From clandestine protests in the shadows of dictatorship to a riot of color spilling down its hills, Valparaíso has turned its walls into a living manifesto of freedom.
View More
There are years when art lovers travel to chase a single masterpiece or a much anticipated opening, and then there are years like 2026, when the world seems to conspire in your favour. From the river-washed warehouses of London to the labyrinthine alleys of Stone Town in Zanzibar, this is a year made for wandering between cultures, carrying with you a sketchbook, a pair of comfortable shoes, and an appetite for surprise. These ten destinations do not simply host art events. They reveal how art, history, and daily life are braided together, asking you not just to look, but to listen and linger.
Across continents and climates, you will encounter major retrospectives that reframe familiar names, new institutions intent on shifting regional power, and humble streets where every carved lintel tells a story. In each place, art spills beyond the gallery wall into gardens, palaces, city squares, and sea-facing promenades. It appears in neon cursive above a hotel bar, in monumental bronzes thrust into a botanic landscape, in the tender graphite of a drawing preserved in a Parisian archive, and in the flicker of a video pod reading your thoughts above Tokyo’s twinkling skyline. This is not a passive journey. It is an invitation to be changed by what you see.

To follow this route is to move through time as much as space. You walk through 40 years of Tracey Emin’s confessional practice in London, then drift into the future at the inaugural Art Basel in Doha. You cross the centuries from Madrid’s golden age of painting to contemporary Bangkok’s rising kunsthalle. You trace unheard voices at the Venice Biennale, then return to the very foundations of a nation in Philadelphia as the United States quietly, and sometimes noisily, confronts its 250th year. Everywhere, you see how art can be both monument and whisper, both declaration and door.
On a cool early spring morning, the Thames carries a faint mist that softens the edges of London’s skyline. Inside Tate Modern, however, there is nothing soft about Tracey Emin’s retrospective. A Second Life, spanning four turbulent decades, hits you with the force of a confession whispered too loudly in a crowded room. The industrial vastness of the former power station feels charged: the scent of metal and polished concrete, a low murmur of visitors, the occasional squeak of a shoe that echoes like an exclamation point in the Turbine Hall.
Here is her iconic installation My Bed, reassembled in all its dishevelled intimacy. Crumpled sheets clinging to the mattress like low clouds, cigarette butts fossilised in ashtrays, discarded bottles and worn underwear scattered with forensic precision. Standing before it in 2026, with Emin’s later works nearby, you sense not provocation for its own sake but a clear narrative of survival. Her early diaristic pieces converse with raw, post-operative drawings and paintings made after her battle with cancer, their surfaces thick with scumbled paint and handwritten declarations. It is as though the gallery walls have become pages torn from a private journal, enlarged until you can step inside.
Yet London’s 2026 allure is not solely about interiority. A short journey west, the air changes as you arrive at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. The scent of damp earth and clipped grass replaces the city’s metallic tang. Here, Henry Moore’s monumental bronzes rise from the lawns and meadows in Henry Moore: Monumental Nature, an open air exhibition that stretches across Kew’s 320 acre UNESCO listed landscape. Thirty sculptures, each one a massive punctuation mark in space, recline among swaying grasses or stand sentinel near the soaring glass of the Temperate House. You trace the smooth curve of a reclining figure with your eyes as it frames the winter bare branches beyond, the bronze catching a rare shaft of English sun and radiating back a muted gold.
Moving among these works is a bodily experience. Children sprint through the negative spaces Moore carved out, their laughter carrying on the wind, while older visitors walk slowly, fingers brushing guide maps, absorbing the dialogue between sculpture and nature. Inside the Shirley Sherwood Gallery, smaller carvings and drawings reveal the skeletal underpinnings of these giants, the seed of each form captured in a graphite line or the grain of elm. It is a reminder that even the grandest public work begins as a quiet observation, a hand moving across paper.

