
France Faces a Museum Security Reckoning After the Louvre Heist
A French parliamentary report turns the 2025 Louvre crown jewels theft into a wider indictment of museum governance, infrastructure, and risk planning.

How Museums Should Build a Real Crisis-Readiness System in 2026
A practical guide for museum leaders building one operating model across security, collections care, governance, and public communication.

How to Read a Museum Merger Before the Press Release Turns It Into a Fairytale
Museum mergers are sold as inevitable wins. This guide shows how to judge the governance, money, curatorial risk, and public value behind the pitch.

Rene Matić’s Deutsche Börse Prize Win Signals a Different Center of Gravity for Photography
Rene Matić’s 2026 Deutsche Börse Prize win rewards a photography practice built from intimacy, subculture, and care rather than institutional spectacle.

Russia Recasts the Gulag Museum to Erase Stalinist Memory
Moscow's remaking of the Gulag Museum into a war-memory institution shows how state power is narrowing which histories can still be publicly told.

Tehran Museum Reopens by Turning War Into a Curatorial Question
Tehran's museum of contemporary art has reopened with conflict-focused displays, showing how collections care and public programming operate under active risk.

The Met’s Neue Galerie Merger Will Reshape How New York Treats Private Museum Legacies
The Met’s planned 2028 merger with Neue Galerie secures a private collection’s future while raising harder questions about legacy, governance, and public trust.

Wellcome’s Return of 2,000 Jain Manuscripts Tests a More Useful Model of Restitution
Wellcome Collection’s transfer of 2,000 Jain manuscripts suggests a restitution model built around community care, research access, and historical honesty rather than symbolism alone.

Tan Mu’s Quantum Gaze at ERES: Painting the Politics of Access
In Seeing the Unseen at ERES Foundation, Tan Mu renders a superconducting cryostat as a disciplined image of authority, staged visibility, and delegated trust.

How to Read Yves Klein and Claude Parent's Architecture of Air in 2026
A practical guide to understanding the architecture of air as a design program about environmental control, political space, and immaterial form rather than an art-historical curiosity.

A Fight Over Robert Capa's Madrid: Heritage Advocates Clash With City Council Over Historic Civil War Site
Madrid's city council has announced plans to use the building where Robert Capa photographed three war-scarred children during the Spanish Civil War as a social services center, triggering a formal dispute with the International Centre of Photography over the use of Capa's name and legacy.

Ancient Egyptians Used Correction Fluid to Revise the Book of the Dead, Scholars Find
Researchers at Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum have identified a 3,000-year-old white pigment mixture used to correct mistakes on a Book of the Dead papyrus, revealing a scribal practice strikingly close to modern correction fluid.

How to Read a Catalogue Raisonne
A catalogue raisonne is the most rigorous instrument available for assessing an artist's complete body of work. Knowing how to use one is essential for collectors, researchers, and anyone navigating the secondary market.

Venice Biennale 2026 Guide: How to See the New Bvlgari Pavilion and Marciana Collateral Installations
A practical route for seeing Bvlgari's two-part Venice program across Giardini and Biblioteca Marciana, with timing, access, and curatorial context for one-day visitors.

How to See the Whitney Biennial 2026 in One Focused Afternoon
A practical route through key floors, viewing priorities, and pacing tactics for visitors who want a serious first pass through the 2026 Whitney Biennial without defaulting to checklist fatigue.

Sotheby's Trophy Consignment Risk Playbook 2026: How to Bid Big Without Losing Discipline
A practical framework for collectors and advisors navigating nine-figure consignments in 2026, with clear rules for underwriting, guarantees, sequencing, and post-sale execution.

Whitney Biennial 2026 preview opens ahead of public opening
The Whitney Biennial 2026 began member previews this week before opening to the public, signaling how institutions are framing U.S. contemporary art narratives for the spring season.

ARCO Madrid 2026 Market Read Guide: What Collectors Should Track Beyond Headlines
A practical framework for reading ARCO Madrid 2026 with institutional discipline: which signals matter, how to separate noise from conviction, and where to act in real time.

10 Must-See Exhibits in Los Angeles in March 2026
From museum-scale surveys to tightly focused gallery debuts, here are ten Los Angeles exhibitions to see in March 2026. Los Angeles in March is less about.

At the DIA, Reimagining African American Art Corrects the Museum's Center
Detroit's new installation does more than add visibility, it reorganizes the museum's internal narrative by placing African American art beside its most.

Barkley L. Hendricks at Marian Goodman Paris Shows Portraiture as Social Thought
All is Portraiture in Paris makes a rigorous case for Hendricks as both formal innovator and acute social observer, extending beyond canonical portraits.

Giangiacomo Rossetti at Mendes Wood DM Paris Makes Melancholy Structurally Luminous
In Résurrectine, Rossetti stages painting as a chamber of delayed recognition, where mirrors, windows, and arsenic yellow bind art historical citation to a.

Gideon Appah at Pace Turns Coastal Ghana Into a Theater of Time
In Beneath Night and Day, Appah expands his Swimmers and Surfers cycle into a painterly study of rhythm, color, and collective memory, where beach life.

How to Assess Museum Deaccession Offers in 2026 Without Overpaying or Overreaching
Museum deaccession channels are creating more private buying opportunities, but they also carry valuation, governance, and reputational risk. This guide maps a practical framework for collectors and advisors who want conviction with discipline.