Watch the exhibition teaser for Bruegel's "The Wedding Dance" Revealed

Updated Jul 20, 2022

Artist Features

The Conservation Department of the Detroit Institute of Arts, in collaboration with the European Art Department, organized a focus exhibition to celebrate one of the museum’s most iconic paintings, Pieter Bruegel’s The Wedding Dance (1566), on the occasion of the 450th anniversary of the artist’s death.

The painting was considered a sensational discovery when it was acquired by the museum in 1930. It was a source of inspiration for Diego Rivera when he was in Detroit executing his Detroit Industry murals and today is one of the two major Bruegel paintings in an American collection. In 2013, the painting also played a prominent role in saving the museum’s collections during the city of Detroit’s rise from bankruptcy. 

Using the lens of art conservation, the exhibition will trace the life of the painting from its creation to the present, emphasizing its status as a material object, from its very free underdrawing and its thin paint application to the conservation treatments and restorations to which it has been subjected over time. The focus on the painting’s materials will demonstrate to the visitor that artworks are not static, but instead subject to natural aging, human intervention, as well as changing shifts in attitude and taste.

Bruegel's “The Wedding Dance” Revealed is on view through August 30, 2020. Free with general admission, which is free for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

Wedding Dance revealed

Still from Bruegel's "The Wedding Dance" Revealed Exhibition Trailer

The Conservation Department of the Detroit Institute of Arts, in collaboration with the European Art Department, organized a focus exhibition to celebrate one of the museum’s most iconic paintings, Pieter Bruegel’s The Wedding Dance (1566), on the occasion of the 450th anniversary of the artist’s death.

The painting was considered a sensational discovery when it was acquired by the museum in 1930. It was a source of inspiration for Diego Rivera when he was in Detroit executing his Detroit Industry murals and today is one of the two major Bruegel paintings in an American collection. In 2013, the painting also played a prominent role in saving the museum’s collections during the city of Detroit’s rise from bankruptcy. 

Using the lens of art conservation, the exhibition will trace the life of the painting from its creation to the present, emphasizing its status as a material object, from its very free underdrawing and its thin paint application to the conservation treatments and restorations to which it has been subjected over time. The focus on the painting’s materials will demonstrate to the visitor that artworks are not static, but instead subject to natural aging, human intervention, as well as changing shifts in attitude and taste.

Bruegel's “The Wedding Dance” Revealed is on view through August 30, 2020. Free with general admission, which is free for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.