Theodorus van Hoytema, "Dierstudies (Animal Studies): Angora Konynen," 1898
Paper Zoo February 7, 2012 - August 19, 2012

“Paper Zoo” brings together prints, drawings, and photographs of the animal kingdom (including birds and marine creatures) dating from about 1500 to the present. Featuring some 30–40 works by Rembrandt, Audubon, Picasso, and others, this delightful exhibition highlights...

Devidasa of Nurpur, "Praudha Adhira Nayika (The Mature Heroine Without Self-Control)," 1694 or 1695
Gems of Rajput Painting December 10, 2011 - September 3, 2012

“Gems of Rajput Painting” features the MFA’s superb collection of paintings made for the princes of Rajasthan and the Punjab hills (known as “Rajputs”). The kingdoms of these art-loving princes shared a common elite culture, though, by the early 1700s, each court had...

Edouard Manet, "Les Courses," 1865-72
Manet in Black February 18, 2012 - October 28, 2012

Edouard Manet’s friend, the poet Charles Baudelaire, described black as the color of the nineteenth century. Manet was a master in the use of black, asserting his bold and subtle imprint on a range of subjects, from exotic Spanish dancers to the horses and spectators at a thrilling Paris...

Gustave Le Gray, "Cloudy Sky—The Mediterranean with Mount Agde," 1856-59
Silver, Salt, and Sunlight: Early Photography in Britain and France February 7, 2012 - August 5, 2012

The invention of photography in 1839 was a pivotal achievement that changed the course of cultural history. The early years of the medium were rich in experimentation. As each process and technique was invented, artists enthusiastically explored new possibilities for visual recording and...

Moataz Nasr, film still from “Merge and Emerge,” 2011. Courtesy Galleria Continua, San Gimignano/Beijing/Le Moulin
Histories of Now: Six Artists from Cairo January 18, 2012 - March 17, 2012

Organized by the SMFA, “Histories of Now: Six Artists from Cairo” is an exhibition of recent video and multimedia installations by some of Egypt’s most important and influential contemporary artists. Signaling the myriad of social and political circumstances that preceded the 2011...

Jedediah Caesar, "Untitled (detail)," 2011
Jedediah Caesar: Soft Structures December 17, 2011 - April 1, 2012

Since receiving his BFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in 1998, Los Angeles–based artist Jedediah Caesar has gained international recognition for sculptures that amass found materials into systems that reveal new patterns, often abstract, sometime social. Gathering natural and...

Beauty as Duty
Beauty as Duty: Textiles and the Home Front in WWII Britain October 8, 2011 - May 28, 2012

The British experience during and after WWII was quite different from that of Americans. From the fall of 1940 through the spring of 1941, Britain was subjected to relentless bombing in a terror campaign known as the Blitz. Even after the Allied victory, Britain continued to suffer shortages of...

Ellsworth Kelly, "Curve XXI," 1978-80
Ellsworth Kelly: Wood Sculpture September 18, 2011 - March 4, 2012

The 30 wood sculptures that Ellsworth Kelly has made over the course of his esteemed career are among his most beautiful and evocative works. Despite Kelly’s work being the subject of major retrospectives worldwide, this is the first museum exhibition to focus on the essential and beguiling...

El Anatsui, "Black River," 2009  photo by Tony Rinaldo
Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art September 18, 2011 - September 18, 2012

Contemporary art finds a dynamic new home at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, when the Museum unveils to the public the Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art, located in the MFA’s dramatic I. M. Pei-designed building. The transformed wing features seven galleries introducing innovative...

Wide bed curtain, 1725-50
Embroideries of Colonial Boston: Domestic Embroideries September 17, 2011 - June 3, 2012

The embroideries of colonial Boston girls and women have long been treasured family possessions and are now much sought after by collectors. The charm and craftsmanship of the Adam and Eve samplers, pastoral pictures with leaping stags and galloping hunters, as well as crewelwork bed hangings and...

Wendy Jacob, "Ice Floe," 2011
Maud Morgan Prize 2011: Wendy Jacob September 17, 2011 - July 8, 2012

About the Prize: Established in 1993 in recognition of New England artist Maud Morgan (1903–1999), the Maud Morgan Prize honors a Massachusetts woman artist who demonstrates significant vision, creativity, and contributions to contemporary art in the Commonwealth. As of 2011, $10,000 is...

Kawanabe Kyōsai, "Hell Courtesan," 1870s-1880s
Kawanabe Kyōsai and the Hell Courtesan September 3, 2011 - June 17, 2012

The first exhibition in our newly renovated Japanese Print gallery focuses on a recent acquisition, a monumental hanging scroll of the Hell Courtesan by Kawanabe Kyōsai (1831–1889). Known for the charm, eccentricity, and extraordinary skill of his work, Kyōsai gleefully satirized the...

Eugène Delacroix, "Royal Tiger," 1829
Passion and Precision in the Age of Revolution August 20, 2011 - May 13, 2012

European art of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is dominated by two powerful artistic movements: Neo-classicism and Romanticism. Neo-Classicism is marked by purity, austerity, clarity, and an almost abstract obsession with the linear. The style was stimulated by the recent...

Imogen Cunningham, "Sunbath (Alta on the Beach)," 1925-30
Modernist Photography: 1910–1950 July 30, 2011 - April 1, 2012

"Modernist Photography 1910–1950" features approximately 40 American modernist photographs representing highlights from the Museum's own collection as well as The Lane Collection. Complementing the work displayed in several of the other Level 3 galleries in the new Art of the...

Charles Robert Ashbee, "Marsh-bird brooch," 1901-02
Jewels, Gems, and Treasures: Ancient to Modern July 19, 2011 - July 1, 2014

What is a gem? "Jewels, Gems, and Treasures: Ancient to Modern," the first exhibition in the Museum's new Rita J. and Stanley H. Kaplan Family Foundation Gallery, examines the various roles and meanings associated with a wide range of gem materials. Drawn from the MFA...

John LaFarge, "View Over Kyoto From Ya Ami," 1886
Around the World in Watercolor, 1860-1920 July 16, 2011 - March 4, 2012

“Around the World in Watercolor, 1860-1920” features work by Americans who sought adventure and inspiration for their art. They ventured across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and traversed the American continent. Thirty watercolors from the Museum’s permanent collection by John...

"Danziger Tea Basket," Photo by Christopher Gardner
An Unspoken Dialogue with Japanese Tea February 12, 2011 - September 23, 2012

"An Unspoken Dialogue with Japanese Tea" has been organized to complement an exhibition and a series of programs focusing on the contemporary Japanese tea bowl to be held in the Boston community during spring 2011. Drawn from the extensive holdings of the Museum of Fine Arts' Morse...

View of the Art of the Americas Wing galleries from the Shapiro Courtyard
Art of the Americas Wing November 20, 2010 - December 31, 2016

The centerpiece of the MFA’s historic expansion is a spectacular new wing for the Art of the Americas collection, which will double the number of objects from the collection on view, including several large-scale masterpieces not displayed for decades.  Learn more about the new wing.

The first Museum of Fine Arts building in Copley Square, 1876–1909
Preserving History, Making History: The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston June 20, 2008 - June 30, 2012

As part of celebrating the renovation and re-opening of the State Street Corporation Fenway Entrance, this exhibition tells the story of the Museum's history, its architecture, and its vital role as a community resource and partner. Rarely seen historic photographs, paintings, sculpture,...