With our lists of good intentions and a blank calendar ready to mark all our appointments for the new year, appointments of the new year, this is a good time to start making plans – even short-term ones – by looking at the schedule of contemporary art exhibitions in Europe. The major European capitals are offering a mix of eagerly awaited new openings and exhibitions that opened last fall and are now coming to an end.
Art in 2026 is marked by eagerly awaited returns and new research, established practices and more recent experiments. From the reopening of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome, under the new direction of Cristiana Perrella, to major museum retrospectives, such as the unmissable one dedicated to Daidō Moriyama, which arrives in Vienna for its fifth stop.
From one city to another, the selected exhibitions address central themes in contemporary art: identity, memory, the body, our relationship with technology, and social transformations. The languages are various and range from photography to video, from painting to sound and installation, in projects that also vary in scale and format: from more intimate experiences, such as “Gravity, Be My Friend” by Pipilotti Rist in Stockholm, to more layered works such as “House of Music” by Peter Doig in London, where painting and listening coexist in the same space, to the major monographic exhibition that the Jeu de Paume in Paris is dedicating to Martin Parr, who passed away last December 6.
These exhibition projects sit alongside other shows that directly question the relationship between art and technology, such as “Soft Robots” in Copenhagen, or that tackle political and historical issues, such as John Akomfrah's work in Madrid, previously presented at the Venice Art Biennale in 2024.
Domus has selected ten exhibitions to check out in January in ten European capitals, from north to south: ten opportunities to spend a weekend away, waiting for spring to arrive.
Opening image: Martin Parr. Benidorm, Espagne, 1997. © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos
