon /All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026

Francis Bacon: Three Studies of Isabel Rawsthorne, 1967

124.2 × 157.1 cm, oil on canvas (Neue Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © The Estate of Francis Bacon / All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026)

Francis Bacon: Portrait Study, 1949

149.4 × 130.6 cm, oil on canvas (Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago © The Estate of Francis Bacon / All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026)

Francis Bacon: Seated Figure, 1955,

152.5 × 117 cm, oil on canvas (Stekelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (SMAK) © The Estate of Francis Bacon / All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026)

Francis Bacon: Figure Study ("Fury"), ca. 1944

, 94 × 74 cm, oil and pastel on fiberboard (Private Collection © The Estate of Francis Bacon / All rights reserved / Bildrecht, Vienna and DACS, London 2026)

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Anniversary Exhibition Collecting for the Future

 ALBERTINA

19 June until 11 October 2026


In 2026, the ALBERTINA Museum is celebrating 250 years of existence. This significant anniversary offers an opportunity to look back upon the eventful history of the collection and the institution itself as well as to look towards the future with optimism and enthusiasm – attitudes that have always been part of the ALBERTINA Museum’s self-conception. Much has already been written about the museum – but nowhere near everything has been said. What stories have yet to be told? What still awaits discovery? And how will the ALBERTINA Museum develop in the future?

Open to New Perspectivs

It is these questions that guide us through this anniversary year’s programming. Three main exhibitions with innovative approaches present the world-famous collection of the ALBERTINA from a new perspective, will usher rarely shown and entirely unknown objects into the spotlight alongside renewed scrutiny of known artistic quantities. A “path of discovery” through the extensive collections of the ALBERTINA encourages visitors to the exhibition Fascination Paper to experience this tradition-steeped medium anew and interact with art from unaccustomed perspectives.

Reappraising the history of the ALBERTINA Museum also entails centering a female personality whose pivotal role in the collection’s founding is frequently overshadowed by that of her husband, Duke Albert of Sachse-Teschen: Archduchess Marie Christine. As the favorite daughter of Empress Maria Theresia, she endowed her marriage with the wealth that made possible such wide-ranging art acquisitions. She had also been active since her youth as an artist in her own right, by virtue of which she wielded important influence over the couple’s collecting pursuits. The Anniversary Exhibition Collecting for the Future devotes itself to this collecting history with a selection that will include precious works ranging from Dürer’s Hare to the expressive drawings of Egon Schiele.


ALBERTINA MUSEUM, VIENNA includes over one million objects, numbers among the world’s most important collections of graphic art, and was founded 250 years ago: the collection of the ALBERTINA Museum. This onceprivate collection has long since become a world-class museum.

That it was Albert of Saxe-Teschen who laid its cornerstone in 1776 is well known. This exhibition, however, sheds light specifically on female contributions to this world-famous collection for the first time. The focus here is on Marie Christine, the favorite daughter of Empress Maria Theresia, and how she worked together with her husband Albert to build the collection in a systematic manner.

It is therefore the collection’s beginnings and the collectors’ respective motives that are explored, here. What profile was the collection intended to develop, and for what purpose was this collecting being done? Which artists were favored? And when did the largest groups of works by figures such as Albrecht Dürer or Egon Schiele arrive here?

These and further questions will be answered with reference to priceless examples such as Dürer’s Hare. In doing so, this presentation shall train its gaze not only on a great past but also forward, into the future.

IMAGES



Johann August Walther: Herzog Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, 1776

30.4 x 23.3 cm, Pinsel in Grau mit Weißhöhungen auf Pergament (© ALBERTINA, Wien)

Johann August Walther: Erzherzogin Marie Christine von Österreich, Gattin des Herzogs Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, 1776

30.1 x 23.4 cm, Pinsel in Grau mit Weißhöhungen auf Pergament (© ALBERTINA, Wien)

Archduchess Marie Christine Habsburg-Lothringen: Reading Letters, Second half of the 18th century

23,9 × 19,3 cm, Watercolor (The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna)

Jakob Alt: Das Palais Herzog Alberts, 1816  
27.4 x 40.8 cm, Feder in Schwarz, Aquarell (© ALBERTINA, Wien) 

Albrecht Dürer | The Hare | © The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna

Hieronymus Bosch | The Tree Man, ca 1500 | The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna

Pieter Bruegel d. Ä. | Big Fish Eat Little Fish, 1556 | The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna
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