
EU Parliament Members Push to Suspend Venice Biennale Funding Over Russian Pavilion
A group of European Parliament members has called for suspending EU funding to the Venice Biennale if Russia’s pavilion participation proceeds, escalating a dispute that now sits at the intersection of cultural diplomacy and war policy.

Collector Playbook: How to Underwrite Geopolitical Risk Before Buying Into Institutional Cycles
A practical framework for collectors and advisors to evaluate political exposure, governance risk, and reputational downside before committing capital during volatile institutional seasons.

How to Read Institutional Power Signals in the Art World, A Practical 8-Step Framework
A practical framework for collectors and curators to evaluate leadership exits, legal disputes, and high-visibility acquisitions without getting trapped in headline noise.

Claire Tabouret’s Notre-Dame Windows Face a Legal Test of Heritage Policy
A planned legal challenge over Claire Tabouret’s Notre-Dame commission has turned a design decision into a national argument about restoration, authority, and contemporary art inside historic monuments.

Dalí Museum’s Bacchanale Purchase Expands the Stakes of Institutional Scale
The Dalí Museum’s purchase of the monumental Bacchanale set reframes its program from canonical display to logistical and curatorial experimentation at architectural scale.

Guillaume Cerutti’s Exit Reopens the Core Question at the Pinault Collection
After just thirteen months, Guillaume Cerutti’s departure as Pinault Collection president exposes how concentrated governance remains at one of Europe’s most influential private art platforms.

Misan Harriman Turns Protest Photography Into a Permanent Civic Space at Hope 93
Misan Harriman’s The Purpose of Light returns to London as a permanent installation, expanding the role of small private galleries in shaping political photography discourse.

Anne Imhof's First Asia Solo at Tai Kwun Signals Hong Kong's Bid for Harder-Edged Institutional Theatre
Tai Kwun will stage Anne Imhof's first solo exhibition in Asia this autumn, giving Hong Kong a high-profile institutional test of whether it can absorb her full performance-installation vocabulary without softening its edge.

Gabrielle Goliath Takes Her Cancelled South African Pavilion Into Venice Anyway
After South Africa pulled her Venice Biennale project, Gabrielle Goliath is mounting Elegy independently in Venice, turning a state cancellation into a direct test of artistic freedom and institutional legitimacy.