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Sunday, December 21, 2025 |
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| Speed Art Museum brings Bosch and Bruegel's fantastical print worlds to the U.S. for the first time |
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Pieter van der Heyden (Netherlandish, about 1530about 1572) After Pieter Bruegel the Elder (Netherlandish, about 1526/271569) The Fall of the Magician Hermogenes, 1565 Engraving, 8 13/16 × 11 7/16 in. Collection Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam From the estate of Dr. J.C.J. Bierens de Haan, inv. BdH 7580 (PK)
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LOUISVILLE, KY.- The Speed Art Museum opened a new marquee exhibition, Otherworldly Journeys: The Fantastical Worlds of Bosch and Bruegel, marking the first time that this exceptional exhibition has been displayed in the U.S. Drawn from the internationally renowned collection of the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the exhibition features 85 rare engravings and etchings. The show, which runs October 17, 2025 through February 1, 2026, offers a fascinating voyage into the most bizarre corners of art history, exploring the visionary and satirical works inspired by Renaissance masters Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Organized by Peter van der Coelen, Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, and locally curated by the Speeds Curator of Works on Paper Kim Spence, Otherworldly Journeys spotlights 16th-century Netherlandish prints that broke from artistic convention through their focus on everyday people and the absurdities of human behavior Through the media of engraving and etching, these inventive designs reached a wider, urban audience of merchants, scholars, and artists across The Netherlands and beyond. In creating visual art that was satirical, moralizing, and widely accessible, Bosch and Bruegel provided the first modern lens through which the public could view themselves and their world.
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is one of the few museums in the world where the work of Bosch and Bruegeland the Surrealists they later inspiredare so strongly represented. Otherworldly Journeys is the first exhibition devoted entirely to the prints inspired by Bosch and created by Bruegel and his contemporaries, said van der Coelen. These works reveal the imagination and innovation that defined Netherlandish art in the 15th and 16th centuries. Bosch and Bruegel invented new imagery and shared ideas that traveled far beyond their studios, inviting us to see the world in new ways.
Though created 500 years ago, the themes in Otherworldly Journeys feel strikingly contemporary. These intimate prints invite guests to come close and explore every detail. Many images conceal tiny, humorous and even disturbing scenes that turn viewing into a visual treasure hunt through the artists imaginations. Teeming with peasants and demons, folly and faith, they transform everyday life, dreams, and nightmares into reflections on what it means to be human. In an age defined by memes and digital sharing, Otherworldly Journeys reminds us that the urge to tell stories through imagesand to see ourselves reflected in themis timeless.
This exhibition is a celebration of two of the most creative artistic geniuses of the 16th century and a generation of printmakers they inspired, said Spence. Hieronymus Bosch completely reimagined familiar subjects, populating them with fantastic creatures never seen before. His vision was so unique that demand for Boschian art continued decades after his death. Pieter Bruegel, too, was equally innovative. He developed new genressuch as mountainous landscapes, seascapes, and depictions of everyday lifethat laid the groundwork for artists of the Golden Age of Dutch art and later.
A fully illustrated catalog written by Peter van der Coelen and published by The Speed Art Museum accompanies the exhibition. The exhibition is supported by Dutch Culture USA, a program of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the United States. Leading sponsors include Mary Helen and John David Myles. Additional support for this exhibition and the 2026 exhibition season is provided by Cary Brown and Steven E. Epstein, Todd P. Lowe and Fran C. Ratterman, Debra and Ronald Murphy, Dr. Victoria Phillips and Travis Anderson, and the Sociable Weaver Foundation, among others.
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