In the exhibition “Cindy Sherman,” at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, “Untitled #474.”
“Cindy Sherman”

Cindy Sherman
Cindy Sherman, "Untitled #458"
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Through Oct. 8
Perhaps no American artist to have emerged since 1970 has had the impact Sherman has. Her photographic self-portraits, in which she is never herself but always in the guise of some character or stereotype, have been highly influential as meditations on identity. This large retrospective, which was at New York’s Museum of Modern Art earlier this year, comprises more than 170 photographs — and just as many personalities. 151 Third St., 415-357-4000, www.sfmo
ma.org

Cindy Sherman
Cindy Sherman, "Untitled #92"
“Art and Wine”
Kunsthistorisches Museum
Vienna
Through Sept. 2
Drawing on its permanent collection, one of the world’s great museums presents more than 100 artworks relating to one of the world’s great beverages. Maria There-
sien-Platz, 011-43-1-525-240, w.khm.at/
en/
“The Early Durer: The Roots of His Art”
Germanisches National Museum
Nuremberg
Through Sept. 2
More than 200 artworks, primarily prints and drawings, pay tribute to the leading master of the northern Renaissance. Katäusergasse 1, 011-49-911-133
10, www.gnm.de/
“Youth and Beauty:
Art of the American Twenties”
Cleveland Museum of Art
Through Sept. 16
Some 130 works, by the likes of Georgia O’Keeffe, Isamu Noguchi, Edward Hopper, and Walker Evans, show the evolution of American art during the Jazz Age. 11150 East Blvd., 216-421-7340,
www.clevelandart.org
“Gerhard Richter:
Drawings and Other Works on Paper”
Louvre
Paris
Through Sept. 17
One hundred works on paper have been assembled from throughout the career of the man who may be the most admired living artist. Rue du Louvre, 011-
33-1-40-20-53-17, www.louvre.fr
“Gustav Klimt: The Magic of Line”
Getty Museum
Los Angeles
Through Sept. 23
This exhibition, organized in honor of the 150th anniversary of the artist’s birth, is the first retrospective devoted exclusively to his drawing. 1200 Getty Center Drive,
310-440-7300, www.getty.edu/museum
“The Art of Video Games”
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Washington
Through Sept. 30
Game on, aesthetically speaking. The title of the exhibition, one of the first of its kind, is self-explanatory. 8th and F streets, NW, 202-633-7970, americanart.si.edu/
“Edvard Munch: The Modern Eye”
Tate Modern
London
Through Oct. 14
This exhibition on the Expressionist master concentrates on his 20th-century work and includes little-seen examples of his forays into film and photography. Bankside, 011-44-20-7887-8888, www
.tate.org.uk/modern
“Impressionism:
Sensation & Inspiration”
Hermitage Amsterdam
Through Jan. 13
A large sampling of the Impressionist collection at the Hermitage in St. Petersburg comes to the Hermitage in the Netherlands. Amstel 51, 011-31-20-530-74-88, www.hermitage.nl/en2301
“Beyond Geronimo:
The Apache Experience”
Heard Museum
Phoenix
Through Jan. 30
The celebrity of the Apaches’ most famous chief long ago led to misunderstandings about his tribe, which this exhibition explores. 2301 North Central Ave., 602-
252-8840, www.heard.org
globe.com.
