Monday, December 15, 2025

Whitney Biennial announces artists for its 2026 edition. https://ift.tt/OkbZa9R

The Whitney Museum of American Art has announced the participating artists for the Whitney Biennial 2026. The biennial exhibition will open on March 8, 2026 in New York, featuring 56 artists, duos, and collectives, including Kelly Akashi and Julio Torres. This marks the 82nd edition of the biennial, the longest-running survey of American art in the United States.

The Biennial is co-organized by Whitney Museum curators Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer, with additional curatorial support from Beatriz Cifuentes and Carina Martinez. Guerrero and Sawyer conducted more than 300 studio visits during the research process. Rather than curating the exhibition within a strict thematic framework, the curators decided to shape it based on their conversations with artists.

“With this Biennial, we hope to foreground a network of kinships that gesture toward forms of coexisting in this world,” said Guerrero, in a statement.

Artists are based in 25 states of the U.S., as well as elsewhere, and have connections to Afghanistan, Chile, Iraq, Japan, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Vietnam, and other regions shaped by U.S. political and cultural influence. “Together, these artists’ work makes space for forms of relation that are intimate, improvised, and contested,” Sawyer said in a statement.

Compared with recent editions, the upcoming Whitney Biennial promises to look at “relationality with a particular emphasis on infrastructures.” Sawyer said. The 2024 edition, “Even Better Than the Real Thing,” foregrounded artists working with different notions of reality and their impact on society, while 2022’s “Quiet as It’s Kept” reflected the social and political polarisation of the post-Covid moment.

The museum describes the upcoming Biennial as prioritizing atmosphere over argument, stating that “rather than offering a definitive answer to life today, this Whitney Biennial foregrounds mood and texture, inviting visitors into environments that evoke tension, tenderness, humor, and unease.”

Whitney Biennial 2026 will be the first edition to take place following the launch of the museum’s expanded free admission programs. Admission will be free for all visitors aged 25 and under.

Here is the full list of participating artists:



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Advisor Daniel Malarkey on Finding Art You Want to Wake Up To https://ift.tt/GDm2Hsn

The first painting that stunned Daniel Malarkey made his stomach lurch. In 2006, he saw Edvard Munch’s Love and Pain (1895) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and felt “butterflies jumping around” in his body. The reaction was so physical it initially confused him. “That was perhaps the first time when I saw an artwork where I couldn’t really understand what it could do to my body,” he told me. Music can elicit this reaction easily, he said; with visual art, it is far harder to come by. He’s made a career of chasing that feeling ever since.

On a recent Zoom call from his London home, Malarkey swings his laptop around to show the results of this chase: an Anna Calleja painting of postcards clipped to a string, a small painting by Patricia Thomas, an ’80s Luis Caballero painting, a Paul P. work, a painting by Chicago ImagistTom Schneider, a tiny Sophie Barber canvas, and a Carroll Dunham tucked onto a wall are among the highlights. “They create some sort of story for your home,” he said.

A man about town in the London art world, Malarkey approaches collecting like storytelling, a habit that traces back to his training in theater at Cours Florent and film at La Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris III. That background still guides him, whether he’s curating a gallery show at the likes of Alison Jacques, working with clients, or buying art for himself. He’s interested in the transition from viewing art to falling in love with it, and then deciding to live with a piece. For him, it’s not just what one chooses to buy, but how, where, and with what context it is given.

“It affects every day,” Malarkey explained. “How does [art] change your daily enjoyment? There’s something about looking at pieces where you know the story of the artwork, the artist, you understand why you love that piece, and you see connections between pieces in the collection.”

When buying art, it’s advisable to think less about what’s fashionable and more about what you want to wake up to, he says. “I often tell people the pieces that will become the most valuable are the ones you’d never want to sell,” he said. Part of that relationship is learning how to look. “Sometimes people think, ‘Oh, you should just like an artwork because I’ve shown it to you,’” he said. “No, you need to understand the language of the artist…Then you can start thinking about which work would be right for you.”

Once a work that fits this criteria is found, themes and experiences can then guide the next steps. In a client’s living room, for instance, a painting by the late American painter Juanita McNeely depicts a nude self-portrait of the artist. “It makes me think of the word ‘resilience,’” Malarkey said, noting McNeely’s decades of health struggles and overlooked status in art institutions. Beneath the painting sits a Jean-Marie Appriou table sculpture of Ophelia drifting into water. The dialogue between the two is what inspires Malarkey. “To have that in the same room with [McNeely’s] self-portrait, where she spent her life between life and death, that’s super interesting,” he said.

