
Crystal Bridges Opens a Major Expansion as America Turns 250
Crystal Bridges is adding 114,000 square feet, new galleries and a learning hub, betting that growth can still look civic instead of merely spectacular

French Artists Denounce Pompidou-Hanwha Pact
Over 100 French artists call for the termination of the Centre Pompidou's partnership with South Korean conglomerate Hanwha Group over arms industry ties.

Guide: Curating Global South Perspectives
A strategic guide for curators on decentering Western canons, managing ethical partnerships, and amplifying marginalized voices in contemporary art.

How to Read the Artist Management Boom in 2026
Artist agencies are multiplying as galleries strain under cost and artists seek career strategy, but the real shift is structural rather than merely fashionable

JR's Pont Neuf Installation Is Delayed After Wind Damage
A storm-forced delay to JR's Paris bridge spectacle reveals how exposed large public artworks become when engineering, branding and civic myth meet outdoors

MoMA Names Makeda Best to Lead Photography in 2026
MoMA's appointment of Makeda Best puts a scholar of labor, race and visual culture in charge of one of photography's most influential museum departments

US Federal Earnings Test Threatens Arts Ed
A new Department of Education accountability system judging programs by graduate earnings could strip federal aid from music, visual arts, and film programs.

Venice 2026: Decentering the West
Art world leaders reflect on Koyo Kouoh's curation of the 61st Biennale, emphasizing the shift toward the Global South and the resonance of political protest.

Art Basel's War on the Digital Preview
Art Basel's new 'Basel Exclusive' initiative forces galleries to withhold standout works from digital previews to restore discovery.

The Architecture of Presence: A Reading Guide to Marina Abramović
Curator Shai Baitel selects five essential books to understand the life and career of the legendary performance artist Marina Abramović.

The Blue-Chip Divide: A New Market Hierarchy
An analysis of the widening gap between record-breaking blue-chip auction markets and the struggling primary market for emerging artists.

The Death of Jerry Gogosian: Satire and Status
Hilde Lynn Helphenstein, the satirist behind Jerry Gogosian, dies at 40, leaving a legacy of dismantling the blue-chip art market's opacity.

The Earnings Test: A Death Knell for American Arts Education?
Proposed U.S. Department of Education guidelines would judge higher-ed programs by graduate earnings, potentially decimating arts programs.

The Eternal Return of the Banana: Cattelan's Comedian
Maurizio Cattelan's infamous duct-taped banana is stolen from the Centre Pompidou-Metz, continuing its history of disruptive behavior.

Benton End Returns as a Living Art School Site
The Garden Museum's Benton End exhibition treats the Suffolk house as a live case study in art education, horticulture and artist-house revival.

Blue-Chip Sales Return as Riskier Art Stalls
New York's May auctions revived demand for top-tier modern trophies, but buyers still look wary of younger artists and inflated primary-market prices.

How to Read Museum Acquisition Round-Ups Without Falling for Prestige Fog
Acquisition round-ups can look like harmless good news, but they reveal how museums rewrite canon, spend money and signal future priorities if you know where to look

Yemen's Heritage Workers Fight War, Looting and Silence
Yemeni heritage professionals are trying to protect museums, shrines and historic cities from war, looting and climate damage with almost no support.

Getty's Renovation Plans Turn Arrival Logistics Into a Cultural Strategy
Getty has revealed the first concrete details of its $600m-$800m campus modernization, making clear that circulation, comfort, and retail are now central to how major museums define public access.

How to Read Authentication and Rediscovery Claims in 2026
When a museum or market player says a painting is newly authenticated, rediscovered, or resurfaced, read the evidence, institution, and timeline before you believe the romance.

How to Read Museum Retail Strategy in 2026
When museums start treating gift shops as destinations, read the floor plan, licensing choices, product language, and labor model before you call it harmless merch.

John M Armleder at MAH Geneva Turns the Museum Into a Self-Portrait
John M Armleder’s Observatoires at MAH Geneva matters because it treats the encyclopedic museum not as a neutral container but as a stage where local identity, collection history, and display power collide.

Julio Le Parc's Death Closes a Career That Refused Passive Looking
Julio Le Parc, who has died at 97, spent decades turning movement, instability, and viewer participation into a political and perceptual argument against static authority.

What Whistler’s Newly Authenticated Early Portrait Really Changes
Research at Tate and the Hunterian has authenticated Whistler’s earliest known portrait, making the bigger story one of conservation, chronology, and how museums rewrite artists without market hype.