
Don McCullin Returns to Vietnam for Final Book
Don McCullin will devote his final book to Vietnam, turning a lifetime of war photography into a last argument about memory, witness, and the limits of images

Frank Bowling Foundation to Launch in London
The Frank Bowling Foundation will launch with art, archives, bursaries, and London partners, making legacy control a public institutional question

How to Read Artist Foundations in 2026
Use the Frank Bowling launch to judge how artist foundations shape archives, access, canon formation, and institutional power

Leonardo Drew Joins Hauser & Wirth in 2026
Leonardo Drew joins Hauser & Wirth, signaling how mega-galleries are betting on artists with museum scale, formal rigor, and durable market authority

Christie’s London Sale Reprices South Asian Art
A £18.9 million white-glove sale led by Ganesh Pyne, Abanindranath Tagore, and K.K. Hebbar points to a deeper global repricing of the category.

David Hockney Changed How Painting Learns to See
A new Hockney reassessment shows how perspective, collage, landscape, and digital tools became one lifelong campaign against static vision

David Hockney's Queer Vision Still Looks Radical
A fresh reassessment of David Hockney's queer imagery shows how intimacy, coded wit, and domestic pleasure changed what gay life could look like in major art

Duane Michals Dies at 94, After Remaking Photography
Michals used sequences, handwritten text, and staged fictions to break photographic literalism and permanently widen what the medium could do.

How to Read Artist Legacy News
Use this guide to read obituaries, memorials, and legacy stories with sharper attention to institutions, markets, archives, and public afterlife.

How to Read Late-Career Artist Surveys
Use the Hockney and Kapoor season to judge what a late-career survey is really doing: canon formation, market staging, institutional risk, and legacy control

Kohei Nawa Makes His Los Angeles Debut at Pace
Kohei Nawa's Los Angeles debut at Pace turns taxidermy, optics, and drift into a sharp test of how sculpture behaves in an image-saturated city

NYC AIDS Memorial Reactivates Scott Burton
Oscar Tuazon’s new memorial commission shows how institutions can preserve AIDS-era public art through transformation rather than static tribute.

AI Helps Return a Cadell Interior to the Market
A thrift-store find identified with Gemini and sold at Lyon & Turnbull shows how AI is entering attribution without replacing connoisseurship

Almine Rech Takes On Leonora Carrington in France
Almine Rech’s Carrington partnership with rossogranada brings estate stewardship, Art Basel visibility, and Paris-market muscle into one deal

Bonalumi Returns to Art Basel as Space-Maker
Mazzoleni’s Art Basel Unlimited presentation revives Agostino Bonalumi’s 1970 Struttura modulare bianca as a serious test of how fairs frame historical work

How to Read Public-Art Mega-Event Commissions in 2026
Behind every World Cup art trail sits a real politics of funding, fabrication, visibility, and legacy that readers should learn to decode

How to Read World Cup Public Art Commissions
Use the World Cup’s artist-designed soccer ball trail to read sponsorship, civic branding, site politics, and what public art is really being asked to do

NYC AIDS Memorial Unveils Scott Burton Tribute
Oscar Tuazon’s new AIDS Memorial commission turns Scott Burton’s damaged public sculpture into a living work about touch, grief, and queer community

Phoenix Art Museum Lands 185-Work Indigenous Gift
Phoenix Art Museum’s 185-work Indigenous gift could finally force a fuller, collection-based retelling of American art in the Southwest

World Cup Public Art Hits New York and New Jersey
ARTS 14C’s World Cup sculpture trail turns museum networks, civic branding, and artist visibility into one sprawling summer public-art test

Christie’s London Sale Lifts South Asian Art Again
A £18.9 million Christie’s sale in London, with record prices for Abanindranath Tagore and K K Hebbar, points to deeper demand for South Asian modernism

Courtauld’s Hepworth Show Makes Color Impossible to Ignore
The Courtauld’s Hepworth in Colour reframes Barbara Hepworth by treating color as a structural force rather than a decorative afterthought

David Hockney Dies at 88, Leaving No Safe Version of Figuration
David Hockney dies at 88 after remaking figurative painting, queer visibility, and art-world scale on his own impatient terms

French Researchers Claim a New Way to Spot Art Forgeries
Researchers in northern France say detailed surface-topography analysis can distinguish forged paintings from authentic works with sharper precision