
Mexico’s Frida Kahlo Export Dispute Exposes the Governance Gap Between Symbol and Contract
A new dispute over works linked to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera has escalated from cultural concern to a legal-governance fight over temporary export terms and public accountability.

BFI and NPG Reposition Marilyn Monroe as a Producer-Performer, Not a Frozen Icon
Two major UK programs marking Monroe’s centenary are reframing her as a strategic image-maker and production entrepreneur, not just a symbol of Hollywood tragedy.

US Museums Near the Border Are Absorbing the Cost of Canada’s Travel Pullback
A broad decline in Canadian travel to the US is now visible in museum visitor data, exposing how politically sensitive cross-border audiences have become.

Cross-Border Loan Playbook: How Collectors and Curators Protect Access, Title, and Return
A practical framework for structuring international artwork loans so institutions get public access while collectors and estates retain clear title, enforceable return terms, and conservation control.

NGV’s ‘Mother’ Exhibition Repositions Maternal Labor as an Art-Historical Category
At Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria, a 200-work exhibition titled ‘Mother’ treats caregiving not as sentiment but as structure, linking historical iconography to contemporary artists working inside the pressures of domestic labor.

Yale Puts a 37-Foot Lucknow Scroll on View, Reframing Company-Era Art as Infrastructure of Empire
The Yale Center for British Art has unveiled the 19th-century Lucknow scroll after two years of conservation, offering a rare public test case for how museums exhibit fragile imperial-era objects without flattening their political context.

Yale Unrolls a 37-Foot Lucknow Scroll and Reframes Company-Era Art as Infrastructure
After two years of conservation, Yale Center for British Art has put the Lucknow scroll on view, turning a fragile object into a live argument about empire, circulation, and display ethics.

A Cross-Border Cultural Risk Playbook for Collectors, Curators, and Museum Teams
As travel politics and soft boycotts reshape audience behavior, institutions and collectors need practical systems for lending, attendance forecasting, and public communication across borders.

US Museums Feel the Drop as Canadian Cultural Tourism Contracts
A sharp decline in Canadian travel to the US is now registering in museum attendance data from border regions to Florida, forcing institutions to rebalance audience strategy around local and domestic visitors.