Art in London seeps into unexpected places. At The Ned, a lavish hotel set in a former bank near the City, you step from the marble floored lobby into spaces humming with live jazz and clinking glasses, only to look up and find a Tracey Emin piece glowing above a bar. Her delicate neon script, at once romantic and wounded, casts a rose coloured halo over vintage glassware and well dressed patrons. Staying here feels like inhabiting a curated installation of contemporary British glamour, where art is not relegated to a sterile gallery but woven through the fabric of daily life.
For a quieter, more cocooned base, check into The Connaught in Mayfair, a grand hotel that has long nurtured ties with contemporary British artists. In the light filled lobby and along hushed corridors, you encounter pieces that nod to the country’s shifting cultural landscape. Perhaps it is a bold abstract painting catching afternoon light filtered through etched glass, or a sculptural work glimpsed at the end of a carpeted hallway. After a day of absorbing Emin’s emotional topographies and Moore’s earthy colossi, retreating to The Connaught’s velvety bar for a martini beneath a quietly radical artwork feels like the perfect closing bracket to London’s art filled sentence.
By May, you find yourself stepping off a vaporetto into the watery luminosity of Venice. The light here seems thinned with history, glancing off the greenish surface of the canals and bouncing from facades flaking with centuries of salt and sun. The 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, titled In Minor Keys, hums through this fragile city from 9 May to 22 November 2026. Curated by the late Koyo Kouoh, it is an exhibition that embraces quietness as an act of resistance, amplifying voices that have so often been muffled in the global art conversation.
At the Arsenale, the former shipyard that now acts as one of the Biennale’s main arteries, you walk through long, brick lined halls where the air tastes faintly of brine and old iron. Instead of bombast, you encounter delicate installations that invite you to lean in rather than step back. A low lit room might host a sound piece composed of recordings from overlooked communities, each whispering in a language that hovers at the edge of your comprehension. A series of small scale drawings on handmade paper, pinned at eye level, could map the emotional cartography of displacement more powerfully than any monumental painting.
Kouoh’s curatorial concept takes the musical metaphor seriously. In Minor Keys suggests not only a softer volume but a complexity of emotion: melancholia, longing, introspective joy. Works by artists from the Global South and diasporic communities appear again and again, their practices grounded in vernacular traditions and political realities often overshadowed by Western narratives. You might find a textile piece dyed with plants gathered from a threatened landscape, its fibres stiff with salt, accompanied not by a manifesto but by a simple, handwritten line about a grandmother’s hands. In another space, video monitors show footage of daily rituals in a small village, projected at just above waist height so that you have to bend forward, as though bowing in respect.

Outside the official sites, the Biennale spills across Venice like pigment dropped into water. National pavilions claim palazzi along the Grand Canal, their marble staircases now framing contemporary installations. A narrow calle suddenly opens into a courtyard where a pop up performance is underway: a dancer moving in near silence on worn stone, their gestures echoing the lapping rhythm of the canal beside them. Even simple acts, like stopping for a spritz in a small bacaro, become part of the exhibition’s citywide takeover, as neighbouring walls host collateral shows and artist run projects that challenge, expand, or subvert the main theme.
The beauty of visiting Venice during Biennale season is the sense that art and city are engaged in a continuous negotiation. You may emerge from an installation about rising sea levels only to find the actual lagoon glittering just below the pavement, its surface slipping higher with each passing year. You might ponder a work about the erasure of minority languages while standing in a vaporetto queue overhearing at least five tongues spoken at once. The Biennale’s emphasis on subtlety does not mean it is gentle. Rather, it proves that the quietest works can leave the deepest afterimage as you drift away across the water, the city’s campanili receding like exclamation marks in the mist.
Autumn on the other side of the Atlantic feels brisk and electric as you step onto the streets of New York City. The air is laced with roasted nuts from sidewalk carts and the metallic screech of subway trains below, but above ground, the art scene moves with a different kind of urgency. At the edge of the Meatpacking District, the Whitney Museum of American Art hovers over the Hudson like a ship of glass and steel, a bellwether for contemporary American art. The Whitney Biennial returns in 2026 as a compressed weather report of the nation’s anxieties and ambitions.
