If you’re anything like me, one of the first things you Google when researching a destination is what the best museums are in town and what exhibitions are currently showing.
Much like the rest of the arts and culture (and travel) industry, museums are bouncing back after years of pandemic lock downs curtailed admission numbers with bigger, better, and more creative exhibitions than ever. These shows explore everything from what it would be like if one of the most successful anime franchises of all time was integrated into the works of one of the world’s most famous artists to a deep dive into the (filthy) mind of one of Hollywood’s quirkiest and irreverent directors.
These are seven of the most exciting art exhibits worth traveling for right now:
The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures is solely dedicated to the art and science of making films.
Photo by Elliott Cowand Jr./Shutterstock
1. John Waters: Pope of Trash at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
- Location: 6067 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, California, United States | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: August 4, 2024
- Tickets: $25 per person | Buy now
John Waters, who directed films such as Pink Flamingos, Female Trouble, Cry-Baby, and Hairspray, shot to fame in the 1970s and ‘80s for his wildly transgressive, but popular cult films which pushed the limits of what independent cinema could be. John Waters: Pope of Trash will completely take over the fourth floor of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and is the first comprehensive exhibit solely dedicated to the auteur’s films and movie-making process. Items on display include costumes, archival photos, props, and handwritten scripts. Keep an eye out for Debbie Harry’s exploding wig from Hairspray as well as the original Pink Flamingos script.
Many visitors to New York spend their entire stay in Manhattan (except for, perhaps, a stop in Queens when they first land). It’s hard to blame them as there’s no shortage of sights to see there. Taking time to venture out to at least one of the other boroughs, however, will make your visit that much richer. Brooklyn is the most popular of them, with Williamsburg, along with its neighbors Greenpoint and Bushwick, the main draw for many with its busy restaurant and bar scene. (The Ides Bar, Tørst, and Roberta’s are some favorites in the area.) Brooklyn’s Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Museum, adjacent to the park, are also worth including on your itinerary while BAM (the Brooklyn Academy of Music) has a crowded calendar of cultural events—dance, theater, lectures, and even its own art-house cinema. In Queens, the Noguchi Museum and PS1 (part of the Museum of Modern Art) draw art-lovers to Long Island City. And in the Bronx, the New York Botanical Garden is one of the gems of the city, with 250 acres of grounds, many landscaped but also including a tract of primeval forest that has survived unchanged even as the city has grown up around it.
Photo by courtesy of Christopher Postlewaite/NYC & Co.
2. Spike Lee: Creative Sources at the Brooklyn Museum
- Location: 200 Eastern Pkwy., Brooklyn, New York, United States | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: February 4, 2024
- Tickets: $25 per person | Buy now
Meanwhile, across the country, New York City’s Brooklyn Museum has devoted a massive exhibition—with over 400 artifacts—to director Spike Lee, who’s known for his movies like Get on the Bus, BlacKkKlansman, and Mo’ Better Blues, which explores issues of race, contemporary social issues, and Black identity in his films. Spike Lee: Creative Sources explores the Atlanta-born, New York–raised director’s rise to becoming one of the country’s most well-known filmmakers. Inside, visitors will find ephemera from Lee’s life, posters of and props from his award-winning movies, and a room devoted completely to the Knicks, his favorite basketball team. “This exhibition is going to give you a very different point of view of Spike Lee,” curator Kimberli Gant said in an interview with Gothamist. “As a preserver of culture presented from a Black diaspora lens. You’re going to see themes that echo from these objects into what you see in his films.”
The Fondation Louis Vuitton was designed by famed architect Frank Gehry.
Photo by Shutterstock
3. Mark Rothko at the Fondation Louis Vuitton
- Location: 8 Av. du Mahatma Gandhi, 75116 Paris, France| Find on Google Maps
- Running until: April 2, 2024
- Tickets: $17 per person | Buy now
Artist Mark Rothko is best known for pioneering color field paintings—large swaths of vibrant pigment that seem to envelop viewers wholly and completely within them. Mark Rothko at the Fondation Louis Vuitton will encompass four stories of the Frank Gehry–designed building and feature 115 works from the largest international institutional and private collections. The pieces will be displayed chronologically and run the breadth of the painter’s career, from his earliest figurative paintings to his later, more abstract works that he’s now known for. Mark Rothko is the first retrospective devoted entirely to the Latvian-born American in France.
