With such a fantastic array of museums and galleries in Sheffield (many of which are free to visit) you'll never be short of interesting exhibitions to explore in the city.
While there are some fascinating permanent exhibitions in the city, which are available to peruse all-year round, here you'll find listings for temporary exhibitions in Sheffield which are only available for a limited amount of time- catch them before they're gone!
New exhibition 'Scratching the surface – Breaking through' by Corinna Button is coming with an opening event on Friday 4th October.
Dead Cat Bounce is an exhibition about an experimental opera by Gary Zhexi Zhang and Waste Paper Opera that imagines parallel realities of environmental and financial catastrophes across time and space.
A free exhibition showcasing commissioned art created in response to racist media reporting and border abolition.
This new exhibition from Hayward Gallery Touring comes to the Millennium Gallery in Sheffield and plunges into the joys and heartaches, mess, myths and mishaps of motherhood through over 100 artworks, from the feminist avant-garde to the present day.
Crafted is Millennium Gallery’s new annual selling showcase celebrating excellence in making across the region and beyond.
Sheffield Photographic Society's 20th annual Perspectives Exhibition will take place in the Sheffield Winter Garden commencing Friday 1st November at 12 noon, running daily through to Sunday, 10th November 2024.
In collaboration with Dig Where You Stand, this latest exhibition, Fractured, explores the overlooked Black lives that have passed through, moulded and formed part of the cracks of Wentworth Woodhouse in centuries gone by.
Sheffield Print Fair returns for their 11th year and will once again celebrate of all things print on Saturday 9 November at the Millennium Gallery, with 45 artists, galleries and print people taking part.
Discover how artists have experimented with colour and form, with displays including work by Joseph Cutts, Naum Gabo, Tess Jaray and Bridget Riley.
The human figure has been a subject for artists since the earliest cave paintings. This new display, drawn from Sheffield’s collections, explores artists’ enduring fascination with depicting people.