Museums across the USA are civic landmarks, community hubs, economic engines and major draws for out-of-town visitors.

Oh, and they also exhibit world-class art.

In addition to displaying their rich and varied permanent collections, American museums produce temporary exhibitions that combine scholarship with showmanship. These shows highlight works both by artists who are household names and by those whose breakout moment lies just around the bend – helping visitors think about, look at and understand the world around them in new ways.

An exciting lineup of exhibitions will pack both the calendar and gallery walls in 2026. In particular, the 250th anniversary of the country’s founding provides a timely chance to take a fresh look at American art.

Here are seven exhibitions all over the US that are worth planning a trip around in 2026.

People walk in a riverfront park in a big city. A large museum is seen across the road.
The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City. Max Touhey, via Whitney Museum

1. Whitney Biennial 2026

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City
On view: starting March 8, 2026

The 82nd edition of this venerable survey of the new, the now and the next of American art is the tentpole of the Whitney Museum of American Art’s 2026 program. Staff curators Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer have selected a wide range of works in many media (and often multimedia) by 56 individual artists and collectives drawn from the full spectrum of American experience. (This year’s lineup skews notably young, with more than half the creators born after 1980.) As you walk through this survey of the American art scene, you might find yourself outraged or befuddled, galvanized or inspired. But one word that never describes the Whitney Biennial? Boring.

Baltimore-Style Album Quilt
Alexander Hamilton
Artist Considers the 21st Century Implications of Psychosis as Public Health Crisis...
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas. Eddie Brady/Getty Images
Clockwise from top left: Baltimore-Style Album Quilt, 1845-1850. American Folk Art Museum; “Alexander Hamilton“ by Giuseppe Cerrachi, 1794. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art; The Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville. Eddie Brady/Getty Images “Artist Considers the 21st Century Implications of Psychosis as Public Health Crisis or, Critical/Comedic Analysis into the Pathophysiology of Psychosis“ by Vanessa German, 2014. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art

2. America 250: Common Threads

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas
On view: March 14–July 27, 2026

In an era of divisive politics and polarization, the priceless Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in rural Arkansas will use the power of art to spark dialogue, community and (dare we say it?) patriotism. The institution’s contribution to the USA’s semiquincentennial festivities will use a display of documents – including the Declaration of Independence – as a launchpad for presenting paintings, textiles, sculptures and even toys that illustrate how Americans have seen themselves from 1776 to the present. Expect quilts to factor big in the presentation – and the presence of live quilters in the galleries, continuing the art-making into the present. Corny? Perhaps. But these days, we all deserve to have our spirits lifted a bit.

Communications
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Matthew Tom
Ann Bailis
Exhibition Dates:
March 29
–
June 28, 2026
Exhibition Location:
The Met Fifth Avenue,
Gallery 899
,
The Tisch Galleries
,
Floor 2
www.metmuseum.org
For Immediate Release
Raphael:
Sublime
Poetry
•
Images are lent for the sole purpose of editorial publicity related to
Raphael: Sublime Poetry
at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from
March
29
through
June 2
8, 2026
.
•
Images must not be cropped, detailed, overprinted,
bled to the edges,
guttered,
or otherwise altered or manipulated.
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Copyright credit
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must appear adjacent to all reproductions.
Image
Identification
Raphael (Raffaello di Giovanni Santi) (Italian,
1483
–
1520)
The Virgin and Child with Infant Saint John the
Baptist in a Landscape (The Alba Madonna)
ca. 1509
-
11
Oil on canvas (transferred from wood)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.,
Andrew W. Mellon Collection (1937.1.24)
Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington
Raphael (Raffaello di Giovanni Santi) (Italian,
1483
–
1520)
Portrait of Baldassarre Castiglione
1514
-
1516
Oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre, Paris, département des
Peintures (611 [MR 437])
NEW YORK - May 26, 2015: The Metropolitan Museum of Art  located in New York City, is the largest art museum in the United States and one of the ten largest in the world.
295510418
arch, architectural, architecture, archway, art, attraction, city, entrance, famous, grand, great, hall, history, interior, landmark, lobby, may, met, metropolitan, museum, new, ny, nyc, people, tourism, tourists, travel, usa, visitors, york
Left: “Portrait of Baldassarre Castiglione“ by Raphael, 1518. RMN - Grand Palais/Art Resource, NY Right: The Great Hall of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Shutterstock

3. Raphael: Sublime Poetry

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
On view: March 29–June 28, 2026

This is the kind of blockbuster art event only the Met can pull off. Bringing together over 200 works by one of the most famous artists who ever lived, this exhibition is the first comprehensive look at Raphael’s oeuvre ever mounted in the US. Through a display of huge paintings, drawings and sumptuous tapestries (which were considered the height of opulence and refinement in the Renaissance), visitors can expect a fresh look at the creative process and output this singular artist, who looms as large over the history of art as any figure, ever. Whether you’ve never set foot in the Met or you drop in weekly, this show is reason alone to get planning your next visit – now.

