
Drents Museum Sentencing Leaves the Real Damage in Place
Prison terms for the Drents Museum thieves close one legal chapter, but the heist still exposes how loans, insurance, and diplomacy fail under pressure.

How to Read Museum Risk Headlines in 2026
Museum risk stories are rarely just about accidents. Read them through funding, staffing, security, conservation, and public access choices.

Israel Museum Magritte Damage Tests Open Display Ethics
A child’s damage to Magritte’s The Castle of the Pyrenees has reopened the hard question museums hate: how much vulnerability should public access require?

Why the Phillips Collection’s $15 Million Gift Matters
A record Sherman Fairchild Foundation gift gives the Phillips Collection room to repair its balance sheet, staff capacity, and public mission at once.

Crystal Bridges Bets Big on Expansion and American Scale
Crystal Bridges is adding 114,000 square feet and testing whether the museum-expansion boom can still claim civic purpose instead of pure prestige

Gwangju Biennale’s 2026 Artist List Sets Ho Tzu Nyen’s Terms
The 16th Gwangju Biennale has named 43 artists and groups, outlining a show about transformation, endurance, and political memory before opening in September.

How to Read a Museum Expansion Without Falling for the Renderings
Museum expansions are governance stories before they are architecture stories. Here is how to read the money, programming and power behind the new wings.

How to Read the No ICE in the Cup Poster Campaign in 2026
The No ICE in the Cup campaign is more than protest branding. It is a visual strategy for immigrant safety, local organizing, and World Cup image politics.

John Constable’s Cello Returns as a Different Kind of Archive
A restored cello tied to John Constable shifts attention from the painter’s canvases to the local networks of music, craft and friendship that shaped him

No ICE in the Cup Uses Protest Posters to Reframe World Cup America
A new campaign has enlisted artists from US host cities to argue that ICE presence would turn the 2026 World Cup from a civic celebration into a theater of fear.

Templon Retreats From Chelsea but Not From New York
Templon’s Chelsea shutdown exposes how quickly the post-pandemic gallery land rush has soured, even for established international dealers

Wallace Chan Tests Venice as a Luxury Art Stage
Wallace Chan’s Venice presentations use myth, sound, and sacred architecture to test whether jewelry-world prestige can hold as exhibition culture.

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.

Dolores Olmedo Reopens With Kahlo, Rivera and Old Questions
Museo Dolores Olmedo has reopened with its Kahlo and Rivera holdings intact, but the fight over who controls that legacy is not over

FotoFocus Center Gives Cincinnati a Photography Museum
Cincinnati’s FotoFocus Center turns a biennial into a permanent museum and tests whether photography can hold a city’s year-round civic attention

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.

How to See Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera in Mexico City
Museo Dolores Olmedo’s reopening reshapes the smartest Frida and Rivera itinerary in Mexico City. Build a visit around context, not checklist tourism

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.

Tone Hansen Takes Moderna Museet at a Structural Turning Point
Tone Hansen takes over Moderna Museet just as Sweden merges art, architecture and public art into one agency, raising the stakes of her appointment

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.

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.