
Weekend Guide: A Focused Art Itinerary Hidden Inside the Week-Ahead Noise
Instead of chasing every listing, build a four-part route this week around Frank Bowling, Hurvin Anderson, Catherine Opie, and a major open-access image release from Washington’s National Gallery of Art.

Why the Banksy and Ferrante Identity Chase Keeps Returning
A fresh cycle of identity claims around Banksy and Elena Ferrante has revived a long-running conflict between disclosure culture and the right of artists to control the terms of their public presence.

Philip Castle, Airbrush Visionary Behind Iconic Film and Music Imagery, Dies at 83
The British illustrator whose visual language shaped A Clockwork Orange, Full Metal Jacket, and album culture from Bowie to Pulp has died, leaving a body of work that fused commercial commission with singular style.

New Museum Expansion and Next-Gen Collecting Debate Land in This Week’s Art Conversation
The Art Newspaper’s latest podcast links the New Museum’s OMA-designed expansion to a wider discussion about emerging collector behavior and institutional storytelling around access, scale, and audience.

Zurich’s Museum Rietberg Transfers Ownership of 11 Benin Objects to Nigeria
The Swiss institution will transfer ownership of 11 Benin objects to Nigeria, with two slated for physical return and nine expected to remain in Zurich on loan under a new restitution framework.

Powerhouse Arts Names Liz Munsell Vice President of Curatorial Arts and Programs
The Brooklyn nonprofit tapped curator Liz Munsell to lead exhibitions and public programming as it scales residencies, subsidy initiatives, and its growing print fair ecosystem.

Glasgow International 2026 Expands Its Citywide Program Around Labor, Migration, and Ecology
The 11th Glasgow International lays out a distributed model across institutions and neighborhood spaces, with commissions focused on labor history, migration, and collective memory.

New York March Shows Signal a Direct-to-Market Shift in How Art Is Circulated
A new Artforum field report tracks how New York artists and spaces are bypassing older gatekeeping routes through hybrid gallery, social, and self-distribution tactics.

Sam Doyle at Outsider Art Fair Shows How Self-Taught Histories Are Being Repriced
A focused presentation of Sam Doyle works at New York's Outsider Art Fair highlights how institutions and collectors are revaluing self-taught artists through historical framing and tighter supply.