logo
International Women's Day: Five must-see European exhibitions

International Women's Day: Five must-see European exhibitions

Euronews08-03-2025
By Sarah Miansoni
Between long-awaited retrospectives and extensive multi-artist exhibitions, several European museums have chosen to prominently feature art by women in 2025. Check out our favourite picks in celebration of International Women's Day.
ADVERTISEMENT
A 2022 study of major art museums in the United States found that 87% of artists featured in these institutions were men. Luckily, Europe fares far, far better.
For International Women's Day (and International Women's Month), here are five not-to-be-missed European exhibitions centred around female artists.
Female artists at work between the 16th and 19th centuries
Lavinia Fontana (1552 Bologna-1614 Rome), First self-portrait at the spinet, 1575 Oil on copper, 31 x 25.5 cm Rome, Private collection
Museo di Roma
Where? Museo di Roma – Palazzo Braschi (Rome, Italy)
By the 16th century, Rome had become a major artistic hub, welcoming art titans such as Caravaggio and Michelangelo. Female artists, however, remained largely sidelined and excluded from formal training, so much so that many of their names have simply vanished from the art history books. The Museo di Roma aims to change this.
'Female artists at work between the 16th and 19th centuries' presents about 130 pieces by 56 different artists. Featured painters include Lavinia Fontana, Artemisia Gentileschi and Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, who all came to Rome hoping to find success and cement their place in the art world.
The show is a display of artworks as much as an attempt to shed light on the lives and professional experiences of these women. The museum will also offer a series of panel discussions with art historians and gender studies scholars throughout the run of the exhibition.
'Female artists at work between the 16th and 19th centuries' is on until 4 May 2025.
Vaginal Davis: Fabelhaftes Produkt
Vaginal Davis, 2019, Collection Vaginal Davis
Photo © Hector Martinez - Gropius Bau
Where? Gropius Bau (Berlin, Germany)
Gropius Bau in Berlin is presenting Vaginal Davis's first comprehensive solo exhibition in Germany, 20 years after the American artist set up home in Berlin.
As far as art goes, Vaginal Davis is everything: painter, performer, filmmaker, musician, writer… With seven large-scale installations, Fabelhaftes Produkt ('Magnificent Product') reflects this diversity, and spans works from 1985 to 2025. The exhibition also presents her collaboration with other artists, such as the Berlin-based art collective CHEAP.
A Black queer icon, Vaginal Davis named herself after the renowned activist Angela Davis. Her work is a delightful mixture of punk, glamour and drag culture – she has often been described as a 'drag terrorist'. 'I was always too gay for the punks and too punk for the gays. I am a societal threat', she said in a 2015 interview for The New Yorker. You've been warned.
'Vaginal Davis: Fabelhaftes Produkt' at Gropius Bau opens on 21 March and runs until 14 September 2025.
La Musée. Une collection d'artistes femmes
La Musée
Musée Sainte-Croix
Where? Musée Sainte Croix (Poitiers, France)
French artist Eugénie Dubreuil, now 87, spent 25 years of her life collecting art by female creators, with the dream of one day dedicating a museum to her findings. In 2024, with more than 500 pieces on her hands, she had gathered one of the largest-known collections of female artwork in France and decided to make a donation to the Musée Sainte Croix in Poitiers.
The result is 'La Musée' (a pun between 'the museum' and 'the amused'), a display of 300 pieces dated from the 17th to the 21st century. Drawings, engravings and miniatures make up the bulk of the exhibition. The whole thing is an eclectic mix of unknown artists and household names such as Rosa Bonheur, Niki de Saint Phalle and Suzanne Valadon (who is the focus of a current show at Centre Pompidou, in Paris).
ADVERTISEMENT
'La Musée. Une collection d'artistes femmes' runs until 18 May 2025.
Harriet Backer. Every Atom is Color
Harriet Backer, Chez Moi, 1887
Nasjonalmuseet/Børre Høstland
Where? Kode Art Museum (Bergen, Norway)
With 'Every Atom is Color', the Kode Bergen Art Museum takes visitors through Harriet Backer's personal and artistic development, as she rose to become one of the most influential painters in Norwegian history, known for her rich use of colour and light.
Backer (1845-1932) was an aficionado of the private space, and many of the pieces displayed in Bergen feature scenes of interior and portraits of her friends and loved ones.
ADVERTISEMENT
Music is also a predominant theme in her work, and the exhibition includes a musical programme that highlights Backer's sister, Norwegian pianist Agathe Backer-Grøndahl. 'Every Atom is Color' concludes an international tour that brought Backer's work to Stockholm, Paris and Oslo over the past two years, to great public acclaim.
"Harriet Backer. Every Atom is Color" is on until 24 August 2025.
Linder: Danger Came Smiling
Installation view of Linder: Danger Came Smiling
Mark Blower - Courtesy the artist and the Hayward Gallery
Where? Hayward Gallery (London, UK)
She is punk, she is rock, and she wore a meat dress 30 years before Lady Gaga did. Pioneering feminist artist Linder Sterling is now the focus of 'Linder: Danger Came Smiling', a retrospective currently held at Hayward Gallery in London.
ADVERTISEMENT
Throughout five decades, the Liverpool-born artist has produced satirical collages and photomontages to question the representation of the female body. Drawing from pop culture, she offers a radical questioning of gender and sexual norms.
The title 'Danger Came Smiling' refers to the name of a 1982 album by post-punk band Ludus, which Sterling founded. Smiles are also a recurrent motif in her work. The exhibition includes her landmark montages as well as sculptures, photographs and video installations.
'Linder: Danger Came Smiling' at Hayward Gallery runs until 5 May 2025.
Hanna Benihound's work in London
AP Photo
And as a cheeky bonus for London-based art lovers, head to Granary Square in King's Cross to admire Hanna Benihoud's illustrations, displayed as part of the free outdoor showing 'HighlightHer'. The event celebrates 'extraordinary ordinary women' for International Women's Day.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump
Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump

