On this page of our website, we will present the most interesting exhibitions in our opinion that take place in the specific week in the museums of the world. Exhibitions that all interested art lovers are required to know. Art is a huge mosaic spanning from prehistory to the present day. It accompanies man from the beginning of his existence because it is that creative expression that in the artwork captures the mental state, emotions, ideas, and visualization of the artist and will always be important in human life because of the magnetism it causes to human emotions by stimulating them.
AMSTERDAM (HOLLAND-EU)
Exhibition: Hokusai: Hansken, Rembrandt’s Elephant

Photo by the website www.rembrandthuis.nl
She was famous across Europe: The Asian elephant Hansken. In the middle of the 17th century, she was the only living elephant on the continent and was toured to markets, fairs, and courts. When Hansken was in Amsterdam, Rembrandt drew her. Occasion for The Rembrandt House Museum to tell her life’s story in an exhibition for young and old. Hansken, Rembrandt’s Elephant presents works of art by Rembrandt and his contemporaries, historical documents, and a digital map on which you can follow Hansken’s trail through Europe. But also, Hansken’s sjull, which has been preserved and has been brought from Italy to the Rembrandt House Museum specially for this exhibition. Hansken, Rembrandt’s Elephant is on view in The Rembrandt House Museum.
Until August 29, 2021
TOKYO (JAPAN)
Exhibition: Isamu Noguchi- Ways of Discovery

In Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum is exhibited one of the foremost artists of the 20th century-Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) “Isamu Noguchi: Ways of Discovery”. The son of a Japanese father and American mother, Noguchi constructed a unique sculptural philosophy while grappling with his identity as an artist caught between two cultures, East, and West. Deeply influenced by the aesthetic vision of Constantin Brancusi, a sculptor whom he encountered in his twenties, Noguchi devoted his life to pursuing a world enabling the creation of abstract form fundamentally resonant with nature. Due to war, Noguchi also knew the pain of belonging to nations that were bitter enemies, and he produced artworks imbued with an earnest desire for peace. This exhibition will retrace Noguchi’s remarkable “path of discovery.” By communicating this visionary artist’s deep insights into Japanese culture, it will reveal the essence of his art and the meaning it holds for us today.
April 24, – August 29, 2021



