All the exhibitions not to be missed this fall

Photography, contemporary art, and design: Domus has selected the exhibitions not to be missed this autumn, from Milan to Seoul, via Paris, New York and Hong Kong.

As summer draws to a close, it's time to keep a close eye on the calendar again, catching up with the rhythm of everyday life.

Fall 2025 promises to be a vibrant season for contemporary art: among retrospectives and solo exhibitions, collective projects that aim to tell stories from the fringes that deserve to be brought to the forefront, and installations that continue to question the relationship between physical and digital reality, between human and non-human, museums and international institutions offer programs that cross geographies, practices, and mediums.

© Małgorzata Mirga-Tas. Photo Marcin Tas

In Europe, from Mantua to London, via Paris, Berlin, Düsseldorf, and Amsterdam, exhibitions exploring the themes of metamorphosis in contemporary society and queer identity stand out, featuring photography, painting, and video installations, delivering a rich and polyphonic vision of the present, but also of historical memory. Isaac Julien reinvents Palazzo Te with a ten-screen film in which Giulio Romano's masterpiece becomes the protagonist, while in Milan come Nan Goldin's slideshows at the Pirelli HangarBicocca, in an intimate and intense rereading of his life and photographic production.

In the U.S., New York, Boston and Dallas are hosting retrospectives of iconic artists such as Tehching Hsieh, Antony Gormley and Robert Rauschenberg, while the MIT Museum in collaboration with EPFL Pavilions in Lausanne presents the projectLighten UP!, a meeting point between art, science and sensory perception.

Civitas Solis II 2014. Commissioned by National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea Sponsored by Hyundai Motor Company Courtesy of the artist and BB&M © Lee Bul. Photo: Jeon Byung-cheol Courtesy of the artist and the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea.

In Asia, Tokyo and Seoul become the places to be during their respective Art Weeks, offering opportunities to engage with performance art, experimentation, and cultural fusion through projects by artists such as Aki Sasamoto and Lee Bul. In Hong Kong, meanwhile, a retrospective dedicated to Robert Rauschenberg in dialogue with local artists at M+ highlights unexpected connections between East and West.

Here's Domus selection of twenty exhibitions not to be missed during the last months of 2025, to end the year on a high note while waiting to discover what's next for 2026.

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