LeMonde

time14 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle ad sparks controversy online and pleases Donald Trump

In the languor of summer, investors were the first to sense the opportunity, sending American Eagle Outfitters' stock soaring by about 20% in a matter of days. The reason: a new ad campaign featuring American actress Sydney Sweeney. It was a throwback to the 1980s, with a blonde star leaning into her car engine while the viewer's gaze follows her neckline, before wiping her hands on the back pockets of her jeans and speeding off in her Ford Mustang: 1.9 million views on Instagram. At another moment, the camera lingers on Sweeney's blue jeans before moving up to her blue eyes: "My jeans are blue," says the actress after praising the passing down of genes from one's parents. "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans," concludes a voice-over, creating ambiguity between "jeans" and "genes." At a third moment, viewed by 4.5 million online users, the actress puts up a poster of herself where the word "genes" is crossed out and replaced with "jeans." Whether seen as highly glamorous or hopelessly outdated, investors don't care, since the controversy has been spreading online: "Supremacist dog whistles," accused influencer Chris Glover, known as GenericArtDad, on TikTok. "The new American Eagle Ad with Sydney Sweeney? That's Eugenics. Nazi propaganda. And it's blatant. Like, you don't even need media literacy. It's that on the nose obvious," echoed author Elle M. Drew on Threads.

After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'
After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'

LeMonde

time21 hours ago

  • LeMonde

After Ferrand-Prévot's triumph in the Tour de France Femmes, France 'is now enamored by women's cycling'

For 36 years, France had longed to see one of its riders finish the Tour de France wearing the yellow jersey. That wait ended on Sunday, August 3, in Châtel, Haute-Savoie, located in the Alps. "Pauline Ferrand-Prévot has found her Holy Grail," wrote Le Soir. The leader of the Visma-Lease a Bike team, winner of the 2025 edition and the "new Sun Queen," has "captivated" the country in recent days, wrote the Belgian daily. Like many international outlets, the paper celebrated the women's version of the Tour, packed with drama and standout moments. This was especially true after the men's race, where the suspense was short-lived. "The fourth edition of the modern Tour was predicted to be one for the history books (...) And it certainly delivered," observed American outlet The Athletic. Like other foreign publications, The Guardian highlighted the public enthusiasm surrounding the race, validating the vision of its director, former cyclist Marion Rousse. Rousse remarked that she was delighted "not to have seen a Tour de France Femmes, but a Tour de France" along the roadside. Record viewership figures (25.7 million viewers on France Télévisions) confirmed the enthusiasm.

