Upcoming planned exhibitions include: •
Labyrinth: Knossos, Myth and Reality: This exhibition opened at the Ashmolean in February 2023 and will be open until late July 2023. Major exhibitions in recent years include: •
Pre-Raphaelites: Drawings & Watercolours: This exhibition, initially shown for 5 weeks in 2021, was re-mounted in 2022 for a longer run, opening in July. It is drawn from the Ashmolean's own collection of
Pre-Raphaelite drawings and watercolours. •
Pissarro: Father of Impressionism: Open from February until June 2022, this exhibition included artworks drawn from the Ashmolean's collections as well as international loans, spanning
Camille Pissarro's entire career. •
Tokyo: Art and Photography: Open from July 2021 until January 2022, this exhibition included artworks from the Ashmolean's collection as well as loans from Japan and new commissions by contemporary artists. It included woodblock prints by
Hokusai and
Hiroshige, photography of
Moriyama Daido and
Ninagawa Mika. •
Pre-Raphaelites: Drawings & Watercolours: Open in May and June 2021, this exhibition was drawn from the Ashmolean's own collection of
Pre-Raphaelite drawings and watercolours. The exhibition was curated by British art historian
Christiana Payne. •
Young Rembrandt: Open from August until November 2020, this exhibition was delayed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, and featured more than 120 of
Rembrandt's paintings, drawings and prints from international and private collections. It focused on the first decade of Rembrandt's work, from 1624 to 1634, and included his early paintings
Jeremiah Lamenting the Destruction of Jerusalem,
Self-Portrait in a Gorget,
Rembrandt Laughing,
Judas Repentant, Returning the Pieces of Silver,
Portrait of Jacques de Gheyn III, and
History Painting. The exhibition was the subject of a
BBC television documentary, in its 2020 Museums in Quarantine series. •
Last Supper in Pompeii: Open from July 2019 until January 2020, this exhibition explored what the people of the ancient Roman city of
Pompeii loved to eat and drink. Many of the objects, on loan from
Naples Museum and
Pompeii, had never before left Italy. •
Jeff Koons at the Ashmolean: Open from February until June 2019, this exhibition featured 17 major works by the American artist
Jeff Koons, 14 of which had never been on display in the UK before. They included some of his most well-known series such as Equilibrium,
Banality, Antiquity and his recent Gazing Ball paintings and sculptures. In the galleries of the museum, where the collections range from prehistory to the present, Jeff Koons's work was 'in conversation' with the history of art and ideas which has been his focus over the past four decades. The exhibition was curated by Koons and
Norman Rosenthal. •
Spellbound: Magic, Ritual & Witchcraft: Open from August 2018 until January 2019, this exhibition explored the history of magic over eight centuries. On display were 180 objects from 12th-century Europe to newly commissioned contemporary artworks. • '''''America's Cool Modernism: O'Keeffe to Hopper''''': Open from March until July 2018 this major exhibition of works by American artists in the early 20th-century included over 80 paintings, photographs and prints, and the first American avant-garde film,
Manhatta. Many of the paintings had never before travelled outside the US. •
Imagining the Divine: Art and the Rise of World Religions: Open from October 2017 until February 2018 this exhibition explored Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam and Judaism, and was the first to look at the art of these five world religions as they spread across continents in the first millennium CE. •
Raphael: The Drawings: Open from June 2017 until September 2017 this exhibition brought together over a hundred works by
Raphael from international collections and aimed to transform public understanding of Raphael through a focus on the immediacy and expressiveness of his drawing. •
Degas to Picasso: Creating Modernism in France: Open from February 2017 until May 2017, and featuring works by
Matisse,
Manet,
Chagall,
Braque,
Delacroix,
Renoir,
Metzinger,
Degas,
Léger and
Picasso, this exhibition told the story of the rise of Modernism through works from a private collection that had never been seen in Britain before. •
Power and Protection: Islamic Art and the Supernatural: Open from October 2016 until January 2017, this was the first major exhibition to explore the supernatural in the art of the Islamic world. The exhibition included objects and works of art from the 12th to the 20th century, from Morocco to China, which have been used as sources of guidance and protection in the dramatic events of human history. These include dream-books, talismanic charts and amulets. •
Storms, War and Shipwrecks: Treasures from the Sicilian Seas: Open from June until September 2016, this exhibition explored the roots of
Sicily's multi-cultural heritage through the discoveries made by underwater archaeologists – from chance finds to excavated shipwrecks. The exhibition also featured what has been described as a "flat pack"
Byzantine church interior, intended for assembly at its destination, with marble items raised from a wreck off the southeast coast of Sicily in the 1960s by archaeologist Gerhard Kapitan. •
Andy Warhol: Works from the Hall Collection: Open from February until May 2016, this exhibition featured over a hundred works, by
Andy Warhol, from the Hall Collection (US), plus loans of films from
The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Curated by
Sir Norman Rosenthal, the exhibition spanned Warhol's entire output, from iconic pieces of the 1960s Pop pioneer to the experimental works of his last decade. •
Elizabeth Price: A Restoration: Open from March until May 2016, this two-screen video installation by British artist
Elizabeth Price was a newly commissioned work in response to the collections and archives of the Ashmolean and
Pitt Rivers museums, in partnership with the
Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, and funded by the 2013
Contemporary Art Society Award. The main focus was the records of
Arthur Evans's excavation of the Cretan city of
Knossos. •
Drawing in Venice: Titian to Canaletto: Open from October 2015 until January 2016, this exhibition featured a hundred drawings from The
Uffizi Gallery in Florence, the Ashmolean, and
Christ Church, Oxford. It was based on new research tracing continuities in Venetian drawing over three centuries, from around 1500 down to the foundation of the first academy of art in Venice in 1750. The exhibition also featured 20 works on paper and canvas by contemporary artist
Jenny Saville, produced in response to the Venetian drawings in the exhibition. •
Great British Drawings: An exhibition open from March until August 2015 showing more than one hundred British drawings and watercolours from the Ashmolean's collection, spanning three hundred years. •
An Elegant Society: Adam Buck, artist in the age of Jane Austen: Open from July until October 2015 this exhibition explored the work of
Adam Buck, Irish
Regency era portrait and miniature painter. •
Discovering Tutankhamun: a special exhibition, open from July until November 2014, explored
Howard Carter's excavation of the tomb of
Tutankhamun in 1922. Original records, drawings and photographs from the
Griffith Institute were on display. •
The Eye of the Needle: English Embroideries from the Feller Collection: a special exhibition, open from August until October 2014, of 17th-century embroideries from the
Feller Collection, together with examples from the Ashmolean's own holdings. •
Cézanne and the Modern: a special exhibition, open from March to June 2014, displaying
Impressionist and
Post-Impressionist paintings and sketches from the
Henry and Rose Pearlman Collection •
Francis Bacon / Henry Moore: Flesh and Bone: a special exhibition, open from September 2013 until July 2014, displaying paintings by
Francis Bacon and sculptures and drawings by
Henry Moore. •
Stradivarius: a special exhibition, open from June until August 2013, exploring the life and work of
Antonio Stradivari. It was the first time twenty-one of his instruments, from guitar to cello to violin, were on display together in the UK. •
Master Drawings: a special exhibition, open from May until August 2013, displaying a selection of the Ashmolean's on western art collection. The exhibition surveyed drawings of all types by some of the biggest names in art history, including Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael, as well as Gwen John, David Hockney and Antony Gormley. •
Xu Bing: Landscape Landscript: a special exhibition of the work of
Xu Bing, open from February until May 2013. It was the Ashmolean's first major exhibition of contemporary art. ==Keepers and Directors==