The epoch-defining Bayeux Tapestry is coming to the UK this year for a not-to-be-missed visit. Other exhibitions to check out in 2026 include tributes to artistic legends, as well as opportunities to cast a fresh eye at the work of artists who may be underappreciated.
Bayeux Tapestry, British Museum, London In what may be the “art event of the year”, said Jonathan Jones in The Guardian, the “vast embroidery” telling the story of the Norman Conquest will be displayed here in a “once-in-a-lifetime triumph of cultural generosity by France”. Book early – it’s expected to be a blockbuster.
Enid Marx, Compton Verney, Warwickshire You might not have heard of Enid Marx, said The Times, “but you’ve probably sat on one of her most famous works” – the design that covers the seats of the London Underground. A “prolific and imaginative designer”, her work spanned textiles, children’s books, wrapping paper, stamps and bookplates.
Beryl Cook: Pride and Joy, The Box, Plymouth The work of “self-taught painter” Cook “may not be great art”, said The Guardian, but it is fun, colourful and larger-than-life. This show, marking her centenary year, serves up a “bawdy slice of Plymouth and post-war British life”.
Gwen John: Strange Beauties, National Museum, Cardiff; National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh The “luminous, introspective and quietist works” of Welsh modernist Gwen John offer a vision that still feels strikingly modern 150 years after her birth, said Laura Cumming in The Observer. The first major showing of her work for 40 years, this is an “unmissable retrospective”.
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