Inside, the exhibition unfolds as a series of charged encounters. One room might be dominated by an immersive installation that seasons the air with the smell of burnt plastic and sea salt, conjuring climate catastrophe with unnerving immediacy. Another space could host a cluster of screens streaming live feeds from protests, border crossings, and quiet domestic interiors, each image annotated by artists who intervene in the relentless churn of media. Themes of surveillance, identity politics, and digital disinformation ripple through the show, yet the tone is not purely dystopian. You also encounter works that look tenderly at community gardens in the Bronx, or at intergenerational family portraits reconstructed from found photographs and oral histories.
Photography looms large in New York’s 2026 calendar. Uptown, a major museum devotes a luminous retrospective to Graciela Iturbide, the Mexican photographer whose black and white images have long captured rituals, landscapes, and everyday gestures with a poetic, almost mystical clarity. Walking through the galleries, you move from the dusty expanses of Sonora to the crowded streets of Mexico City, each photograph rendered in velvety shades of grey. The rustle of visitors’ coats, the soft whirr of the climate control system, the faint aroma of old paper from accompanying catalogues all merge into a sensory hushed reverence for the power of the lens to expand our sense of reality.

Down by the East River, Artexpo New York returns to Pier 36 in April, transforming the waterfront warehouse into a buzzing bazaar of creativity. The concrete floors vibrate faintly under the footfall of thousands of collectors, curators, and curious onlookers moving between booths. On one wall, a hyperrealist seascape captures every foam fleck in icy detail, while a few steps away, a young artist from Brooklyn shows glitchy, neon drenched canvases that seem ripped from a future internet. The scent of coffee from pop up kiosks blends with the chemical tang of fresh paint and printing ink, turning the fair into a sensory saturation point. It can feel overwhelming, but finding a quiet conversation with an emerging artist at the edge of the chaos becomes its own reward.
A short ride away in Chelsea, the Affordable Art Fair offers a different kind of exhilaration. The white cubed galleries along the High Line may still trade in seven figure works, but inside this fair, the thrill lies in discovering something you can actually take home. Here, early career photographers show intimate series printed on matte paper, the grain of the image visible like skin. Small paintings lean on shared shelves, waiting for someone to recognise that they have fallen in love. The atmosphere is more relaxed, conversations more candid. You leave with a wrapped work under your arm, feeling that you have not simply consumed New York’s art scene, but joined it in some small but meaningful way.
There is a particular light that belongs to Paris in early summer, a soft, champagne coloured radiance that seems to polish the city’s limestone facades from within. This year, that luminosity meets its match indoors, where drawings and paintings gather in two of the city’s most storied institutions. At the Grand Palais, the exhibition Dessins sans limite pulls back the curtain on 20th century drawings from the Centre Pompidou’s vast collection, inviting you into the intimate space where lines first conceived masterpieces.
Inside the vast glass nave, you move through rooms where graphite, ink, and charcoal hum at a quieter frequency than oils and bronzes. There is a sense of proximity here: the faint grain of paper illuminated by carefully calibrated spotlights, the occasional smudge where an artist rested their hand, a faded annotation in the corner of a sheet. You might find a quick, looping sketch by Picasso, the loose arc of a figure that later hardened into a famous canvas, or an ephemeral study by a lesser known artist whose work feels like a secret discovery. The show’s title, Drawings without limits, proves apt. The exhibition argues that drawing is not a preparatory step but a boundless language in its own right, capable of capturing fleeting emotions and radical ideas with a few decisive strokes.
