NEW HAVEN, CONN.- This spring, the Yale Center for British Art invites visitors to explore the complex and evolving narratives of British art across centuries, with three compelling special exhibitions. Drawing from the museums renowned holdings, these exhibitions illuminate creative collaborations, global exchanges, and the emergence of distinctive forms of modernism across continents from the eighteenth century to the present.
Our spring exhibitions demonstrate the museums commitment to presenting a dynamic story of British art, said Martina Droth, Paul Mellon Director, YCBA. They illuminate the complex interplay of culture and power, while inviting audiences to explore cross-cultural connections and artistic innovation across the centuries.
Painters, Ports, and Profits: Artists and the East India Company, 17501850
January 8 June 21, 2026
This exhibition examines the extraordinary artistic exchanges between Indian, British, and Chinese artists whose work and lives were shaped by the growing power of the British East India Company. Between 1750 and 1850, the Company transformed itself from an expansive international business into a major military and political power that sought to control and profit from territories across Asia. Art was central to the Companys world: it was traded for profit, offered as diplomatic gifts, and collected by its agents and officers. As the Companys wealth increased, so did the networks of artists trained in academies, princely courts, schools, studios, and workshops. These artists experimented with styles, materials, and techniques from their diverse traditions to create a singular visual language that connected art to the expanding global economy. The exhibition features architectural drawings, watercolors, hand-colored aquatints, small- and large-scale portraits, and a spectacular thirty-seven-foot-long scroll depicting the city of Lucknow, India. Most works are drawn from the YCBAs extensive collection, and many will be displayed for the first time. A comprehensive publication accompanies the exhibition and provides insights from an international array of scholars, curators, and conservators.
Rina Banerjee: Take me, take me, take me . . . to the Palace of love
February 7 July 26, 2026
On display for the first time at the YCBA since it was acquired in 2023, Take me, take me, take me . . . to the Palace of love by Rina Banerjee (b. 1963, Yale MFA 1995) references the iconic form of the Taj Mahal in India, both a grand funeral monument and a symbol of enduring love. Banerjees translucent sculpture (2003) inverts the monuments most cherished features: its costly materials and elegant marble façades, its sense of history and permanence, and its fixed location. In contrast, Banerjees palace consists of a light frame of steel and copper wrapped in a skin of pink cellophanea mass-produced material designed for the disposable consumer culture of the twenty-first century. Suspended from the ceiling, the tentlike structure will float in the museums Entrance Court, visible from the street and welcoming visitors upon arrival. In the center of the work are relics of colonialism, including an antique Anglo-Indian Bombay chair, together with a chandelier assembled from a variety of expendable goodspink foam balls, plastic beads, synthetic materials, and fake birds. Modeled on a toy souvenir of the Taj Mahal, the sculpture invites visitors to reflect on histories of global movements of goods, people, and culture, and how connections can be forged through art.
Going Modern: British Art, 19001960
February 12 August 9, 2026
Twentieth-century Britain saw the emergence of some of the most innovative and influential artists of modern times, including Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, and Francis Bacon. Their work continues to resonate and inspire today, yet going modern and being British, as artist Paul Nash observed, was never straightforward. This exhibition focuses on the six decades from 1900 to 1960, a time of astonishing change in politics, culture, and daily life. Comprising more than seventy paintings and sculptures from the museums collection, it shows artists in Britain responding to the question of what it meant to be modern. The exhibition ranges across the urban impressionism of Walter Sickert and the Camden Town Group; the paintings of Roger Fry and the Bloomsbury Group, as experimental in art as in life; the abstraction of Ben Nicholson; the groundbreaking sculpture of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth; and the School of Londons bleak yet humane vision. By bringing a strongly contemporary ethos to enduring concerns with natural forms and the human figure, these artists created compelling and highly distinctive modernisms of their own.