
Illustration by Hayden Maynard
If it’s some aesthetic escapism you are after, or maybe a bit of nostalgia, try these:
But perhaps you are longing to be transported more completely to another world.
Enough immersion already! For some visual quiet, try these:
Looking for evidence the art museum is finally giving female artists their due? There’s lots.
The Art Gallery of Ontario is showing more than 270 pieces of art, textiles, ceramics and silverware in Making Her Mark: A History of Women Artists in Europe 1400-1800. But note this massive exhibition closes soon. To July 1.
In her series of self-portraits Anti-Icon: Apokalypsis, at the Polygon Gallery in Vancouver, U.S. photographer Martine Gutierrez questions identity, gender and culture by personifying iconic figures in history. From July 12 to Sept. 29
Meanwhile, the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton is mounting a show entitled Canadian Women Modernists that includes such artists as Pegi Nicol MacLeod, Marcella Maltais, Marian Dale Scott and Florence Wyle. To July 28
Or want to see Indigenous art in the spotlight?
Omalluq: Pictures from my Life at the Winnipeg Art Gallery features drawings that the Kinngait artist, better known as a carver, executed in the last two years of her life. To March 30
Shelley Niro: 500 Year Itch is the first major retrospective exhibition of the Mohawk artist, featuring four decades’ worth of video, photography, painting and multimedia work. The show closes in Hamilton at the end of the month before beginning a national tour. To May 26 in Hamilton; at the National Gallery of Canada June 21 to Aug. 25
True Tribal: Contemporary Expressions of Ancestral Tattoo Practices at the Museum of Vancouver examines 30 years worth of modern artistic engagement with traditional skin-marking, from the Maori to the Mi’kmaq. Now on view
But maybe you prefer some Eurocentric history. The closest you will get to the old-school blockbuster:
The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts is welcoming the best of Flemish art by such painters as Hans Memling, Peter Paul Rubens and Anthony van Dyck. The exhibition, drawn from the collection of the Phoebus Foundation in Antwerp, Belgium, is entitled Saints, Sinners, Lovers and Fools: 300 Years of Flemish Masterworks. From June 8 to Oct. 20
And the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau has imported First Royals of Europe, a show of ancient precious metals from southeastern Europe. Its 700 rare artifacts date back as far as the Neolithic Age and include copper axes and bronze swords, plus silver and gold jewellery. To Jan. 19