Spring at the MFAH
spring is here
Gallery Highlights
Explore the exhibitions—including Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature—and all the installations and art collections, to see works from all around the world. Revisit old favorites, and find new ones!
Exhibitions | 2021
• Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature
• Electrifying Design: A Century of Lighting
• Between Sea and Sky: Blue and White Ceramics from Persia and Beyond
• Carmen Herrera: Structuring Surfaces
• Connecting Currents: Contemporary Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
• Eye on Houston: High School Documentary Photography
• Fire/Works: Enamel Art through the Centuries
Spring Picks at the MFA Shop

David Hockney. My Window
Van Gogh | Almond Blossom Scarf
Porcelain Tulip
Hockney – Van Gogh: The Joy of Nature
Ikebana Unbound: A Modern Approach to the Ancient Japanese Art of Flower Arranging
Dandelight
Van Gogh | Roses Pillow
Visit the new MFA Shop online store to see all the new arrivals & more!
For additional information, and to order by phone, call 713.639.7360.
MFAH Films | Virtual Cinema
Take in a movie from home!
Virtual Cinema features the latest selections curated by MFAH Films.
Perpetual Bloom

Chelsea Porcelain Works, Plate, c. 1755, porcelain, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, Museum purchase funded by Mr. and Mrs. Harris Masterson III.
Henry Fletcher, after Pieter Casteels III, January, from the series The Twelve Months of Flowers, 1730, engraving with etching and hand coloring on laid paper, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Bayou Bend Collection, gift of Miss Ima Hogg.
Worcester Porcelain Manufactory, Gardener and Companion, 1770, soft-paste porcelain, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Rienzi Collection, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Masterson III.
Perpetual Bloom: Botanicals in the 18th-Century Interior
As European nations explored distant lands in the 1700s, botanicals flowed into the continent from all over the world. This exhibition at Rienzi, the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts, looks at the ways in which botanicals were displayed and re-created in domestic interiors during the 18th century.