How are Scarlett Johansson and AC/DC being used to scare off wolves?
How are Scarlett Johansson and AC/DC being used to scare off wolves?

Euronews

timea day ago

  • Euronews

How are Scarlett Johansson and AC/DC being used to scare off wolves?

American farmers have been having a hard time dealing with wolf attacks, as the number of canis lupus has soared since they were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, in 1995. As a result, attacks on cattle and sheep have skyrocketed – with farmers finding themselves in a bind as they are forbidden to harm wolves due to their protected status. But now, a technological innovation has been deployed in the fight to prevent attacks by wolves in the rural north-west: drones. And not just any drones - Quadcopter drones equipped with speakers which blare out AC/DC and the voice of Scarlett Johansson. While the loud rock music can seem like an evident tactic to scare wolves away from cattle, the second does seem a little more incongruous... The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has confirmed to The Wall Street Journal that people arguing is a distressing sound for wolves and so, the fight scene between Johansson and Adam Driver in the 2019 movie Marriage Story is a perfect deterrent. 'I need the wolves to respond and know that, hey, humans are bad,' the aptly-named Paul Wolf, a USDA district supervisor in Oregon, told WSJ. Harsh, as the two married protagonists in Noah Baumbach's film, Nicole and Charlie, are going through a bi-coastal divorce that pushes them to their limits. They're flawed, certainly, but hardly bad. Still, that argument is one for the ages... And a really tough watch. Still, wouldn't you know it, the music and film clips work. Since the deployment of the drones, the number of wolf attacks in Oregon has been reduced. The number of cows killed by wolves has fallen from 11 over a 20-day period to two over the next 85 days in Southern Oregon. In that case, allow us to be so bold as to recommend some other classic on-screen arguments like the Jack Nicholson-Tom Cruise back-and-forth in A Few Good Men; the Joe Pesci 'How the f*** am I funny?' bit in Goodfellas; that biting confrontation between Jesse and Celine in Richard Linklater's Before Midnight; and of course, the 'You're tearing me apart, Lisa' scene from The Room. And if Ben Kingsley's 'Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!' eruption in Jonathan Glazer's Sexy Beast doesn't terrify the wolves, we don't know what will. Kingsley still terrifies us to this day. In other Scarlett Johansson news, the 40-year-old actress recently broke a Hollywood record by becoming Hollywood's most bankable lead performer. This follows the commercial success of her latest film Jurassic World Rebirth. The takings of the most recent instalment in the Jurassic franchise have put Johansson at the top of the list of the highest-grossing lead actors of all time, with $14.8billion (approx. €12.7bn) in box office for her films across her career in leading or ensemble roles. According to the breakdown from The Numbers, the following projects were the biggest contributors: In our (less than glowing) review for Jurassic World Rebirth, we said: 'Despite Gareth Edwards excellent direction, some nifty staging of CG set pieces and a handful of spectacular sequences – chiefly the riverbed encounter with a dozing T-Rex – Jurassic World Rebirth comes off as more of a nostalgic legacyquel than a rejuvenating fresh start. (...) Jurassic World Rebirth honours the magic of Spielberg's gamechanging blockbuster but downgrades what could have been a daring revival to a passably entertaining regurgitation.' Read the full review here. Scarlett Johansson can next be seen on the big screen in the upcoming crime drama Paper Tiger by James Gray – in which she'll team up with Adam Driver once more. Hopefully their interactions will scare off more wolves. But please, less breaking of audiences' hearts. We're still recovering from that Marriage Story tiff.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store