Pokémon x Van Gogh reimagines some of the Dutch artist’s most famous paintings with a cute twist.
Photo by Frans Ruiter/Unsplash
4. Pokémon x Van Gogh Museum at the Van Gogh Museum
- Location: Museumplein 6, 1071 DJ Amsterdam, Netherlands | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: January 7, 2024
- Tickets: $21 per person | Buy now
I know, I know. The last place you thought you’d see Pikachu is at the Van Gogh Museum. But, in an effort to get younger audiences interested in art, the museum has partnered with the Pokémon Company to bring six paintings inspired by Pokémon and Vincent Van Gogh to life—and really, the partnership is not that far-fetched given the Dutch artist’s own obsession with Japanese art and woodblock prints. At Pokémon x Van Gogh Museum, visitors can expect to see Munchlax and Snorlax relaxing inside of Vincent van Gogh’s Bedroom in Arles as well as Sunflora smiling among his still-life paintings of sunflowers. Don’t forget to grab some cute Pokémon x Van Gogh merch at the giftshop on your way out.
Yayoi Kusama: Infinite Love will feature one of the artist’s newest infinity room installations.
Courtesy of Yayoi Kusama, Ota Fine Arts, Victoria Miro, and David Zwirner
5. Yayoi Kusama at SFMOMA
- Location: 151 3rd St, San Francisco, California, United States | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: September 7, 2024
- Tickets: $30 per person | Buy now
Two of Yayoi Kusama’s most spectacular Infinity Rooms are now on display at San Francisco’s SFMOMA. The exhibition is composed of two of Kusama’s signature infinity rooms, Love is Calling and Dreaming of Earth’s Sphericity, I Would Offer My Love, which is brand new and previously was shown at New York’s David Zwirner Gallery. Dreaming of Earth’s Sphericity, I Would Offer My Love, includes round,colored windows that are lit by both natural and artificial light that travel through the lenses of a dizzying array of green, red, yellow, and blue dots. The second infinity room, Love is Calling, is one of the artist’s largest works and features a darkened room that’s lit only by the light of inflatable forms hanging from the ceiling. As museumgoers travel through the exhibit, Kusama can be heard on a background track reciting a poem about love. But use your time wisely—visitors are only allowed to step inside each infinity room once per visit, for one minute.
Manhattan’s Field of Lights will be free and open to the public, but timed reservations will be required.
Courtesy of Rubenstein Public Relations
6. Field of Light at Freedom Plaza
- Location: E. River Esplanade, New York, New York, United States | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: December 15, 2024
- Tickets: Free, but reservations are required | Reserve now
British-Australian artist Bruce Munro is best known for his exhibitions, which are large-scale, immersive, and site-specific. Arguably his most famous art series is his Field of Light installations, which have been displayed everywhere from Austin, Texas to Uluṟu in Australia. On December 15, a Field of Light will debut in Manhattan. The installation will consist of 17,000 solar-powered, flower-like fiber optic stems lit up in a rainbow of colors. The exhibit will be completely free and open to the public, but visitors will need to reserve a time slot in order to see the Field of Light.
Picasso in Fontainebleau takes a deep dive into one of the most important periods of the artist’s career.
Photo by Tomas Abad/age fotostock
7. Picasso in Fontainebleau at MoMA
- Location: 11 W 53rd St., New York, New York, United States | Find on Google Maps
- Running until: February 17, 2024
- Tickets: $28 per person | Buy now
Pablo Picasso famously reinvented himself and his artistic practice dozens of times over his career. At Picasso in Fontainebleau at New York City’s Museum of Modern Art, Picasso fans will be able to view the large amount and varied of work he created during the three months in 1921 that he lived in Fontainebleau, a town located about 40 miles southeast of Paris.t was a deeply transformative time for the artist, and marks a period when he was beginning to explore cubism more deeply. The exhibition will be the first time four monumental pieces, both versions of Picasso’s Three Musicians and Three Women at the Spring, will reunite since they were first created in the painter’s garage-turned-makeshift-studio.