Elsewhere in the Grand Palais complex, colour erupts in a major Matisse exhibition. Here, the air seems saturated with pigments: the saturated blues of The Swimming Pool, the rhythmic patterns of textiles draped across studio chairs, the buttery yellows that turn even a simple vase of flowers into a visual crescendo. As you stand before one of his late cut outs, the paper shapes layered like leaves caught mid dance, you sense the artist’s hand in the gouged edges and subtle overlaps. The room thrums with the energy of improvisation, jazz translated into paper and gouache. Outside, the muffled honk of traffic on the avenue feels far away, the city temporarily replaced by Matisse’s invented paradises.

Cross the Seine to the Musée d’Orsay, where Renoir and Love revisits the painter often associated with soft light and convivial scenes, asking more probing questions about how affection, desire, and intimacy played out on his canvases. Amid the familiar swirl of dancers at Le Moulin de la Galette, you notice the small details the exhibition highlights: the gentle tension of a hand at a waist, the glint of an eye meeting another across a crowded café. Works are grouped not simply by chronology but by emotional atmosphere. A gallery dedicated to familial tenderness might display portraits of children and mothers, their skin rendered with that unmistakable Renoir glow, while another space engages more overtly with eroticism, forcing you to confront the era’s gender politics and the gaze that shaped these paintings.
Outside, along the embankments of the Seine, booksellers open their green metal boxes, releasing the smell of old paper and dust into the summer air. It is almost impossible not to think of drawings when you flip through stacks of vintage prints and etchings, their lines softened by time. In Paris, art does not confine itself to museums. It spills into poster covered kiosks, into the window displays of tiny galleries in the Marais, into the chalk sketches of street artists working near Place du Tertre in Montmartre. Yet in 2026, the combination of Dessins sans limite, Renoir’s reconsidered affections, and the riot of Matisse’s colours at the Grand Palais makes the city feel especially drawn in, as if the entire capital has been sketched anew.
Arriving in Tokyo is like stepping into a circuit board lit from within. By late October, a crispness enters the air, and from the observation decks of Roppongi Hills, the city stretches out in a glittering grid beneath a sky already hinting at winter. Inside the Mori Art Museum, however, time and space bend under the spell of Mariko Mori’s long awaited retrospective, her first major show in her birthplace in over two decades. The elevator ride up feels like a prelude, your ears popping slightly as city life drops away and you enter a different kind of atmosphere.
The exhibition traces three decades of Mori’s practice, yet it feels resolutely present tense. Early works from the 1990s introduce her as a futuristic cyborg figure inserted into real world settings: a silver haired apparition waiting at a subway platform, a glittering alien presence in a traditional tea house. The glossy surfaces and saturated colours echo the pop culture of that era, yet the questions they pose about identity, gender, and technological saturation have only grown sharper. Nearby, a cluster of sculptures glows softly in a darkened room, their forms inspired by ancient dolmens and celestial orbits, the surfaces iridescent like abalone shells.
One highlight is the reimagined Wave UFO, an immersive pod that seems to hover within the gallery like a visiting spacecraft. After removing your shoes, you climb a short flight of steps into its smooth, white interior. Reclining on padded seats, you are fitted with a simple sensor that reads your brainwaves. Above you, projections translate those signals into a shifting universe of colour and form, creating an ever changing skyscape unique to you and the small group sharing the pod. The air is cool and faintly ozonic, punctuated only by the low hum of hidden speakers. For a few minutes, your inner state becomes the artwork, blurring the line between observer and observed in a way that feels both intimate and expansive.

Mori’s exhibition is steeped in Buddhist philosophy and a sense of cosmic oneness. Wall texts and subtle soundscapes reference sutras and mandalas, yet the show never feels didactic. Instead, it offers portals: a video installation in which waterfalls cascade in reverse beneath a full moon, a sculpture that seems simultaneously seed and satellite. The effect is to stretch your sense of scale, making your own body feel both tiny and vitally connected to everything else. When you step back out into the observation deck afterwards, Tokyo’s lights appear not as random sprawl but as a living network, every window a node in an enormous, breathing organism.
