(Click here to see past & recently closed exhibits that we have hosted around the world)
2014 - 2015- 2016
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International Exhibits 2020
Visual artists accepted as IN3 Site Members may apply to participate in any of the following exhibits. Those selected are responsible for shipping their original work to IN3's hub. IN3 transports the works to the exhibits, hangs them, and presents the work of any participating artists who are unable to attend the opening reception in person. Artist attendance of the opening receptions is encouraged, but not mandatory.
IN3 is a well respected and accessible global organization to aid visual artists' international career development goals. Exhibit in galleries, museums and prominent Historic sites in the Best Cities around the World to Market Your Art. Start Now!
October 2020: Venice, Italy
The exhibition will take place in the most perfect setting for Art Music and History. Scuola Grande di San Teodoro in Rialto, the most prestigious Concert Hall, the seat of the oldest Venetian confraternity built around the 8th century as a sign of devotion to the first patron saint of the city of Venice.
Venice, the capital of northern Italy’s Veneto region, is built on more than 100 small islands in a lagoon in the Adriatic Sea. It has no roads, just canals lined with Renaissance and Gothic palaces. No city is quite as instantly recognizable as Venice, with its mix of Italian Renaissance art and Byzantine-influenced architecture, another legacy of its past ties, in both commerce and war, with the East. Music also plays an important part in the character of Venice and the Venetians.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
August 2020: Rome, Italy
IL LABORATORIO Gallery. The culture and traditions in Rome reflect its historic past and celebrate the modern world. Rome culture is an eclectic mix of high culture, the arts, fashion and historic architecture. Art created by the masters during the Renaissance and Baroque periods coexists with modern-day pieces in art museums and galleries throughout the city.
The Vatican, the Colosseum, the Palatine and Forum Museum, the Galleria Borghese, the Palazzo Altemps, the Piazza di Spagna and the Domus Aurea are the stepping stones of today’s Roman culture.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
February 2020: Paris, France
Galerie ARTES Paris is the most desirable city for artists to exhibit their art. The Culture concerns the arts, music, museums, festivals and other entertainment in Paris, the capital city of France. The city is today one of the world's leading business and cultural centers; entertainment, music, media, fashion, and the arts all contribute to its status as one of the world's major global cities. Paris is also home to notable cultural attractions such as the Louvre, Musée Picasso, Musée Rodin, Musée du Montparnasse, Musée National d'Art Moderne. Art and artifacts from the Middle Ages can be seen in Musée Cluny while Musée d'Orsay is notable for housing Impressionist era masterpieces.
. Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
March 2020:Buenos Aires, Argentina
SOHO Point Central Gallery. Buenos Aires is the capital and largest city of Argentina. The city is located on the western shore of the estuary of the Río de la Plata. Buenos Aires is Argentina’s big, cosmopolitan capital city. Its center is the Plaza de Mayo, lined with stately 19th-century buildings including Casa Rosada, the iconic, balconied presidential palace. Other major attractions include Teatro Colón, a grand 1908 opera house with nearly 2,500 seats, and the modern MALBA museum, displaying Latin American art.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
March 2020: Barcelona, Spain
Espacio Creativo NAUART, Barcelona. The cosmopolitan capital of Spain’s Catalonia region, is defined by quirky art and architecture, imaginative food and vibrant street life. It has medieval roots, seen in the mazelike Gothic Quarter, but a modernist personality represented by architect Antoni Gaudí’s fantastical Sagrada Família church. Barcelona is an enchanting seaside city with boundless culture, fabled architecture, and a world-class drinking and dining scene. The centerpiece of Barcelona is Barri Gòtic, the city’s historic district laden with architectural treasures and atmospheric narrow lanes.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
April 2020: Guadalajara, Mexico
Museo del Tequila. Guadalajara is the second largest city in the country and it is ranked as the eighth best city to visit in Mexico and South America. Known as the land of tequila. Guadalajara is a city in western Mexico. It’s known for tequila and mariachi music, both born in Jalisco, the state of which Guadalajara is the capital. Guadalajara’s historic center is dotted with colonial plazas and landmarks such as the neoclassical Teatro Degollado and a cathedral with twin gold spires. The Palacio del Gobierno houses famous murals by painter José Clemente Orozco.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
April 2020: Oporto, Portugal
Galeria Geraldes Da SIlva. Porto, a creative and bohemian city. The city has undergone transformations in recent years and today is different from what it was fifty years ago. It is more cosmopolitan and lively Porto is a coastal city in northwest Portugal known for its stately bridges and port wine production. In the medieval Ribeira (riverside) district, narrow cobbled streets wind past merchants’ houses and cafes. São Francisco Church is known for its lavish baroque interior with ornate gilded carvings. The palatial 19th-century Palácio de Bolsa, formerly a stock market, was built to impress potential European investors.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