In another home, he placed English artist Derek Jarman’s only 1991 white landscape painting near British painter Maggi Hambling’s portrait of Oscar Wilde dying in Paris. These are two entirely different artists, but together they form a tender, if unexpected, story. Malarkey explained that Jarman, in his dying wish to the director of London’s National Portrait Gallery, demanded a sculpture of Wilde in London. The artist the museum selected, coincidentally, turned out to be Hambling.

Conversations between artists and artworks across generations can also yield rewarding insights. One client now lives with two paintings by the British artist Celia Paul hung beside a work by the late Welsh painter Gwen John. Paul published a book, Letters to Gwen John, where she wrote to the long-deceased artist, despite never meeting. In this domestic pairing, those imagined exchanges feel literal. “It gives [the owner] so much joy seeing those together,” Malarkey said.

Artworks, for Malarkey, can interact with a room historically and emotionally, but it all comes down to trusting that gut instinct and finding the works you want to live with. It’s important not to rush that process. “It’s really lovely with art—what makes it something you can do your whole life as a collector—is when you wait 10 years to get that piece you’ve always wanted,” he said. “There’s nothing like hanging that piece.”

The arrival is slow, but the impact is immediate. One small shift in the room can give the sense that something new has entered your daily life. It’s in finding those connections that Malarkey is still back in front of that Munch painting—waiting for the jump in his stomach that tells him he’s found something special.



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Friday, December 12, 2025

Picasso painting valued at $1.1 million to be raffled in $120 charity draw. https://ift.tt/K9RX7IF

A third edition of the international charity raffle “1 Picasso for 100 Euros” has been launched in support of Alzheimer’s research. The program allows participants to purchase a €100 (about $117) ticket for a chance to win an original work by Pablo Picasso, which is valued at €1 million (about $1.1 million), with proceeds benefiting Fondation Recherche Alzheimer, a French research foundation.

Ticket sales opened on November 24th and are available exclusively through the raffle’s official website. A total of 120,000 tickets will be sold worldwide, and the draw is scheduled to take place on 14 April 2026 at 6 p.m. at Christie’s in Paris, under the supervision of a bailiff, and will be streamed live online.

The artwork to be awarded is Tête de femme (1941), a gouache-on-paper portrait of a woman. The piece comes from the collection of Opera Gallery, which is a partner in the initiative, and will be transferred to the winner following official validation after the draw. The work was painted during a tumultuous period between Picasso and Olga Khokhlova, his first wife. Olivier Picasso told the New York Times that it was conceived during an “extremely complicated [time] for my grandfather.”

The “1 Picasso for 100 Euros” concept was first realised in 2013, raising €5 million (about $5.8 million) for the preservation of the UNESCO-listed city of Tyre, in Lebanon. The first painting raffled was an early work on paper titled L’Homme au Gibus (1914). A second edition, organised in 2019, sold over 51,000 tickets across more than 100 countries and raised more than €5 million (about $5.8 million) for the humanitarian organisation CARE. The painting for the second raffle was Nature Morte (1921), an oil painting on canvas.



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Late Painter Joyce Pensato’s Dark, Subversive Cartoons Finally Get Their Due https://ift.tt/pHZRdYq

In 1992, a friend brought Joyce Pensato a rubber Mickey Mouse head scavenged from a garbage dump. Struck by the eerie expression of the toy, Pensato began painting and drawing it obsessively, stripping the Mouse of his cheer and reducing him to a few abstracted forms. In the resulting drawing, Untitled (1992), Mickey is barely a character at all, just two bulbous ears, a skull-like snout, and vacant, gazing eyes.

Over her career, Pensato spent decades dragging America’s cartoons into the abyss. Mickey’s cheerful grin disappears, Batman’s mask melts, and Felix the Cat looks startled and uneasy. These icons are rendered in quick, forceful strokes and thick drips of enamel. Using mostly black, white, silver, and gold, she took the shine of pop culture and ran it through her raw, expressive mark-making practice. The final images feel possessed: apparitions devoid of cheer, revealing something painful within.

