Hamburger Menu Pixel Books by Gütsel

Auguste Rodin, “Pygmalion and Galatea”, 1908 9. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Credit: Rijksmuseum

Rijksmuseum and Galleria Borghese present “Metamorphoses”, February 6th through May 25th, 2026

Rijksmuseum and Galleria Borghese present “Metamorphoses”, February 6th through May 25th, 2026

#Amsterdam, October 20th, 2025

Passion and desire, lust and jealousy, cunning and deceit—few classical texts have stirred the imagination of artists as deeply as Ovid’s “Metamorphoses”. In the eponymous exhibition artists as #Titian, #Correggio, #Cellini, #Caravaggio, #Rubens, #Rodin, #Brancusi, #Magritte, and #Bourgeois rival the imaginative power and artistic vision of one of Antiquity’s greatest poets. Over 80 masterpieces will be brought together from museums and collections worldwide. This exceptional exhibition has been developed through close collaboration between the #Rijksmuseum in #Amsterdam and #Galleria #Borghese in #Rome.

The exhibition runs from February 6th to May 25th 2026 at the Rijksmuseum. It will be presented—in a different configuration—at Galleria Borghese from June 22nd to September 2th 2026. “Metamorphoses” is made possible in part by The Bennink Foundation, the Rijksmuseum International Circle and the Rijksmuseum Patrons.

Highlights

“Metamorphoses” brings together more than 80 highlights from international collections. The works include Titian’s Danaë, painted for King Philip II of Spain; Tintoretto’s Minerva and Arachne; Correggio’s iconic “Jupiter and Io”, as well as “Ganymede Abducted by the Eagle” and “Danaë” (all painted for the Duke of Mantua); Caravaggio’s “Narcissus”; and Rodin’s marble “Pygmalion and Galatea”, presented alongside Gérôme’s painting of the subject. Three of Arcimboldo’s composite, grotesque faces will also be on display. In addition, the life size #bronze “Perseus” with the “Head of Medusa”, made by the Dutch artist Hubert Gerhardt for the Duke of #Bavaria, will be shown for the first time together with its model, the prototype for Cellini’s famous work of the same title.

The exhibition presents art from across the centuries in a variety of media, with painting, sculpture, precious metalwork and ceramics, as well as contemporary #photography and #video #art.

Bible for artists

Very few texts from antiquity have inspired as many artists as “Metamorphoses” by the Roman poet Publius #Ovidius Naso (Ovid, 43 BCE to 17 CE). In this monumental epic, he described a world filled with transformations of gods and humans into animals, plants or stones. It is with good reason that, in his 1604 #Schilder boeck, Karel van Mander described the work as a ‘Bible for artists’. This was by no means an exaggeration: after the Bible, Metamorphoses remained for centuries one of the most important and inexhaustible sources for painters, sculptors, engravers, composers, writers and poets. Its influence persists to this day.

“Metamorphoses”

‘All things change, but nothing dies’ is the message Ovid conveys in “Metamorphoses”, his narrative #poem in which gods become animals, nymphs are transformed into trees, humans turn to stone, and stones become human. Many of the stories it contains explore interactions between gods and mortals, with love playing a major role—far from always with mutual consent. Violence and treachery also recur throughout the stories. The exhibition highlights the depiction of several iconic fables. They include the creation of the cosmos and the world from formless chaos; the story of the weaver Arachne, who is transformed by the jealous goddess #Minerva into a #spider to weave her webs for all eternity; and the affairs of Jupiter, the chief god, who repeatedly disguises himself—as a bull, a swan, in a shroud of mist, or as a shower of gold —to deceive his jealous wife #Juno and his victims.

#Book

Produced in partnership with Galleria Borghese, the exhibition catalogue will be available in three languages: Dutch, English and Italian. It discusses all the works in both exhibitions, and includes essays by Dutch and Italian specialists. Graphic design by Irma Boom Office.

Exhibition design

The designer of the exhibition at the Rijksmuseum is Aldo Bakker, who previously designed “Small Wonders” (2017) and “Asian Bronze” (2024) for the #museum.

Zurück

Home News Impressum Kontakt Datenschutz

Instagram Facebook