
Christie's London Tightens the Pinault Grip
François-Henri Pinault taking the chair at Christie’s London makes family control more explicit at a delicate moment for the global auction trade.

Getty Center Renovation Turns Visitor Flow Into the Main Event
Getty is spending up to $800m to remake arrival, circulation, and welcome spaces, treating visitor infrastructure as a core curatorial and civic issue.

How to Read Gallery Insolvency and Storage-Risk Headlines in 2026
When a gallery collapses, the real story is who controls possession, paperwork, storage terms, and the artist's ability to recover work fast.

Tate's 1926 Van Gogh Opening Explains How Modern Taste Gets Made
Tate's centenary story shows British taste for modern art being built through loans, women collectors, royal ceremony, and even a forged Van Gogh.

Art Basel Paris Shows a Fair Learning to Sell Caution
Art Basel Paris named 206 exhibitors for 2026, and the rise in joint booths shows a fair market selling collaboration, caution, and cost control.

Carrington's Villa Pilar Reappears in London
A newly surfaced Leonora Carrington painting from her 1940 confinement will join the Freud Museum show, deepening its account of trauma and invention

Cheryl Finley Wins the 2026 Driskell Prize
High Museum's Driskell Prize goes to Cheryl Finley, honoring a scholar whose work has shaped Black art history and Atlanta's curatorial pipeline at once

France Uses AI to Picture Heritage Climate Damage
French researchers are training AI on sites like Strasbourg Cathedral and Bibracte to forecast climate damage and make conservation risk politically visible.

How to Read Art Fair Exhibitor Lists Like a Market Adult
An exhibitor list is a risk map, not a party invite. Read first-timers, joint booths, absences, sector splits, and local density before the fair opens.

How to Read Museum Admission Policy Changes in 2026
When museums tweak entry fees, the real story is not the ticket price alone but the balance between access, subsidy, audience habits, and institutional nerve

Tiwani Contemporary Closes and Exposes a Market Blind Spot
Tiwani Contemporary closed after 15 years, exposing how weakly the market still supports the galleries that built demand for African diasporic art.

Whitney Workers Take Contract Fight to Gala
Whitney staff used the museum's donor gala to pressure management before their first contract expires, testing how visible museum labor can become in 2026

Bergen Assembly Bets on Ecology and Mysticism
Lucia Pietroiusti and Filipa Ramos give Bergen Assembly 2028 an ecological and spiritual frame that could sharpen the triennial

Christie's Tests the Market for a Grail Manuscript
A thirteenth-century Arthurian manuscript at Christie's turns medieval literature into a live market question about rarity, provenance, and spectacle

Hauser & Wirth Backs a Menorca Residency
Rashid Johnson and Sheree Hovsepian's new Casa Gràcia program turns Menorca into a test case for whether residency culture can be more than lifestyle branding

How to Read AI Oracle Installations in 2026
A practical guide to telling serious AI oracle installations from shallow tech theater by tracking language, ritual, labor, and power

How to Read Artist Residency Launches in 2026
A practical guide to judging whether a new artist residency offers real time, money, and autonomy or just repackaged cultural lifestyle branding

Nick Doyle Turns the AI Oracle into Gallery Theater
Nick Doyle's Perrotin show uses an AI psychic named Ava to fuse self-help speech, tech hype, and American myth into gallery theater

Rietberg Reframes the Colonial Photo Archive
Museum Rietberg's A Kind of Paradise asks who gets to rewrite colonial photography and what repair can mean inside the museum now

VMFA Lands a 1,986-Work Photography Gift
VMFA's huge Joy of Giving Something donation reshapes how Richmond will present photography when the museum's new galleries open in 2027

Beyeler Cezanne Loan Faces Nazi-Looting Claim
A Cezanne watercolor shown at Fondation Beyeler is under fresh scrutiny after new archive evidence sharpened a Nazi-era loss claim by Gustav Schweitzer's heir

How to Plan a Serious Summer Museum Calendar
A practical 2026 guide to building a sharper summer art calendar from museum previews and biennial lists without wasting attention on consensus hype.

How to Read Provenance Claims in Real Time
A practical guide to judging restitution and ownership disputes while stories are still unfolding, before one side locks in the preferred narrative

MOCAD Reopens With a Smaller Footprint and Bigger Questions
Detroit's MOCAD reopens with co-leadership and a leaner building plan, testing whether museum agility can beat institutional bloat