Today, we welcome a new year, and with it, a renewed excitement for all things art in 2023. If ‘see more art’ found its way onto your New Year’s Resolutions list, look no further than our pick of the best global art exhibitions to catch in January 2023.
BEST ART EXHIBITIONS TO SEE IN JANUARY 2023
1. ‘David Hockney: Bigger & Closer (not smaller & further away)’ at the Lightroom, London
Installation of David Hockney’s Gregory Swimming Los Angeles March 31st 1982, composite polaroid, 27 3/4 x 51 1/4
(Image credit: © David Hockney))
Legendary artist David Hockney will launch an ambitious, immersive art show in London this month, transforming his iconic paintings, rarely seen pieces and newly created work into a multisensorial experience. ‘David Hockney: Bigger & Closer (not smaller & further away)’ at the Lightroom in London will use digital projection and audio technology to offer a journey through Hockney’s world. Until 23 April 2023
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2. ‘Theaster Gates: Young Lords and Their Traces’ at the New Museum, New York
‘Theaster Gates: Young Lords and Their Traces’, 2022. Exhibition view: New Museum, New York
(Image credit: Photography: Dario Lasagni. Courtesy New Museum)
Theaster Gates’ first US museum show is a moving homage to the creative forces who came before, as well as his native Chicago. ‘Young Lords and Their Traces’ at The New Museum, is what Gates describes as ‘a personal pantheon’ and ‘a kind of memorial for different individuals who had an impact on my life and culture’. Until 5 February 2023
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3. Monica Bonvicini ‘I do You’ at Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin
Monica Bonvicini ‘I do You’, Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin
(Image credit: Courtesy the artist, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Galerie KrinzingerCopyright the artist, VG-Bild Kunst, Bonn, 2022, / Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin / Jens Ziehe)
Monica Bonvicini’s much-anticipated exhibition ‘I do You’ is nothing short of monumental. Through site-specific, architecturally transformative works which range from the 1990s until today, the show spotlights Bonvicini’s signature modes of feminist and architectural inquiry, specifically tailored to the Mies van der Rohe-designed building. Until 30 April 2023
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4. ‘Art Here 2022’ at the Louvre Abu Dhabi
Installation view of the Louvre Abu Dhabi ‘Art Here 2022’ exhibition, which showcases work by ten shortlisted artists for the Richard Mille Art Prize
(Image credit: Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi. Photography: Augustine Paredes (Seeing Things)
For the second edition of the ‘Art Here’ exhibition, the Louvre Abu Dhabi presents a multifaceted celebration of contemporary art from across the UAE and wider GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) region. ‘Art Here 2022’, coinciding with the museum’s fifth anniversary, features work by ten artists shortlisted for the Richard Mille Art Prize 2023. Until 19 February 2023
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5. ‘Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now’ at M+ Hong Kong
Installation view of Self-Obliteration (1966–1974) at ‘Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now’, 2022
(Image credit: Lok Cheng, M+ © Yayoi Kusama)
‘Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now’ at M+ is one of the first major retrospectives of the Japanese artist’s work in nearly a decade. From early sketchbooks to iconic pieces (yes, there are Pumpkins) and work created during the pandemic, the show offers potent reflections on mental health, hope, and the enduring, universal power of Kusama’s art.
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6. Art commissions at the Sydney Modern Project, Art Gallery of New South Wales
Installation view of Francis Upritchard, Here Comes Everybody
(Image credit: © Francis Upritchard , photo © Art Gallery of New South Wales, Christopher Snee)
To mark the opening of its Sydney Modern Project, the Art Gallery of New South Wales unveiled a series of nine site-specific art commissions (some on view permanently) displayed inside and outside the new SANAA-designed building. Commissioned artists include Francis Upritchard (who we spoke to ahead of the opening), Adrián Villar Rojas, Lisa Reihana, Lee Mingwei and Yayoi Kusama.
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7. ‘In Search of the Present’ at Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Finland
Refik Anadol: Machine Hallucinations: Nature Dreams, 2021
(Image credit: Espoo Museum of Modern Art)
What is intelligence, where it can be found, and where it can go? asks EMMA’s group show ‘In Search of the Present’. 16 artists including Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Refik Anadol, Raimo Saarinen and Sougwen Chung dissect the intersections of nature, technology and art. As well as cutting-edge AI, the show also spotlights the often underestimated power of intelligence in the natural world. Until 15 January
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8. Zizipho Poswa ‘uBuhle boKhokho’ at Southern Guild Gallery, Cape Town
(Image credit: Hayden Phipps and Southern Guild)
Ceramic artist Zizipho Poswa is known for an expansive art practice that draws on ancient African traditions. Her latest show of ceramics and photography, continues her exploration of traditional African hairstyles, drawing inspiration from the elaborate art of hairstyling not just in her native South Africa but across the African continent and the diaspora. Until 2 February 2023
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9. Laure Prouvost, ‘Above Front Tears Oui Float’ at The National Museum, Light Hall, Oslo
(Image credit: David Levene)
Turner Prize-winning artist Laure Prouvost has filled the cavernous space at the top of Oslo’s new National Museum. Prouvost’s is the first in a series of artist commissions and turns the iridescent marble space into an ethereal, experiential world that imagines nature taking over. Until 12 February 2023
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10. Takashi Murakami at Perrotin Dubai, ICD Brookfield Place
View Takashi Murakami’s exhibition at Perrotin Dubai, ICD Brookfield Place
(Image credit: ©2022 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Courtesy Perrotin Photo: Altamash Urooj)
Perrotin Dubai and ICD Brookfield Place have partnered to present Takashi Murakami’s first exhibition in the city, bringing together some of the artist’s most iconic works. Highlighting the artist’s signature blend of high and low culture, the show sees traditional Japanese painting techniques and aesthetics collide with the language of consumerism, nostalgia and childhood obsessions. Until 28 January 2023
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