Down in Ueno, the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum celebrates its centennial, its dignified brick façade a counterpoint to Mori’s futuristic visions. Special anniversary exhibitions delve into the city’s artistic past, from early 20th century nihonga painting to postwar avant garde movements that once shocked polite society. Wandering its galleries, the smell of varnish and polished wood mixing with the distant cries of children playing in Ueno Park, you sense how Tokyo has long been a crucible of visual experimentation. Together, the Mori retrospective and the museum’s centennial form a kind of temporal bridge, tying the city’s artistic future to its dense, unpredictable past.
By February, the desert light over Doha acquires the soft, honeyed tones of late afternoon even in mid morning, the sky an unblemished blue that seems to stretch forever. It is against this luminous backdrop that the inaugural edition of Art Basel Qatar unfolds, signalling a new chapter for the Gulf’s cultural ambitions. Inside the sleek halls of the fair, air conditioning hums quietly as collectors and curators move through a landscape of booths drawn from 31 countries, their conversations in English, Arabic, French, and countless dialects weaving a low constant tapestry of sound.
Anchored in Msheireb Downtown Doha, the fair’s main exhibition brings together 87 galleries presenting 84 artist led projects, yet what distinguishes this edition is its ambition in public space. A Special Projects program sends large scale installations, sculptures, and performances into courtyards, plazas, and waterfront promenades, responding to the theme Becoming. One afternoon you might find yourself standing before a towering mirrored structure reflecting the desert sky back onto itself, your own figure fragmented into shards amid the clouds. Another evening, a performance piece traces the movements of migrant workers through the city with illuminated drones, their choreographed paths recreating invisible labour routes above your head.
Beyond the fair, Doha’s maturing art scene manifests in new and reimagined institutions. The Doha Design Biennale, still in its early editions, scatters experimental architecture and design installations across the city, from the waterfront Corniche to tucked away warehouses in the industrial zone. You might encounter a pop up pavilion made entirely of woven palm fronds and recycled plastic, its interior scented with frankincense and cooled by cleverly channelled breezes, or stumble upon an interactive light work built into the arches of a restored souq building. Everywhere, the line between art, design, and daily life blurs, reflecting a region negotiating its identity in real time.

A short flight away, the long awaited Guggenheim Abu Dhabi finally opens its doors on Saadiyat Island, its Frank Gehry designed form blooming across the water like a cluster of metallic sails. Inside, high ceilings and shifting planes of light house a collection that spans global modern and contemporary art, with particular attention to West Asia, North Africa, and South Asia. The air carries a faint, cool echo, the footsteps of visitors softened by thick carpets in some galleries and resonant on polished stone in others. Looking out through a slit of window, you see the Arabian Gulf glittering beyond, a reminder of the region’s maritime past and its present as a crossroads between continents.
For travellers, this constellation of events marks the Gulf as more than a quick stopover between Europe and Asia. It becomes a destination in its own right, where you can spend mornings contemplating new commissions at Art Basel Qatar, afternoons wandering through design interventions that shade you from the desert sun, and evenings on a rooftop terrace watching the city lights flicker on like a field of stars reflected in glass towers. The art here feels inseparable from questions of futurity: how to build sustainably, how to honour migrant histories, how to translate rapid economic change into cultural forms that endure.
In 2026, the cobbled streets of Philadelphia carry an extra charge. This is the year the United States marks the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and the city where it happened becomes a living stage for reflection, celebration, and critique. Walking through the historic district, you can almost taste history in the air, a mixture of aged brick dust, hot pretzels from street vendors, and the faint sweetness of blossoming trees in spring.
At Independence Hall, the familiar narrative of founding fathers and parchment unfurls, but around it, Philadelphia’s cultural institutions complicate and deepen the picture. The Philadelphia Museum of Art, perched atop its broad steps, uses the anniversary as an opportunity to rehang parts of its collection, foregrounding works by Indigenous artists, African American painters, and contemporary voices that challenge heroic myths. An exhibition on the idea of liberty might pair 18th century portraits with video installations addressing mass incarceration or immigration detention, forcing visitors to cross centuries with each glance.
