Image: 10 Must-See Shows in Europe in 2024, From Vera Molnár at the Centre Pompidou to Anselm Kiefer in Florence
Vera Molnár, Icône (1964). Photo: © Centre Pompidou / Dist. Rmn-Gp.
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10 Must-See Shows in Europe in 2024, From Vera Molnár at the Centre Pompidou to Anselm Kiefer in Florence Here's a carefully selected round-up of what you can look forward to

22 December 2023

Art lovers the world over will be swarming Europe next year for the Venice Biennale, which as per usual boasts dozens of national pavilions and the highly anticipated main exhibition, “Foreigners Everywhere,” curated by Adriano Pedrosa. Anyone hoping to stay on for an early vacation is in luck, as the continent is anticipating a bumper crop of blockbuster museum shows, from a celebration of supermodel Naomi Campbell in London, to a retrospective honoring American land artist Nancy Holt in Berlin. There is also the opening of a shiny new museum dedicated to Nordic modernism in Kristiansand, a coastal city in southern Norway.

Our European team has hand-picked what they are most excited to see in 2024.

“Vera Molnár”
Centre Pompidou, Paris
February 28—August 26, 2024

This pioneer of computer art, who died in December at the age of 99, had a creative vision that was decades ahead of her time. When she began making generative artworks in the 1960s, using the early coding language of Fortran and computers that had mechanical plotters for printers, her peers could not understand it. In their eyes, she had “dehumanized” art, she said in an interview from her Paris nursing home in early 2022.

Much has changed over the past ten years, as the world finally caught up with the significance of Molnar’s experiments with the creative relationship between systems and randomness. This retrospective ranges from drawings produced as early as 1946 to new work made in 2023.

Jo Lawson-Tancred

“Anselm Kiefer: Fallen Angels”
Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
March 22—July 21, 2024

Anselm Kiefer returns to Italy after his major presentation at Palazzo Ducale in Venice 2022, this time taking over the historic Palazzo Strozzi for his major solo show “Fallen Angels.” Born in 1945 in Donaueschingen, Germany, Kiefer is known for his exploration of intricate emotions, memory, war, myth, and existence through his epic works, whether in the form of painting, or sculpture and installation. Curated by Arturo Galansino, director of the foundation, “Fallen Angels” will feature historical titles and new works, aiming to channel the “vital complexity” embodied in the art of the German artist.

 The show opening at the heel of 2023’s release of Anselm, the 3D documentary dedicated to the artist by the acclaimed Wim Wenders, who was also born in the same year as Kiefer and brought up in post-war Germany.

Vivienne Chow 

 
 
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