
Fake Antiquities Case Exposes Provenance Risk in London
A failed attempt to sell forged ancient statues to Sotheby's shows how much the antiquities trade still depends on provenance, expertise and caution

How to Read Public Art Memorial Commissions in 2026
When a memorial commission promises healing, the real questions are who gets to speak, how participation works and what memory the institution can live with

Roberto Lugo Turns Madison Square Park Into a Puerto Rican Monument
Roberto Lugo's new Madison Square Park commission scales his ceramic language into public sculpture and makes Puerto Rican visibility the work's central argument

Stonehenge Gets a Full-Scale Neolithic Hall Replica
English Heritage's Kusuma Neolithic Hall turns Stonehenge into a richer public-history experience while testing how responsibly institutions stage prehistory

England Museums Push Back on Tourist Fees
English national museums are resisting a proposal to charge overseas visitors, warning it could damage access, tourism spending and cultural legitimacy

How to Read a Museum Funding Crisis in 2026
When museums float tourist fees or sponsorship fixes, the real story is usually governance, subsidy and leverage. Here is how to read it clearly

How to Read an Artworld Legitimacy Crisis in 2026
When an art institution says it has a messaging problem, the real issue is often power, patronage or political control. Here is how to read it.

London Show Tracks the Criminalisation of Homelessness
A new Museum of Homelessness exhibition in London links present-day housing precarity to enclosure, colonial expansion and the long policing of unhoused people

New York Residency Opens Neon to Indigenous Artists
A new Kingston residency pairs Lite Brite Neon Studio and the Walker Youngbird Foundation to give Indigenous artists paid access to a rare fabrication medium

Smithsonian Women's Museum Bill Collapses in Congress
Congress sank the Smithsonian women's museum bill after GOP edits turned a bipartisan plan into a culture-war fight over inclusion and control.

Spain Begins Returning Art Seized During the Civil War
Spain is finally returning artworks seized during the Civil War and Franco era, exposing how long democratic memory can take to become museum practice.

Wexner Center Workers Push to Drop the Wexner Name
Unionized staff at the Wexner Center want the institution renamed, arguing that Les Wexner's ties to Jeffrey Epstein have made the title morally untenable.

A Blade of Grass Expands Social-Practice Support With Its 2026 In Fellowship Cohort
A Blade of Grass has named its 2026 In Fellowship cohort, doubling down on gathering, mutual support, and artist-led infrastructure at a brittle political moment.

America’s Endangered Places List Becomes a Memory Fight
The National Trust’s 2026 endangered places list links preservation to political memory, showing how historic sites are threatened by erasure as much as decay.

Chanel Backs Pompidou Renovation Through 2030
Chanel and Centre Pompidou have expanded their relationship into a five year pact that will shape the museum through its 2030 reopening

How to Read Marquee Auction Headlines in 2026
A practical guide to decoding evening-sale headlines in 2026, from sell-through theater and guarantees to estimate strategy and selective demand.

How to Read Museum Venue Takeovers in 2026
A practical guide to reading museum takeovers, off site shows, and luxury backed pop ups without confusing temporary visibility for institutional strength

KNMA Uses Christie’s to Preview a Bigger Museum Future
Kiran Nadar will stage a month long KNMA exhibition at Christie’s London, using a commercial venue to argue for a broader South Asian art history

MOCAK Firing Triggers a Fight Over Museum Governance
Adam Budak’s dismissal at MOCAK has become a test of how Polish museums handle labor complaints, due process, and artistic confidence

Sotheby's and Phillips Signal a Selective Market Rebound
Sotheby's and Phillips posted strong New York totals, but the real signal is a choosy market rewarding quality, scarcity, and disciplined estimates.

British Museum’s Bayeux Display Becomes a Power Statement
The British Museum's plan to show the Bayeux Tapestry flat turns exhibition design into a bid to control the meaning of a contested masterpiece

Galleria Borghese Expansion Fight Exposes Rome’s Bottleneck
A proposed Borghese expansion study has sparked a wider fight over access, preservation, and whether Rome can modernize without betraying itself

How to Read Biennial Sustainability Claims
Venice's green rhetoric is everywhere in 2026. This guide shows how to tell real ecological change from symbolism and greenwashing

How to Read Museum Capital Gifts in 2026
A practical guide to reading giant museum gifts without getting lost in donor theater, from maintenance and governance to access, branding, and leverage