News

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

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

Legal Threat Targets CMHR Nakba Exhibition
A legal threat against the Canadian Museum for Human Rights' Nakba exhibition is testing museum independence, public funding, and curatorial authority

New York Returns 657 Looted Antiquities to India
New York authorities returned 657 looted antiquities valued at nearly $14 million to India, sharpening pressure on collectors, auction houses, and traffickers

Sainsbury Centre Lands £91.2M Rebuild Gift
The Sainsbury Centre's £91.2 million gift will fund major refurbishment while testing how philanthropy and sustainability reshape museum futures

Sainsbury Centre’s £91.2M Gift Tests Foster’s Future
A £91.2 million gift gives the Sainsbury Centre a rare chance to repair a famous Norman Foster building without surrendering its radical original premise

Billie Holiday Monument Finalists Put Queens Memory on the Line
Six finalists for a Queens Billie Holiday monument show how public art competitions turn memory, representation, and civic process into one fight over form.

Carnegie International Tests the Idea of Museum Community
The 59th Carnegie International widens the museum’s civic footprint and gains force by admitting that community inside museums is negotiated, not natural.

Centre Pompidou Hanwha Opens Into Seoul’s Museum Arms Race
Centre Pompidou Hanwha opens in Seoul with real curatorial promise, but also with licensing politics, corporate baggage, and familiar branch museum asymmetries.

Christie's Newhouse Night Proved Trophy Demand Is Still Ruthless
Christie's $1.1 billion Newhouse and 20th century sales did more than rebound the market - they showed how little demand has softened for blue chip works.

Dubai's Digital Art Museum Plan Escalates the Gulf Culture Race
Dubai's planned Museum of Digital Art is a cultural infrastructure play aimed at Gulf rivals, tech branding, and the prestige economy around immersive art.

Edgar Calel Wins a Prize That Tests Institutions Too
Edgar Calel's Sam Gilliam Award matters because it honors an artist whose work presses museums on stewardship, Indigenous knowledge, and institutional limits.

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

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.

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

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

Mary Lovelace O'Neal Dies at 84
Mary Lovelace O'Neal, who fused abstraction, Black political history and unruly material force, has died at 84 after a late-career critical ascent

Mnuchin Rothko Anchors Sotheby's May 2026 Sale
Mark Rothko's 1957 canvas from Robert Mnuchin's estate sold for $85.7 million as Sotheby's opened New York's May auctions with a cautious but credible rebound

Tate Britain Reframes Whistler Through Van Gogh's Eyes
Tate Britain's new Whistler exhibition reopens the artist's mother portrait through Vincent van Gogh, turning a familiar icon back into a modern problem

France Faces a Museum Security Reckoning After the Louvre Heist
A French parliamentary report turns the 2025 Louvre crown jewels theft into a wider indictment of museum governance, infrastructure, and risk planning.

Rene Matić’s Deutsche Börse Prize Win Signals a Different Center of Gravity for Photography
Rene Matić’s 2026 Deutsche Börse Prize win rewards a photography practice built from intimacy, subculture, and care rather than institutional spectacle.

Russia Recasts the Gulag Museum to Erase Stalinist Memory
Moscow's remaking of the Gulag Museum into a war-memory institution shows how state power is narrowing which histories can still be publicly told.

Tehran Museum Reopens by Turning War Into a Curatorial Question
Tehran's museum of contemporary art has reopened with conflict-focused displays, showing how collections care and public programming operate under active risk.

The Met’s Neue Galerie Merger Will Reshape How New York Treats Private Museum Legacies
The Met’s planned 2028 merger with Neue Galerie secures a private collection’s future while raising harder questions about legacy, governance, and public trust.

Wellcome’s Return of 2,000 Jain Manuscripts Tests a More Useful Model of Restitution
Wellcome Collection’s transfer of 2,000 Jain manuscripts suggests a restitution model built around community care, research access, and historical honesty rather than symbolism alone.

A Fight Over Robert Capa's Madrid: Heritage Advocates Clash With City Council Over Historic Civil War Site
Madrid's city council has announced plans to use the building where Robert Capa photographed three war-scarred children during the Spanish Civil War as a social services center, triggering a formal dispute with the International Centre of Photography over the use of Capa's name and legacy.

Ancient Egyptians Used Correction Fluid to Revise the Book of the Dead, Scholars Find
Researchers at Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum have identified a 3,000-year-old white pigment mixture used to correct mistakes on a Book of the Dead papyrus, revealing a scribal practice strikingly close to modern correction fluid.

Whitney Biennial 2026 preview opens ahead of public opening
The Whitney Biennial 2026 began member previews this week before opening to the public, signaling how institutions are framing U.S. contemporary art narratives for the spring season.