
The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza presents the first retrospective in Spain devoted to the Danish artist Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864-1916), which will offer a wide-ranging and comprehensive survey of his oeuvre through around a hundred works. More than a hundred years after the death of the artist, who enjoyed considerable success during his lifetime for his cold, silent interiors, modern-day viewers still find his works appealing and unsettling. The ambiguity of his paintings makes them open to many interpretations, which have been enriched in recent decades by attempts both to establish connections with other European artists and to contextualise him with his Danish contemporaries. Viewing Hammershøi’s works in the framework of the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza will also make it possible to relate them to past masters such as seventeenth-century Dutch painters and great nineteenth- and twentieth-century artists, for instance Edward Hopper.
The exhibition will bring his work closer to the current generation of creators and historians, as well as to the general public in Spain, who has rarely had the chance to view it until now. The subtitle of the exhibition, ‘the eye that listens’, is a reference to the metaphorical relationship between Hammershøi’s paintings, the silence and apparent calm they convey, and the artist’s interest in music. The exhibition addresses this and other themes that permeate his work, such as his wife Ida Ilsted’s role in his creative process, the progressive refinement of his domestic interiors and their parallels with the handling of architecture and landscapes, and his depiction of himself as a painter during the last years of his life.
The exhibition will be presented at the Kunsthaus Zürich (Switzerland) from 3 July to 25 October 2026.
Monday closed
From Tuesday to Friday and Sunday: 10.00 - 19.00
Saturday: 10.00 - 23.00 (free access from 21.00 to 23.00).