Now, six years after her death at 78, ICA Miami has mounted the most ambitious presentation of Pensato’s work to date. On view through March 15, 2026, the eponymous retrospective assembles more than 65 works—from 1970s Batman drawings to her late-era, towering enamel paintings. The show offers the clearest view yet of a painter who saw the darkness of the cultural unconscious lurking behind pop’s cheeriest icons.

“Joyce Pensato” unfolds through a series of character-driven rooms that map Pensato’s obsessions. The exhibition opens with the 30-foot-long drawing Take Me to Your Leader (2018), a sprawling work featuring multiple warped versions of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck. “Just walking into the room, it’s like a punch in the stomach,” Gean Moreno, curator of programs at ICA Miami, told Artsy. “It’s going to be super powerful, and as you go through, the intensity builds.”


Early life

Born in Brooklyn in 1941, Pensato first came to painting through an early interest in commercial art. She studied at the Art Students League before transferring to the New York Studio School in 1973. There, under the guidance of Mercedes Matter, she was pushed to pursue her gestural, image-driven approach. Around this time, she created her first charcoal drawings of comic-book characters—Spider-Man and Batman—some of which appear in the show.

Pensato’s first oil paintings carried hints of Joan Mitchell’s influence: muscular brushwork and flurries of color. Untitled (1980), featured at ICA Miami, leans toward landscape-like abstraction, built from broad fields of blues, yellows, and greens. But by 1990, she realized “the color was not working for me,” as she told the Brooklyn Rail.

By the early 1990s, she abandoned her vivid palette in favor of black-and-white enamel, a material Christopher Wool urged her to try. This shift marks the moment her voice fully clicked. In Untitled (Donald) (1991), Donald Duck emerges as a stark white silhouette against a black abyss, an apparition appearing to slip away into darkness.


How Joyce Pensato collected images

Pensato’s studio became a kind of reliquary, piled with toys and dolls rescued from dollar stores and sidewalks: a plush Cartman from South Park, a giant stuffed Bugs Bunny, and countless plastic Mickeys. These objects found their way into the paintings, distorted through vigorous brushstrokes and dripping enamel paint as she furiously reworked these characters.

In I Must Be Dreamin’ (2007), for instance, Felix the Cat appears less mischievous and more like a creature staring back at the viewer in shock. Elsewhere, Batman (1994) presents the hero as a blacked-out shape emerging from the dark, a presence built from shadows. Here, Batman absorbs post–Cold War paranoia into the silhouette of a vigilante protector.

Toward the end of the show, several artworks feature characters from The Simpsons, a family shaped by globalization and media saturation. Marge in Hell (2008), one of the show’s most disturbing images, depicts Marge possessed, her blue tower of hair resembling a tornado. By ripping these characters from their clean-lined origins, Pensato exposes the anxieties of American life that these cartoons were invented to soothe. Eyes bulge, outlines buckle, teeth emerge where smiles once sat. Familiar themes are turned into feral images.

“So much of the work comes from these strong, powerful gestures,” said Alex Gartenfeld, director of ICA Miami. “The visual complexity follows instantly in the drips—they’re an extension of the gesture itself. You feel both the physicality of the mark and the pull of gravity at the same time, which makes it seem like the artist is still right there. And because the enamel stays glossy and wet-looking, it’s as if the painting was made yesterday.”


Painting Mickey Mouse

Mickey Fried Up, 1990
Joyce Pensato
Hollis Taggart

Mickey Mouse is Pensato’s greatest muse. The earliest version featured in the show is Mary Ann’s Bambi (Mickey) (1989), a haunting charcoal drawing of the mouse. She painted nearly every version of him, from the early prototypes to the streamlined corporate star.

This show opens with a room devoted to Mickey that doubles as a timeline of Disney’s rise. Though it was unintentional, Pensato documents the industrialization of animation and the dominance of a single brand, as the image of Mickey unified into what we know today. “If you scratch just a little beneath the surface,” Moreno said, “there’s a whole regimentation of the industry of animation—it actually starts becoming a factory in the way American capitalism has built the factory, too.”

One work, Mr. Movie Star (2007), suggests polished celebrity, yet Mickey’s form appears worn down and partially eroded. The contradiction underscores how mass production can hollow out an icon’s meaning.


A long-overlooked legacy

Recognition came slowly for Pensato. She showed intermittently at group shows in New York, but it wasn’t until she was in her 60s that she had her first major New York solo show in 2007 at Petzel Gallery.