Down the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, the Barnes Foundation continues to astonish with its dense hang of Renoirs, Cézannes, and Matisses, yet special programming in 2026 draws attention to how these European modernists were shaped by non Western traditions. In one gallery, African sculptures and masks, long part of the Barnes collection, take on new prominence, their carved forms and lived histories unpacked through fresh scholarship and contemporary interventions. The rooms hum with overlapping conversations about appropriation, influence, and dialogue, underscored by the soft squeak of wooden floors and the occasional hiss of the climate system kicking in.

On the streets, public art commemorating the semiquincentennial proliferates. Temporary murals bloom on once blank walls, some celebrating grassroots movements from abolition to Black Lives Matter, others imagining future forms of democracy with bold graphic clarity. In neighbourhoods far from the tourist trail, community arts organisations host open air performances and participatory projects, turning vacant lots into stages and galleries. You might stumble upon a spoken word event in Fishtown, the smell of coffee and craft beer mingling with verses about citizenship and belonging, or find a dance troupe rehearsing in a South Philly playground under a canopy of turning leaves.
For visitors, 2026 in Philadelphia offers more than patriotic pageantry. It becomes an opportunity to see how a nation uses art to interrogate its own founding myths, to honour those long excluded from the narrative, and to imagine what the next 250 years might demand. To stand in front of a contemporary painting about voting rights after touring the Assembly Room where the Declaration was debated is to feel time collapse in on itself, the past and present locked in an unfinished conversation. Few cities are better placed to host that dialogue.
When you arrive in Madrid, the light feels drier, sharper, bouncing off the city’s ochre buildings and pouring into its wide boulevards. The famed Paseo del Arte the axis linking the Prado, the Reina Sofía, and the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza thrums with its usual artistic riches. Yet in 2026, it is painting from further north that steals the spotlight, casting the cool shadows of Copenhagen and the glinting waters of the Swedish archipelago over the Spanish capital.
At the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, a major exhibition devoted to Vilhelm Hammershøi draws you into worlds of whispered stillness. His interiors, rendered in muted greys and soft creams, depict sparsely furnished rooms where light pools on wooden floors and lingers on the backs of closed doors. Often a solitary female figure stands with her back to the viewer, her presence both anchoring and unsettling the scene. Seen in Madrid, a city of animated street life and late night plazas, these quiet Danish rooms take on an almost meditative aura. The muffled footsteps in the gallery, the faint rustle of the exhibition booklet in your hand, the cool breath of the air conditioning all heighten the sense of being drawn into a parallel, hushed dimension.
Across town, at the Fundación Mapfre, an exhibition dedicated to Anders Zorn introduces a different northern sensibility. Zorn’s brushwork shimmers with life: water rippling around bathing figures, the glint of silver on a dinner table, the flush of cheeks warmed by firelight. His paintings of Swedish archipelago scenes seem almost to emit their own cool breeze, while portraits of society figures and artists’ circles reveal a deft psychological acuity. In the intimate rooms of the foundation, their walls often painted in deep jewel tones, the works glow like jewels under spotlights, inviting you to examine the flicker of each stroke up close.

These Scandinavian visitors converse with Madrid’s own collections. At the Prado, you might move from Velázquez’s Las Meninas, with its complex play of gaze and power, to Goya’s haunting Black Paintings, then carry those impressions back to Hammershøi’s constricted rooms and Zorn’s luminous portraits. Questions of interiority, social performance, and the depiction of light begin to weave connections across centuries and geographies. In 2026, the city feels like a painting seminar held at urban scale, with each museum visit adding another brushstroke to your understanding.
