Passion, desire, lust, jealousy, cunning and deceit. The Rijksmuseum takes you on a journey into one of the greatest and most important sources of inspiration for artists: The metamorphoses by the poet Ovid.

This classic from antiquity has been read and reinterpreted by artists for centuries. In the major spring exhibition Metamorphoses, you dive into Ovid’s two-thousand-year-old poem about vengeful gods, ingenious heroes and high-minded mortals.

More than 80 masterpieces

Metamorphoses brings together over 80 masterpieces from museums and collections around the world. From Bernini, Titian, Correggio, and Caravaggio to Rodin, Brancusi, Magritte, and Bourgeois. The exhibition features paintings, sculptures, goldsmith’s work, and ceramics, alongside contemporary photography and video art. It is a special collaboration with the Galleria Borghese in Rome.

Metamorphoses is one of the most ambitious exhibitions mounted anywhere in Europe this year.

(Leo Cendrowicz, Brussels times)

Historic and contemporary

Historic masterpieces and contemporary works come together in this exhibition. Alongside iconic works such as Bernini's Sleeping hermaphroditus and Caravaggio's Narcissus, you will also encounter modern interpretations of Ovid’s stories. These include the boundary-pushing work of Ulay and a video installation by Juul Kraijer, inspired by the myth of Medusa.

Bible for artists

'All things change, but nothing dies.' This idea lies at the heart of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, written around 8 AD. Humans, animals, and gods constantly change shape: from Arachne, the weaver turned into a spider, to Jupiter, who disguises himself as a bull, a swan or a shower of gold to deceive his jealous wife and his lovers. In 1604, the Dutch painter and writer Karel van Mander famously called the Metamorphoses a 'Bible for artists'. The richness and variety of works inspired by Ovid shows just how true that still is today.

Take note – this is how to stage an A-list exhibition.

(Cal Revely-Calder, The daily telegraph)