Must-See Blockbusters at Our Global Partners in 2026

06 Feb 2026 Must-See Blockbusters at Our Global Partners in 2026

Discover our handpicked selection of partner museum exhibitions we’re most excited about this year. As always, enjoy complimentary access for you and a guest with your Cultivist Card!

Faire Foyer: Sarah Crowner in Dialogue with Etel Adnan

Image Credits: Zaire Aranguren, Courtesy of The Bass Museum of Art

MIAMI | The Bass Museum of Art | Faire Foyer: Sarah Crowner in Dialogue with Etel Adnan | 20 Aug 2025 - 26 July 2026.

This exhibition pairs new work by Sarah Crowner with a monumental ceramic mural by Etel Adnan, the only example of its kind in the United States. Crowner creates a semicircular, carpeted alcove that frames Adnan’s mural, presenting reflective bronze sculptures and Adnan’s 1960s photographs of the California coastline. Together, the installation offers an immersive, tactile exploration of materiality, movement, and abstraction.


Carol Bove

Image Credits: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Carol Bove 2026

NYC | Guggenheim Museum | Carol Bove | 05 Mar 2026 - 02 Aug 2026

This exhibition marks the first museum survey and largest presentation to date of American artist Carol Bove. Spanning 25 years of her practice, it traces key shifts from early drawings to new monumental “collage sculptures” made of scrap metal and steel tubing, alongside subtle design interventions throughout Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic rotunda.


LACMA

Image Credits: LACMA, Courtesy of The Artist

LA | LACMA | Fútbol Is Life: Animated Sportraits by Lyndon J. Barrois, Sr. | 15 Feb 2026 - 12 July 2026

Celebrating the arrival of the World Cup in Los Angeles, Fútbol Is Life features works by award-winning animator and visual-effects artist Lyndon J. Barrois, Sr. Using gum wrappers, paint, and found materials, his miniature “sportraits” capture iconic moments from women’s and men’s soccer with playful yet emotional precision. The exhibition highlights Barrois’s inventive approach to storytelling through sculpture and stop-motion animation.


rose wylie

Image Credits: Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner. Photo: Jo Moon Price

LONDON | The Royal Academy of The Arts | Rose Wylie | 28 Feb 2026 - 19 Apr 2026

This major exhibition brings together Rose Wylie’s most iconic works alongside new and previously unseen paintings, marking the largest presentation of her work to date. Drawing on cinema, celebrity, literature, and ancient history, Wylie blends cultural references with personal memories, from figures like Marilyn Monroe and Serena Williams to her childhood experiences of the Blitz.


Henry Taylor Musee Picasso

Image Credits: Henry Taylor, From Congo to The Capital, and Black Again, 2007

PARIS | Musée Picasso | Henry Taylor | 08 Apr 2026 - 06 September 2026

Spanning two floors and thirteen rooms, this exhibition brings together around 100 works by Henry Taylor, including paintings, sculptures, and installations that portray the human condition through intimate portraits. Blending personal experience with collective memory, Taylor creates expressive, narrative-driven works that reflect shared histories and draw inspiration from artists such as David Hammons, Philip Guston, and Pablo Picasso.


Carol Dunham

Image Credits: Carroll Dunham, Untitled (7/25/05), 2005, courtesy of the artist and The Art Institute of Chicago

CHICAGO | Art Institute of Chicago | Carroll Dunham: Drawings, 1974–2024 | 31 January 2026 - 01 June 2026

Spanning five decades, this exhibition presents the first museum survey devoted exclusively to Carroll Dunham’s drawings. Developed in close collaboration with the artist, it brings together works from across a 50-year period, many shown publicly for the first time, highlighting drawing as a central thread in his expansive practice.


M+, Hong Kong. Co-commissioned by M+ and Sharjah Art Foundation, 2023, © Amar Kanwar

Image Credits: M+, Hong Kong. Co-commissioned by M+ and Sharjah Art Foundation, 2023, Amar Kanwar

VENICE | Palazzo Grassi | Amar Kanwar: The Peacock's Graveyard | 29 Mar 2026 - 10 Jan 2027

On the upper floor of Palazzo Grassi, Indian artist Amar Kanwar presents The Peacock’s Graveyard, a major installation from the Pinault Collection. This immersive cinematic work reflects on impermanence, the cycle of life, and non-canonical forms of knowledge, alongside additional works that probe a historical moment where every truth appears to face a brutal counterpart.