
Venice Biennale Jury Resigns Days Before Opening Amid Russia and Israel Dispute
The five-member international jury resigned nine days before the Biennale opening, forcing a last-minute rewrite of the 2026 prize process.

Converge 45 Announces Artist List for Portland Triennial Framed by Ursula K. Le Guin
Portland’s Converge 45 has released participating artists and commissions for Here, To you, Now, signaling a city-scale triennial model built on local embeddedness.

Georg Baselitz Dies at 88, Ending a Career That Rewired Postwar Figuration
Baselitz, the German painter whose inverted canvases recast figurative painting after war, has died at 88 as a major Venice exhibition was set to open.

How Curators and Collectors Should Evaluate Biennials During Governance Crises
A practical framework for assessing artistic quality, institutional legitimacy, and acquisition risk when major biennials face political or procedural breakdowns.

How Curators and Collectors Should Evaluate Gallery Counterparty Risk in 2026
A practical framework for assessing whether a gallery can reliably deliver consignments, payments, logistics, and long-term artist support.

Art Monte Carlo Signals Expansion After Informa Prestige Acquisition
The boutique fair Art Monte Carlo opened under new ownership with plans to nearly double in size and extend its international collector program.

Stephen Friedman Gallery Filings Expose £7.8M Debt and Deep Artist Losses
New filings show the collapsed Stephen Friedman Gallery owes £7.8 million, including major sums to artists, shippers, landlords, and tax authorities.

Brighton & Hove Museums to Return 45 Artefacts to Botswana in Repatriation Partnership
Brighton & Hove Museums will return 45 nineteenth-century objects to Botswana, where they will enter a permanent display in Serowe.

A Practical Due-Diligence Playbook for Collectors and Curators in 2026
A field guide for evaluating provenance, legal risk, institutional context, and installation realities before acquisition or exhibition commitments.