Museum & Exhibition Guide — 2026-05-27
As Art Basel in Switzerland approaches (June 18–21), Europe's leading museums are pulling out all the stops with blockbuster openings this week. Meanwhile, the Louvre just announced architects for the Mona Lisa's new private suite, and MoMA's landmark Marcel Duchamp retrospective continues to spark passionate critical debate. From London's boundary-pushing shows to Montréal's immersive ecological worlds, this is one of the busiest weeks in the global museum calendar.
Museum & Exhibition Guide — 2026-05-27
Must-See Exhibitions Opening Now
Top 10 Contemporary Art Exhibitions in Europe — Opening June 2026
- What: Ten major blockbuster exhibitions spanning radical mid-century performance archives to contemporary painting, timed to coincide with Art Basel's international migration to Switzerland
- Dates: Opening June 2026 (Art Basel: June 18–21, 2026)
- Why Go: With the international art world converging on Switzerland, Europe's leading museums are unveiling their most ambitious programming of the year. Shows span everything from deep archival performance work to new-media installations, making this the richest moment for museum-going on the continent.

Otherworlds by Jakob Kudsk Steensen — PHI Centre, Montréal
- What: An immersive exhibition by Danish artist Jakob Kudsk Steensen examining contemporary ecological realities through virtual, sonic, and video worlds
- Dates: Running spring–summer 2026
- Why Go: Steensen's practice occupies a singular space at the crossroads of ecology and technology. Otherworlds immerses visitors in uncanny synthetic landscapes that ask urgent questions about our relationship to nature — and to the worlds we are building to replace it.

Nanualuk – Northern Expedition — Montréal Science Centre, Old Port
- What: A permanent immersive exhibition offering more than 20 interactive missions, each exploring life in the Arctic — including wildlife, Indigenous knowledge, and climate science
- Dates: Ongoing
- Why Go: Part of Montréal's remarkable spring-summer immersive exhibition season, Nanualuk is a standout for families and adults alike. It transforms Arctic science into a first-person adventure, making abstract climate data viscerally real through hands-on exploration.

Currently Running: Editor's Picks
Marcel Duchamp Retrospective — MoMA, New York
- What: A once-in-a-generation retrospective of Marcel Duchamp, the iconoclast whose readymades, conceptual provocations, and alter ego Rrose Sélavy transformed the course of modern art
- Through: Running through mid-2026 (check MoMA for exact closing date)
- Highlight: The show is generating fierce critical debate. Frieze calls it "built like a mausoleum when it should be a monument to the artist's ungovernable wit," while Artforum's Helen Molesworth argues it feels "strangely muted for such a provocative artist" — making it one of the most discussed shows of the year regardless of one's verdict.

Greater New York — MoMA PS1, New York
- What: MoMA PS1's flagship survey of emerging and mid-career artists working in and around New York City, a bellwether exhibition for the state of contemporary art in the region
- Through: Running spring–summer 2026
- Highlight: Harper's Bazaar profiles six breakthrough artists you need to know from this edition. The show's new chief curator Ruba Katrib is also helming Art Basel's Unlimited sector this June, signaling MoMA PS1's growing international ambitions.

After the End (Film Still by Liam Young) — London
- What: A genre-defying exhibition featuring speculative and science-fiction-inflected work, including film stills and multimedia installations, exploring future visions through the science of today
- Through: Running through summer 2026 (check venue for exact date)
- Highlight: London's exhibition scene this spring has been noted for its "spine-tingling" range, with After the End standing out for its immersive, cosmos-spanning ambition. Liam Young's practice bridges architecture, film, and speculative design in ways that feel urgently relevant.

Beyond Art: Science, History & Immersive
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Science Museum, London — Landmark USA 250th Anniversary Exhibition: Marking 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, this major exhibition reveals the scientific history that shaped the founding of the USA through extraordinary maps, paintings, and artefacts. Adult-only "Power Up" evening sessions also return in 2026 with expanded dates.
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Montréal Immersive Exhibition Season (Spring–Summer 2026): Tourisme Montréal highlights a remarkable concentration of immersive experiences this season — from the PHI Centre's ecological Otherworlds to the Montréal Science Centre's Arctic expedition. The city has positioned itself as a global destination for experiential museum culture.
Last Chance: Closing Soon
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Marcel Duchamp at MoMA, New York — closes mid-2026. Don't let the critical controversy keep you away: this is a once-in-a-generation chance to see Duchamp's complete universe — from Fountain to The Large Glass — assembled in one place. Whether you agree with Frieze or Artforum, you'll want to have seen it for yourself.
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Best London Exhibitions (May 2026) — Several standout shows close as the month ends, including works described as "iconoclastic streetwear" history and Spanish art. The Nudge recommends visiting before the June changeover.
Exhibition Trends & Insights
The Louvre's Mona Lisa Moment — Perhaps the biggest museum story of the week: the Louvre has announced the architects who will design a dedicated private suite for the Mona Lisa. Visitors will be able to see Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece without touring the rest of the Louvre, and the museum's annual capacity will grow by three million visitors. The decision signals a broader trend of iconic works being treated as destination experiences in their own right, separate from the collections that house them.
Art Basel's Gravitational Pull — With Art Basel (June 18–21) on the horizon, the past week has seen a notable uptick in ambitious exhibition openings across Europe and the global announcement of MoMA PS1 curator Ruba Katrib's vision for the fair's Unlimited sector. Major institutions are clearly timing their strongest programming to capture the international art world's attention during this peak period.
The Immersive Everywhere — From Liam Young's speculative London environments to Jakob Kudsk Steensen's ecological virtual worlds in Montréal and the Montréal Science Centre's Arctic missions, immersive exhibition formats continue to dominate the global conversation. The trend is no longer confined to art museums: science and cultural history institutions are increasingly adopting theatrical, full-body experiences as their default mode for engaging visitors.
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