Exhibition catalogue, exposition about the history of Samoreau, Samoreau 1987
Exhibition game | National Exhibition Centre | The Great Exhibition | Pictures at an Exhibition | exhibition game | Exhibition Stadium | Earls Court Exhibition Centre | Köchel catalogue | Exhibition Place | Canadian National Exhibition | British Empire Exhibition | All-Russia Exhibition Centre | Third Cambridge Catalogue of Radio Sources | Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre | Pictures at an Exhibition (album) | Exhibition railway line | 1862 International Exhibition | Traffic (art exhibition) | The Atrocity Exhibition... Exhibit A | Royal Exhibition Building | Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 | New General Catalogue | Istanbul Lütfi Kırdar Convention and Exhibition Center | Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre | American National Exhibition | A Catalogue of Crime | The Volpini Exhibition, 1889 | the Great Exhibition | Simultaneous exhibition | ''Schaffendes Volk'' exhibition |
In his critical exhibition catalogue of Early Flemish Masters in Bruges in 1902, the Ghent great connoisseur of early Flemish Art and art historian Georges Hulin de Loo, came to the conclusion that Isenbrandt was actually the anonymous Master of the Seven Sorrows of the Virgin and the author of a large body of paintings previously attributed to Gerard David and Jan Mostaert by the German art historian Gustav Friedrich Waagen.
Close to You: Contemporary Textiles, Intimacy, and Popular Culture (exhibition catalogue), Dalhousie Art Gallery, Textile Museum of Canada, 2007 (ISBN 978-0-7703-2755-2).
In 2002, the Lowe Art Museum in Coral Gables, Miami held an exhibition of Pastiglia Boxes: Hidden Treasures of the Italian Renaissance from the collection of the Galleria Nazionale d'arte antica in Rome, and an 80 page exhibition catalogue was published in English and Italian.
As of July 2012, all 20 works are displayed together on the ground floor of the Veletržní Palace, in an exhibition organized by the National Gallery in Prague (exhibition catalogue: Alfons Mucha - Slovanská epopej).