
Brancusi Record Resets Christie's Market
Christie's $107.6 million Brancusi sale rewrote the sculptor's auction history and sharpened the question of how trophy lots now anchor a fragile top end

Cardiff Museum Makes the Case for Under-Fives in Art Galleries
National Museum Cardiff is using play, language and repeated visits to argue that toddlers belong in galleries long before schools formalize art education

EMMA Bets on Artist Support Instead of Safe Programming
Espoo Museum of Modern Art is backing four mid-career artists with stipends, health insurance, acquisitions and production support through 2030

How to Read Museum Expansion Announcements in 2026
A practical guide to spotting what museum expansion press releases reveal - and conceal - about access, money, politics, and the visitor experience

How to Read Venice Collateral Shows in 2026
Collateral exhibitions shape Venice Biennale week as much as national pavilions do, but only if you know how to separate real urgency from polished overflow

Louvre Picks Architects for New Renaissance
The Louvre's choice of Selldorf and STUDIOS Architecture makes circulation, security, and the Mona Lisa problem central to Paris's next museum remake

M+ and Pompidou Lock In a Five-Year Pact
M+ and Centre Pompidou have turned a memorandum into a long runway for co-curation, loans, and research - a move with real geopolitical and curatorial stakes

Sanya Kantarovsky Opens a Venice Show Against Easy Redemption
At Palazzo Loredan in Venice, Sanya Kantarovsky turns guilt, childhood and damaged spirituality into one of Biennale season's harsher side shows

Borghese Expansion Plan Meets Roman Backlash
Rome's Borghese Gallery wants more room for visitors, but heritage critics say a new annex would damage one of Italy's most intact cultural settings

Catalonia Reopens the Sijena Restitution Fight
Catalonia is seeking €791,000 from Aragón after returning 56 Sijena works, turning a restitution battle into a new dispute over custody costs and legal leverage

Holburne Museum Reclaims Printmaking for Modern Art
The Holburne Museum's Bath exhibition argues that Manet, Gauguin, Toulouse-Lautrec and Picasso used printmaking to reshape modern art itself.

How to Read Emerging-Talent Signals at a Photography Fair in 2026
A practical guide to reading student prizes, artist platforms and fair programming as signals of where photography careers and curatorial attention are heading.

How to Read TEFAF New York Opening Day in 2026
TEFAF New York's crowded VIP opening reveals who is buying, which categories are holding, and how dealers stage confidence at the top end

Lucas Lecacheur Pushes Surfboard Design Off Script
At Melbourne Design Week, Lucas Lecacheur treats surfboards as sculptural experiments that test how utility, performance and myth can coexist.

Photo London Student Award Signals the Fair's Future
Akanksya Dahal's win shows how Photo London is turning education, curatorial attention and fair visibility into a pipeline for future photographers.

Valie Export Dies at 85, Leaving Feminist Art a Harder Standard
Valie Export, the Austrian artist who turned performance, film and the female body into instruments of confrontation, has died at 85 in Vienna

Art Dubai's emergency edition finds buyers
Art Dubai's postponed 2026 edition opened with strong sales, showing how regional institutions and collectors stabilized a fair rebuilt in just eight weeks

Es Devlin's National Portrait Experiment
Es Devlin's new National Portrait Gallery project invites every UK resident into a live collective portrait, testing how museums stage identity and participation

How to Navigate New York Fair Week After Independent's Move
Independent's move to Pier 36 changes New York fair week. Here's how serious visitors should read the city's art geography in 2026

How to Read Photography Market Signals in 2026
A practical guide to the 2026 photography market, from fair design and prize circuits to editions, process, and the difference between attention and conviction

Independent's Pier 36 fair reset
Independent's 2026 move to Pier 36 gave the fair more room and cleaner circulation, sharpening how it sells emerging and rediscovered artists

Photo London Tests Olympia's Fair Economics
Photo London's move to Olympia has sharpened traffic, sales visibility, and curatorial focus, turning a venue change into a real market test

Rene Matić Wins Deutsche Börse Photography Prize
Rene Matić's Deutsche Börse win rewards a practice that links intimacy, subculture, and British political identity without sanding off its rough edges

Venice Biennale 2026 Opens Under Protest
The 2026 Venice Biennale has opened amid strikes, walkouts, and pavilion disputes that expose the event's old nationalist machinery under new pressure