
How to Read Art Basel Unlimited in 2026
A practical guide to reading Art Basel Unlimited beyond spectacle, from curatorial logic and market signals to the works that actually change the room

Obama Center Opens With an Ambitious Public Art Thesis
The Obama Presidential Center opens with major commissions that test whether public art can carry civic memory without dissolving politics into atmosphere

ROM's Widad Kawar Acquisition Redraws Arab Dress History
ROM's Widad Kawar acquisition gives Toronto a major public archive of Arab dress and heritage arts with real stakes for diaspora history and museum practice

Uganda Gallery Visa Denials Hit Africa Basel 2026
Visa denials left Kampala's Umoja Art Gallery absent from Africa Basel, exposing how border policy still decides who gets to appear in the global art market

Art Basel 2026 Opens With a Cautious Recovery
Art Basel's VIP day produced major sales and sober buying, suggesting the top of the market is functioning again without returning to speculative mania

England Gets a State-Backed Mobile Museum
A new government-backed mobile museum will tour England with national collections, turning access policy into a test of how public art actually reaches people

How to Read Basel Satellite Fairs in 2026
A practical guide to Basel’s satellite fairs, from June’s pause to Liste and Basel Social Club, and what each format reveals about the market now

How to Read Museum Climate Grant Headlines in 2026
Frankenthaler's latest grants show which museums treat climate work as infrastructure, which treat it as branding, and what to watch next

June Fair Pauses Basel Edition After Sponsor Exit
June has paused its 2026 Basel edition after losing a corporate partner, exposing how fragile dealer-run alternatives remain even at peak fair week

London’s Jewish Museum Returns in Two Rooms
London’s Jewish Museum reopens inside JW3 after three years closed, making scale, solvency, and institutional survival the real story behind the relaunch

New-York Historical Opens Its Tang Wing in 2026
The New-York Historical opens a $175 million wing for democracy, research, and the future LGBTQ+ Museum while betting architecture can frame a civic argument

Soyoung Yoon Takes Over Whitney ISP in 2026
Soyoung Yoon becomes the Whitney ISP's next director as the museum tries to stabilize a once-paused program and redefine its institutional politics

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

How to Read Basel Beyond Art Basel in 2026
A practical guide to the institutions, artist-run spaces, and local rhythms that matter in Basel once the fair’s theater stops dominating the map

Kyiv Strike Damages Lavra Cathedral and Cultural Sites
A Russian drone strike damaged the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra and other cultural sites, underscoring how heritage remains central to the war’s pressure campaign

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

MAM Rio Fire-Insurance Ruling Exposes a Governance Problem
A Brazilian court fined MAM Rio’s former director over comments on fire insurance, exposing how museums still punish transparency around collection risk

MFA Boston Reframes Liberty Through David Drake and Paul Revere
MFA Boston’s new American galleries place David Drake beside Paul Revere, forcing a sharper reading of liberty, exclusion, and the nation’s founding myths

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.