Past Exhibitions
On June 1, 2013, we closed our galleries so that we can prepare for the fall 2014 opening of our renovated facility. As the completion of this renovation and expansion project nears, we are busy organizing a number of exciting exhibitions.
To learn more about the array of work our staff is producing as we approach the opening, we invite you to read Index, our new magazine. Index is now available in print (you can pick up copies on campus at the Arthur M. Sackler Museum building and the Holyoke Center), and our website will feature an expanded digital version later this month.
Fogg Museum
Arthur M. Sackler Museum
Fogg Museum
This exhibition of approximately 60 works explores the influence of John Ruskin on a group of American watercolorists, most with Harvard connections, who were active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Busch-Reisinger Museum
Busch-Reisinger Museum
Multiple Strategies stages a dialogue between the work of German artist Joseph Beuys and that of the international avant-garde group Fluxus, in particular its principal designer and impresario George Maciunas.
Arthur M. Sackler Museum
This exhibition of over 100 images presents the Social Museum as a compelling case study of the early institutional use of photography as a social document, the systematization of exhibition display by reform organizations, and the role such institutions played in the formation of the modern research university.
University of Virginia Art Museum, Charlottesville
Fogg Museum
Traveling Exhibition
This tightly focused exhibition unites two landmark paintings with eleven works on paper from Léger’s large cycle of works known as Contrasts of Forms.
Arthur M. Sackler Museum
Overlapping Realms presents a sampling of visual arts produced by the varied peoples who inhabited the region stretching from southern Europe through South Asia.
Fogg Museum
DISSENT! presents a historical survey of over 40 printed images that express resistance to religious, political, and social systems and, in doing so, demonstrates the role of printmaking in the dissemination of dissonant opinions.
Fogg Museum
