The Prado Museum is giving its most iconic space a fresh look, swapping its signature grayish-green walls for a deep blue that museum officials say will make masterpieces by Titian, Rubens, and others truly pop.
Carrington in Milan, Sargent in Paris, Thiebaud in London and unicorns in Potsdam — here are a dozen fabulous shows across the continent you won’t want to miss.
The Museo Nacional del Prado continues its efforts to revitalise and highlight the merits of its extensive nineteenth-century painting collections with a new exhibition devoted solely to the painter Antonio Muñoz Degrain (1840–1924).
So far, so close: Guadalupe, Mexico, in Spain offers a new perspective on the role of the Virgin of Guadalupe as a miraculously created image, an object of worship and symbol of identity in the Hispanic world.
The exhibition Paolo Veronese (1528-1588) represents the culmination of a lengthy process of research and reassessment of the Museo del Prado's Venetian painting collection, one of the most important in the world and a cornerstone of the former Spanish royal collection.
Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese were the pre-eminent painters of 16th-century Venice; though Titian was regarded as the greatest, his younger contemporaries were held in very high esteem.
The hallowed halls of Madrid's Museo Nacional del Prado are set to glow with new splendor, as the museum announced today the incorporation of two captivating 18th-century Peruvian viceregal portraits.
The world-renowned Prado Museum in Madrid is taking a novel approach to engaging art enthusiasts by using artificial intelligence to "count" the stories within its vast collection.
Art lovers across Europe are celebrating the unique genius of Hieronymus Bosch, the iconic Netherlandish painter of the late Middle Ages, as major museums housing his works join in marking "Bosch Day."