
Β© Royal Academy
27 March 2026 β 21 June 2026
On NowWautier was hugely celebrated in 17th-century Brussels, then nearly erased from art history. Her rediscovery β led by The Triumph of Bacchus, in which she painted herself as a pagan bacchante at monumental scale β has been called the greatest artistic find of the century by Artnet.
From Royal Academy
Active in Brussels in the middle of the 17th century, Michaelina Wautier challenged the limits imposed on female artists at the time by working on an unusually varied range of subjects: from flowers and portraits to grand history paintings β a format usually reserved for her male counterparts. In her most famous painting, The Triumph of Bacchus, she painted herself as a pagan bacchante in monumental scale, looking squarely at the viewer and confidently asserting her position as the maker....
Read more at Royal Academy βThe Guardian
Olivia McEwan
An astounding lost artist steps out of her male contemporaries' shadows
"This will probably be the first encounter with Michaelina Wautier's work for UK audiences; grouping all her known works together, having been previously practically nonexistent in the collective imagination, has the uncanny effect of conjuring an entirely new person. An astonishing one of exceptional, fully formed ability."
Read full review βThe Telegraph
Alastair Sooke
Baroque art's brilliant blonde steps out of the shadows
"Since our knowledge of Wautier remains sketchy, this is an exhibition of questions as much as answers. For most gallery-goers, though, that won't matter, because β even incomplete β her story and her art are sufficiently compelling."
Read full review βMayfair, LondonΒ·View on artmap
Sunday10amβ6pm
MondayClosed
Tuesday10amβ6pm
Wednesday10amβ6pm
Thursday10amβ6pm
Friday Β·10amβ9pm
Saturday10amβ6pm

Β© Royal Academy
27 March 2026 β 21 June 2026
On NowWautier was hugely celebrated in 17th-century Brussels, then nearly erased from art history. Her rediscovery β led by The Triumph of Bacchus, in which she painted herself as a pagan bacchante at monumental scale β has been called the greatest artistic find of the century by Artnet.
From Royal Academy
Active in Brussels in the middle of the 17th century, Michaelina Wautier challenged the limits imposed on female artists at the time by working on an unusually varied range of subjects: from flowers and portraits to grand history paintings β a format usually reserved for her male counterparts. In her most famous painting, The Triumph of Bacchus, she painted herself as a pagan bacchante in monumental scale, looking squarely at the viewer and confidently asserting her position as the maker....
Read more at Royal Academy βThe Guardian
Olivia McEwan
An astounding lost artist steps out of her male contemporaries' shadows
"This will probably be the first encounter with Michaelina Wautier's work for UK audiences; grouping all her known works together, having been previously practically nonexistent in the collective imagination, has the uncanny effect of conjuring an entirely new person. An astonishing one of exceptional, fully formed ability."
Read full review βThe Telegraph
Alastair Sooke
Baroque art's brilliant blonde steps out of the shadows
"Since our knowledge of Wautier remains sketchy, this is an exhibition of questions as much as answers. For most gallery-goers, though, that won't matter, because β even incomplete β her story and her art are sufficiently compelling."
Read full review βMayfair, LondonΒ·View on artmap
Sunday10amβ6pm
MondayClosed
Tuesday10amβ6pm
Wednesday10amβ6pm
Thursday10amβ6pm
Friday Β·10amβ9pm
Saturday10amβ6pm