Outside, life unfolds in true Madrileño fashion. Terrace cafés spill onto sidewalks, the clink of glasses and the aroma of tortilla and gambas al ajillo providing a sensuous counterpoint to the cool northern scenes you have been contemplating. As the late evening sun slowly sinks, gilding the façades along the Gran Vía, you may find yourself sketching the silhouettes of rooftop statues against the sky, suddenly aware of how Madrid itself invites painterly attention. This is a city that understands how to frame a view, and in 2026, it does so through the eyes of visitors from far away shores.
Humidity embraces you like a second skin the moment you step into Bangkok. The city’s air is thick with the aromas of lemongrass, exhaust fumes, incense coils burning at shrine corners, and sizzling garlic from street food stalls. Amid this sensory onslaught, Bangkok’s art scene has been flowering with remarkable speed, and in 2026 the Bangkok Art Biennale returns with a theme that feels tailored to the city’s own contradictions: Angels and Mara. Angels, evoking benevolent forces, and Mara, the tempter figure in Buddhist cosmology, haunt both the temples and nightclubs of this restless metropolis.
The Biennale stretches across sacred and secular sites. In air conditioned galleries, video installations and sculptural works probe questions of faith, temptation, and moral ambiguity. At Wat Arun, projections ripple across the temple’s porcelain encrusted spires after dark, reimagining celestial beings in digital form that seems to flicker between blessing and seduction. In a riverside warehouse, a sound installation layers the recorded chants of monks with snippets of pop songs heard from passing tuk tuks, creating an auditory palimpsest of the city’s competing spiritual and commercial frequencies. Everywhere, the theme of Angels and Mara plays out not as a simple binary but as a spectrum of human motivations and desires.
One of the most anticipated new spaces is Dib Bangkok, an international contemporary art museum housed in a refurbished 1980s warehouse in the Khlong Toei district. Inside, polished concrete and exposed beams frame large scale installations and ambitious group shows that signal the city’s determination to claim a central place on the global art map. The smell of new paint and sawdust still lingers in some corners, overlaying the faint tang of the nearby port. A rooftop terrace offers views over a tangle of highways and low rise buildings, the sunset glazing the Chao Phraya River in tangerine as boats slip silently below.

Across town, Bangkok Kunsthalle occupies a former printing house in Pom Prap Sattru Phai, its brutalist geometry a stark backdrop for rotating contemporary exhibitions. The cavernous interior volume embraces experimental sound works, kinetic sculptures, and commissioned installations that respond to Bangkok’s rapid, often chaotic urbanisation. Walking through, you might feel the floor vibrate faintly from a sub bass frequency in one gallery while, in another, a delicate piece composed of rice paper and local herbs sends the subtle fragrance of kaffir lime leaves into the air whenever a visitor passes by.
To explore Bangkok’s art scene in 2026 is to accept disorientation as a given. You move from a gilded Buddha hall to a graffiti lined alley in minutes, from a white cube gallery in Thonglor to a makeshift screening room above a motorcycle repair shop. The Biennale’s Angels and Mara theme doubles as a metaphor for the city itself: a place where generosity and exploitation, spiritual depth and hedonistic excess, stand side by side. For travellers, it is exhilarating. Just be prepared to stay up late. Some of the most interesting conversations with artists and curators happen not in boardrooms or official openings but at 2 a.m. over bowls of boat noodles, the steam rising into neon soaked darkness.
Finally, your journey brings you to the edge of the Indian Ocean, where the island of Zanzibar appears on the horizon like a mirage, its coastline fringed with palms and dhows that tilt their white sails against a turquoise sea. Yet it is in Stone Town, the island’s historic heart and a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site, that art takes on its most architectural form. Here, culture is not confined to galleries. It is carved directly into coral stone and weathered teak.