Philadelphia, PA, USA - November 4, 2023: Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts on North Broad Street in Philadelphia, PA, USA. , License Type: media, Download Time: 2025-12-18T22:19:41.000Z, User: bhealy950, Editorial: true, purchase_order: 65050 - Digital Destinations and Articles, job: Lonely Planet Online Editorial, client: Best USA exhibitions in 2026, other: Brian Healy
ilbert Stuart  "George Washington " (The Lansdowne Portrait), 1796   Oil on canvas, 96 x 60 inches (243.84 x 152.4 cm)   The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Bequest of William Bingham
Barkley L. Hendricks   “J. S. B. III, 1968” Oil on canvas, 48 x 34 3/8 inches (121.92 x 87.3125 cm)  Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Richardson Dilworth
People sitting and walking on the steps to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, made famous in the Rocky movie
Clockwise from top left: The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Shutterstock; “George Washington“ by Gilbert Stuart. The Philadelphia Museum of Art; People sitting on the famed "Rocky" steps outside the Philadelphia Art Museum. Samuel Borges Photography/Shutterstock “J. S. B. III, 1968” Barkley L Hendricks. The Philadelphia Museum of Art

4. A Nation of Artists

Philadelphia Museum of Art and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia
On view: April 12, 2026–September 2027

It feels right that this sprawling survey of American art – over 1000 works, across two institutions, on display for more than a year – will be taking over Philadelphia, the USA’s “Cradle of Liberty,” for the country’s 250th birthday. On view at both the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the exhibition will tackle the wide, thrilling, sometimes messy, always engaging scope of the visual arts in the United States – from colonial-era portraits to Hudson River School landscapes to works by Indigenous and African American creators. A selection of masterworks from the private Middleton Family Collection will provide a special enhancement to the presentation. Ambitious? Sure. But so is the American project.

Mary Cassatt. The Child's Bath, 1893. The Art Institute of Chicago, Robert A. Waller Fund.
People walking in a wing of an art museum
Left: “The Child's Bath” by Mary Cassatt, 1893. The Art Institute of Chicago Right: The Art Institute of Chicago. Shutterstock

5. Mary Cassatt: After Impressionism

Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
On view: September 6, 2026–January 3, 2027

A perennial favorite of art lovers, Mary Cassatt has a story that’s hard to resist. After persisting in her desire to train and work as an artist – a rare feat for a 19th-century woman – the Pennsylvania-born Cassatt moved for good to Paris in the 1860s, and officially joined the then-radical circle of Impressionist painters (the only American to be a member). Yet it was in the later phases of her career that she produced perhaps her most memorable – and certainly most innovative – works, including her timeless paintings depicting children with their mothers and caretakers. This exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago will leave you with a fresh perspective on the work of a wonderfully familiar artist.

Félix Nadar, The Actress Marie Laurent, from Behind, c. 1856, salt print from
a glass plate negative, acquired in 1949 from the widow of Paul Nadar.
Bibliothèque nationale de France
The Kimbell’s barrel vaults are made from poured concrete and seem to glow with natural light © Barbara babala / Shutterstock
Left: “The Actress Marie Laurent” by Nadar, c 1856. Bibliothèque nationale de France Right: The Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas. Shuttestock

6. Photography’s First Century: Masterworks from the Bibliothèque nationale de France

Kimbell Museum of Art, Fort Worth
On view: October 4, 2026–January 17, 2027

The Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth’s Louis Kahn–designed jewel box for old master paintings, mounts its first-ever exhibition of photography, with a focus (ahem) on the first decades of the world-changing medium. Drawing from one of the world’s great repositories of historic photographs – the Bibliothèque nationale de Francethis exhibition will trace the development of photography through advancements both technical and artistic. On rare, low-light display will be works by Félix Tournachon (Nadar), Eugène Atget, Sonia Delaunay, Man Ray, Brassaï and other photographic pioneers.

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