The Phoebus Foundation aims to ensure maximal accessibility of the collection to the widest possible audience. Therefore, the chancellery regularly organizes exhibitions:
3500 years of textile art (Enduring) Since 2011, this permanent exhibition in Antwerp shows fabrics, clothing and archaeological findings from ancient Egypt, Rome and the Silk Road. In collaboration with The Phoebus Foundation and Katoen Natie, an international congress by the name 'Textiles from the Nile Valley' is also organized here every two years. The company also finances the publication of the conference bundles.
OER. The roots of Flanders (March–August 2017) This exhibition was organized in the Caermers Monastery in Ghent. OER talked about a tipping point in art and cultural history, and took the visitor to the early 20th century. In a separate scenography, works from the collection of The Phoebus Foundation were shown here, alongside masterpieces from Flemish private collections, such as, the collection of Herman De Bode. This collection was acquired almost integrally in 2018 by The Phoebus Foundation.
The Birth of Capitalism: The Golden age of Flanders (June 2016 – January 2017) This exhibition in the Caermers Monastery in Ghent took the visitor through the five golden centuries of the Southern Netherlands, ending at the
Eighty Years' War. This exhibition not only showed pieces from The Phoebus Foundation, but also from
The Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, the
MAS, the Royal Library Albert I and the
GroeningeMuseum. There were works by
Hans Memling,
Jan Gossaert and
Peter Paul Rubens. This exhibition was not undisputed. Opponents talked about the 'marketing of public cultural activities'. At the opening, they therefore organized a symbolic funeral procession.
VOSSEN: Expedition in the land of Reynaert (May–September 2018) The large collection of
Reynaert the Fox was exhibited in 2018 in the form of an 'expedition' about the medieval animal epic. The expedition takes visitors on a cycling tour of 40 to 60 km through the Flemish
Waasland and the Dutch
Zeelandic Flanders. During this experience, the visitors get to know the medieval story of Reynaert the Fox in a playful and accessible way.
Daniel Seghers (1590–1661) in the Keizerskapel (August–September 2018) After the presentation of the triptych with
Saint Luke painting the Madonna, The Phoebus Foundation focuses on another piece from its collection: a floral still life by
Daniël Seghers (1590–1661). His art was heavily sought after by the European nobility during the first half of the 17th century. According to the famous poet
Constantijn Huyghens, you could almost smell the flowers displayed on the paintings. Today, Daniël Seghers is hardly known to the public. With this new thematic exhibition, the Phoebus Foundation wants to draw attention to this painter.
Lace is More! (May–November 2019) "
Lace is More! offered a historical survey of lace production from the sixteenth century to the present, while also surprising visitors with contemporary lace artworks. A selection of masterpieces from the old master collection combined with textile fragments, contemporary art and haute couture told the unique story of this home-grown Flemish luxury product. Lace is inextricably linked with the history of Flanders. Nowhere in the world do these precious family heirlooms, passed down from generation to generation, have such a unique character as here."
The Bold and the Beautiful (March 2020–April 2021) "The many portraits in The Phoebus Foundation collection from the Middle Ages to the early modern era formed the ideal starting point from which to tell the fascinating story of portrait art."
From Memling to Rubens: The Golden Age of Flanders (April 2021–November 2021) "From Memling to Rubens showed Flemish art from the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as you have never seen it before. The exhibition was a journey through three hundred years of cultural history, with breathtaking masterpieces from the collection of The Phoebus Foundation in the leading role. Unknown gems by
Hans Memling,
Quinten Metsys,
Peter Paul Rubens,
Jacob Jordaens and
Anthony Van Dyck took you to a world full of folly and sin, fascination and ambition. From Memling to Rubens was about dukes and emperors, about rich citizens and poor saints, about art rooms as wine cellars and about Antwerp as Hollywood on the Scheldt."
Crazy about Dymphna: The Story of a Girl Who Drove a Medieval City Mad (April 2021–November 2021) "Following several years of intensive research, The Phoebus Foundation has embarked on a large-scale conservation project: the magisterial St Dymphna Altar, a masterpiece by
Goossen Van der Weyden, grandson of the celebrated Flemish Primitive painter
Rogier Van der Weyden. Goossen created the altarpiece for Abbot Antoon Tsgrooten of the Norbertine Abbey in Tongerlo. It tells the tragic story of
Dymphna, an Irish princess and patron saint of the mentally ill, who is venerated in the town of Geel, in the Kempen region of Flanders. In the five hundred years since it was painted, the altarpiece has been cut down, neglected, vandalized, stolen and forgotten. The Phoebus Foundation recently decided to go ahead with a thorough restoration, the results of which can now be presented to the public. In 2021 the panels were being hosted by Niguliste Museum in Tallinn (Estonia), where an interactive scenography immersed the visitor in the Irish saint’s extraordinary world. Visitors could discover the exceptional stories, forgotten for centuries, that unfolded beneath the layers of dust and dirt, while experiencing the unique history of a monumental altarpiece."
At Home with Jordaens (October 2021–May 2022) "In cooperation with the
Frans Hals Museum, The Phoebus Foundation presents the exhibition
At home with Jordaens: the first monographic exhibition of the seventeenth-century Antwerp master Jacob Jordaens in the Netherlands."
Crazy about Dymphna: The Story of a Girl who Drove a Medieval City Mad (April–October 2022) The Phoebus Foundation returned with their Dymphna exhibition to Geel, where the exhibition was held in St Dymphna's Church. Due to its success,
Crazy about Dymphna has been extended by a little bit longer than a month.
Saints, Sinners, Lovers, and Fools: 300 Years of Flemish Masterworks (October 2022–January 2023) In collaboration with
Denver Art Museum, The Phoebus Foundation organized a new exhibition in which their 15th- to 17th-century masterpieces will be presented to a new audience in the U.S., revealing the fascinating world of various artists from the Southern Netherlands. == Loans ==