Wandering Stone Town’s narrow alleys, you find yourself constantly drawn to its famous carved wooden doors. Each one is a text in relief. Swahili doors, with their rectilinear panels and geometric motifs, speak of early coastal traditions, their patterns echoing waves and local flora. Arab influenced doors grow grander, their frames arching high, adorned with flowing vegetal designs and Quranic inscriptions chiselled with reverent precision. Indian Gujarati doors bristle with heavy brass studs that once served a practical purpose in elephant country, now purely symbolic markers of wealth and status. The smell of salt and spices curls around these thresholds: clove, cinnamon, turmeric, mingling with the faint sweetness of aged wood baking in the sun.
As you trace the grooves of a particularly intricate lintel with your fingers, a local guide explains how, historically, you could read a family’s story from its front door. You learn to spot the signs: the number of panels indicating lineage, the motifs hinting at trade connections, the Arabic script a window into religious devotion. Some doors are freshly restored, their carvings crisp and dark against repointed stone. Others sag slightly, their details softened by centuries of monsoon rains and sea winds. Even in decay, they retain a kind of baroque dignity, a testament to communities that have long bridged Africa, Arabia, India, and Europe.
In recent years, a growing number of artists and artisans have begun to respond to this heritage with contemporary work. Small galleries tucked behind courtyards exhibit paintings that reinterpret door motifs in bold colours, or photographic series that document disappearing architectural details before they yield to modern renovations. You might step into a former merchant house now functioning as a cultural centre, where the cool interior air smells faintly of limes and coconut oil, and find a workshop of young carvers learning traditional techniques alongside new design possibilities. Their chisels tap a gentle rhythm into the afternoon hush, each stroke a bridge between past and future.
As the sun begins to set, you climb to a rooftop terrace café and watch Stone Town shift from ochre to rose to deep indigo. Muezzin calls unfurl from nearby mosques, converging into a wavering chorus carried by the breeze. Below, the carved doors you admired all day fade into shadow, but their presence continues to frame your understanding of the city. In Zanzibar, art is not something you visit and then leave behind. It is built into the thresholds you pass through, the stories you hear, the spices you taste. As 2026’s blockbuster exhibitions and gleaming new museums orbit in your memory, it is these tactile, weathered works of vernacular art that may linger longest, reminding you that every great destination begins with a single, exquisitely crafted door.
Our editors` picks of the latest and greatest in travel - delivered to your inbox daily
599 Pantachit Alley, Pom Prap, Pom Prap Sattru Phai, Bangkok 10100
2025 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy, Philadelphia, PA 19130
111 Soi Sukhumvit 40, Phra Khanong, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110
P.º de Recoletos, 23, Centro, 28004 Madrid
75008 Paris
Al Saadiyat Island - Cultural District - Abu Dhabi
520 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19106
〒106-6150 Tokyo, Minato City, Roppongi, 6 Chome−10−1 Roppongi Hills Mori Tower, 53階
Doha
Esplanade Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, 75007 Paris
299 South St, New York, NY 10002
2600 Benjamin Franklin Pkwy, Philadelphia, PA 19130
Zanzibar
Richmond
Bankside, London SE1 9TG
The Connaught, Carlos Pl, London W1K 2AL
27 Poultry, London EC2R 8AJ
P.º del Prado, 8, Centro, 28014 Madrid
8-36 Uenokoen, Taito City, Tokyo 110-0007
Campo de la Tana, 2161, 30122 Venezia VE
99 Gansevoort St, New York, NY 10014
From clandestine protests in the shadows of dictatorship to a riot of color spilling down its hills, Valparaíso has turned its walls into a living manifesto of freedom.
View More
Inside Doha’s bold new experiment in reimagining the global art fair for the Middle East.
View More
From London’s confessional masterpieces to Zanzibar’s story-filled doors, these ten destinations define the global art journey of 2026.
View MoreSubscribe to our newsletter and get the most captivating travel stories, hidden gems, and expert insights delivered straight to your inbox. As a subscriber, you’ll be first in line for exclusive content, premium offers, and unforgettable travel experiences