MAY 2020: New York City
Rio Penthouse Gallery. The City that never sleeps. New York has long linked its rising power and economic success to investments in arts and culture. The two continue to feed off each other: the city is a giant commercial marketplace for art and creative industries, from art auctions to fashion, design. New York’s cultural life has been seen as a symbol of the city’s wider vitality. From Carnegie Hall to MoMA, public-private partnerships linking civic ambition and wealthy philanthropists have endowed the city with world-class non-profit cultural institutions. Allied to this, New York’s hugely dynamic cultural scene finds expression in everything from Broadway theatre to hip hop.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
June 2020: Sofia, Bulgaria
Bulgaria functioned as the hub of Slavic Europe during much of the Middle Ages, exerting considerable literary and cultural influence over the Eastern Orthodox Slavic world by means of the Preslav and Ohrid Literary Schools. Bulgaria also gave the world the Cyrillic script, the second most widely used alphabet. Bulgaria has nine UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Also. a rich heritage in the visual arts, especially in frescoes, murals and icons. Bulgaria experienced a revival in every area of culture following the Liberation from the Islamic Ottoman Empire in 1878, the fine arts rapidly recovered and came under the influence of European artistic currents such as late Romanticism.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
June 2020: Alexandria, Romania
The culture of Romania is the product of its geography and its distinct historical evolution. Alexandria was the intellectual and cultural center of the ancient world for some time. The city and its museum attracted many of the greatest scholars, including Jews, Syrians and Greeks. Alexandria was not only a center of Hellenism, but was also home to the largest urban Jewish community in the world. The Septuagint, a Greek version of the Tanakh, was produced there. The Royal Library of Alexandria, in Alexandria, Egypt, was once the largest library in the world. It is generally thought to have been founded at the beginning of the 3rd century BC, during the reign of Ptolemy II of Egypt.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
July 2020 Stockholm, Sweden
Belmann Gallery. Stockholm is the capital and largest city of Sweden, with nearly 2 million inhabitants within its vicinities. The inner city is made up of 14 islands connected by some 50 bridges on Lake Mälaren, which flows into the brackish Baltic Sea, and passes the Stockholm archipelago with some 24,000 islands and islets. Stockholm is a cosmopolitan place with both classical and modern architecture, and a captivating Old Town, Gamla Stan. Over 30% of the city area is made up of waterways, and another 30% is made up of green spaces. Air quality is third best of the European capitals.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
TBD: Moscow, Russia
The People's House gallery - Moscow is a very small city with only 5 hectares in area. It is still the capital of the largest state on the planet today. In 2010, the population of Moscow was estimated to be around 11 million. During the day, more than 18 million people take over the city. Moscow accounts for almost a third of Russian activity, which has greatly increased living standards.
Some say Moscow succeeded New York for the largest number of billionaires in the world. The purchasing power of Muscovites is higher than that of its European neighbors.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
TBD: New York, USA
Rio Penthouse Gallery. The City that never sleeps. New York has long linked its rising power and economic success to investments in arts and culture. The two continue to feed off each other: the city is a giant commercial marketplace for art and creative industries, from art auctions to fashion, design. New York’s cultural life has been seen as a symbol of the city’s wider vitality. From Carnegie Hall to MoMA, public-private partnerships linking civic ambition and wealthy philanthropists have endowed the city with world-class non-profit cultural institutions. Allied to this, New York’s hugely dynamic cultural scene finds expression in everything from Broadway theatre to hip hop.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.
TBD: Dallas, Texas USA
When the Dallas area was being settled by American pioneers, many of the settlers traveled by wagon trains along the Shawnee Trail. A line of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway was being built through the area, and periodic watering stops were needed along the route for the steam locomotives. A community grew around this train stop. The town's residents chose "Frisco City" in honor of the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway. This name was later shortened to Frisco. In 1978, the first season of the hit show Dallas was filmed at Frisco's Cloyce Box Ranch, where the house on site was used as the Ewing family home. Frisco’s arts and culture scene is anything but ordinary. Between live theater and musical performances, to local painters, photographers and one of the largest collections of outdoor public art in the state of Texas.
Site Membership is FREE. Get yours HERE.