
IFPDA Print Fair Returns to Park Avenue Armory as Works on Paper Regain Market Heat
The 2026 IFPDA Print Fair opens in New York with 80 exhibitors and a deliberate push to reposition prints and drawings as core collecting categories rather than secondary entries.

Italian Museum Theft Exposes Security Fault Lines at Regional Collections
The theft of three modern masterpieces from the Magnani-Rocca Foundation has renewed scrutiny of private-foundation security and emergency response standards in Italy.

Collector Jean-Marc Bottazzi Argues for Depth Over Checklist Buying
In a new interview, Jean-Marc Bottazzi outlines a collector model built on sustained artist support, concentrated positions, and skepticism toward fair-floor hype.

A Collector's Field Guide to Buying Prints and Drawings During Fair Week
A practical framework for collectors and curators to evaluate quality, edition structure, condition, and pricing discipline when buying works on paper during high-pressure fair cycles.

Dia Al-Azzawi Returns to London with a Career Survey at Richard Saltoun
A major London survey of Dia Al-Azzawi brings archival and large-scale works into one frame, strengthening institutional momentum around modern Arab art histories.

Modern Two Repositions Joan Eardley as a Structural Figure in Postwar Painting
An Edinburgh exhibition on Joan Eardley foregrounds method, place, and material rigor rather than nostalgia, widening her relevance for current curatorial debates.

Dulwich Picture Gallery Opens a Major Konrad Mägi Survey for UK Audiences
A London presentation of Konrad Mägi reframes Baltic modernism for a market and institutional audience that is rethinking regional canons.

Collector Playbook: A Practical Provenance and Title-Risk Checklist Before You Buy
A step-by-step due diligence framework for collectors and advisors to evaluate provenance quality, legal exposure, and resale resilience before acquisition.

Kennedy Center Layoffs Expand the U.S. Cultural Labor Shock
Staff layoffs at the Kennedy Center tied to a planned two-year shutdown mark a new phase in the U.S. arts labor crisis, with national implications for production capacity and public access.