
Artlas Pushes Museums to Define Their AI Terms
Artlas says visitors already bring AI into galleries, forcing museums to choose between curated interpretation and general-purpose bots.

Belfast Photo Festival Reopens Hong Kong's Protest Archive
Thadde Comar's Hong Kong protest project arrives at Belfast Photo Festival, testing how photography carries political memory after urgency fades.

How to Follow Emerging Sculptors After Studio Museum's Fade
Kiah Celeste's Studio Museum spotlight shows how to track emerging sculpture through exhibitions, material choices and institutional follow-through.

Stoke-on-Trent Declares a Heritage Emergency
Stoke-on-Trent says £325 million is needed to rescue its collapsing ceramics landscape, turning a local preservation fight into a national cultural test.

America 250 Puts U.S. Museums on the Spot
As the U.S. semiquincentennial nears, museums must choose between safe patriotic packaging and a sharper public reckoning with national history.

Courtauld Opens Hepworth-Nicholson Studio Photo Show
The Courtauld is showing rare Paul Laib photographs of Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson's Hampstead studio, reframing it as an engine of modernism.

Crystal Bridges Opens Its $150 Million Expansion
Crystal Bridges has reopened with a $150 million expansion that adds galleries, studios and trails while widening its argument about what American art can contain.

How London Galleries Are Resetting the Business in 2026
London dealers are rebuilding the gallery model around exhibitions, smaller spaces, artist infrastructure and museum relationships. Here is how to read the reset.

How to Judge a Gallery Weekend in 2026
Gallery weekends are everywhere. This guide shows how to tell whether one creates real public value or just a crowded, self-flattering art-world loop.

London Gallery Weekend Has to Justify Itself Again
London Gallery Weekend opens with more than 120 exhibitors, but the real question is whether the event builds civic value or merely flatters a strained market.

Mildred Howard Finally Gets the Major Retrospective
Oakland Museum of California opens Mildred Howard's first major retrospective, making overdue recognition a live argument about memory, place and Black life.

Philadelphia Reunites Two Van Gogh Sunflowers
Philadelphia has reunited its Sunflowers with London's National Gallery version, turning a rare loan into a fresh reading of Van Gogh's serial ambition.

How to Read Gallery Weekend Value Claims in 2026
London Gallery Weekend shows how art cities package civic value, collector access, and public relevance at once. Here is how to read those claims critically

How to Read London’s New Gallery Survival Strategies in 2026
London Gallery Weekend shows how dealers are surviving higher costs and softer sales by rethinking fairs, second spaces, and institutional backing.

Julio Le Parc Dies as Tate Prepares a Major Retrospective
Julio Le Parc died at 97 days before Tate Modern opens a major survey, sharpening the case for his radical ideas about light, movement, and the active viewer.

Maria Martins’s Market Finally Catches Up
Maria Martins’s $3.17 million Impossible sale finally prices the Brazilian Surrealist as a major sculptor, not a footnote to Marcel Duchamp

Medina Triennial Makes a Small Town a Big Art Test
The new Medina Triennial uses canal-corridor funding, local labor, and 39 artists to test whether a rural art event can become durable civic infrastructure.

Mexico Moves to Stop Colorado Antiquities Sale
Mexico is trying to halt a Colorado sale of 80 artifacts, testing how hard source nations can push against US antiquities auctions in real time

Stonehenge Study Reopens the Altar Stone Mystery
A new Stonehenge study suggests glacial movement may explain part of the altar stone’s route while leaving the hardest human transport questions intact

Why Rodney Mims Cook’s Russian Forum Visit Matters
The US Commission of Fine Arts chair joined a St. Petersburg panel, raising hard questions about sanctions, symbolism, and cultural diplomacy.

Artists & Mothers Expands Childcare Grants in 2026
Artists & Mothers awarded four $25,000 childcare grants this year, showing how artist-parent support is finally moving from rhetoric to practical infrastructure

Crystal Bridges Bets $150 Million on Scale, Access, and Regional Power
Crystal Bridges reopens with a $150 million expansion that enlarges gallery space, studios, and public amenities while sharpening Bentonville’s claim to national museum influence.

How to Evaluate Artist Management Agencies in 2026
A wave of artist agencies is promising strategy, museum access and career management, but artists need sharper ways to read fees, incentives and institutional claims

How to Read Rome’s Biennale-Season Gallery Scene in 2026
Rome’s current gallery season turns Biennale overflow into a local test of ambition, history, and display. Here is how to read the city’s strongest moves without mistaking atmosphere for seriousness.