Pensato’s images grab you instantly: the scale, the energy, the strangeness of familiar faces pushed too far. But there’s more beneath the surface, an undercurrent of what she experienced in the world channeled through these cultural icons. “If you look at it straight on, you see this expressive gestural painting with all the psychological charge it has, that’s absolutely correct,” Moreno explained. “But if you take a little side step and you start looking at the social landscapes that these characters come from, then the second dimension totally opens up.”



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Thursday, December 11, 2025

$31.4 million Lalanne Hippopotamus Bar is now most expensive design work ever sold at auction. https://ift.tt/ZsrPlod

French designer François-Xavier Lalanne’s Hippopotame Bar, pièce unique (1976) sold for $31.4 million at Sotheby’s on December 10th. The sale smashed its pre-sale high estimate of $10 million, setting the highest price for the artist at auction and the highest price achieved for a design work at auction. All prices include fees.

The final price was the product of a 26-minute bidding battle at the New York auction house, with seven bidders participating. This work confirms the growing popularity of design.

Hippopotame Bar, pièce unique was part of the Schlumberger Collection, belonging to French-born oil heiress and longtime Houston resident Anne Schlumberger and her family. Schlumberger commissioned the work in 1976, making it one of Lalanne’s earliest and most significant explorations of the hippopotamus form. This intimate collaboration yielded the only example executed in hand-wrought copper. Schlumberger died in April 2025.

François-Xavier and his wife, Claude, are often referred to as Les Lalanne, a design duo known for their whimsical, surreal sculptural furniture and fanciful bronzes. Blending animal forms with natural motifs, their work turns everyday use into playful artworks. The design duo gained recognition gradually. In the 1980s, they only caught the attention of the French. However, by the 2000s, the designers had finally gained the attention of international collectors, and that interest continues to rise today.

François-Xavier’s previous artist record was held by Rhinocretaire I (1964), another sculpture containing a bar, which was achieved. $19.4 million at Christie’s in 2023. In June, a similar piece came close to the record, when Grand Rhinocrétaire II (2003) fetched $16.4 million at Sotheby’s. This followed a sale dedicated to the designer, which fetched $59 million at Christie’s in October 2024.

Claude’s auction record is held by Très grand choupatte (2014), which sold for €4.9 million ($5.3 million) at Christie’s in 2023.



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Why 2026 Is a Pivotal Year for the Art Market, According to Massimo De Carlo https://ift.tt/7A8nYTS

A Perfect Day, 1999
Maurizio Cattelan
MASSIMODECARLO

It was only October, but Massimo De Carlo, founder of the gallery named after him, was already reflecting on how the year had gone. “2025 was a resetting year,” he said. After what he calls a “bad” 2024, the eminent dealer has spent recent months fine-tuning how his gallery operates to be “less dependent on the volatility of the market and the volatility of relationships.” The real verdict, he argued, will come in 2026, when it should be clearer whether the market challenges are structural or “occasional.” Are collectors totally recalibrating their buying behaviors, or is the recent slowdown a cyclical dip?

It is a typically pragmatic stance from the dry-humored dealer who, in the almost four decades since founding his gallery, has watched the art market pendulum swing with as much speed as the fortunes of his beloved soccer team, AC Milan. Since he founded his Milan gallery in 1987—after a detour through pharmacy studies and an early love of avant‑garde music—De Carlo has witnessed the art market undergo several permutations. One of Italy’s most influential art dealers, De Carlo represents more than 60 artists, including Maurizio Cattelan (who famously taped him to a wall in 1999) and Rudolf Stingel. His gallery now operates branches in Hong Kong, London, Paris, and an office in Seoul, as well as its original location in Milan.

For De Carlo, part of the current recalibration in the market is cultural. The trade grew used to “easy years,” he noted, and “lost…the perception that the art market is capricious.” His gallery’s answer has been to tighten ties with those who matter most: artists, collectors, and institutions. The more those relationships are cultivated, he said, the less the business is buffeted by “volatility.”

This effort is not about rethinking the gallery’s ethos, which is marked by a familial atmosphere. “We were never a corporate gallery,” he said, noting that artists were the key to his business. He used the analogy of publishers, where “the brand is made by the writers.” Today, he combines decades‑long artist relationships with a restless curiosity for new talent, with young names such as Diane Dal-Pra and Ludovic Nkoth joining the gallery in recent years. “Everything we did, we did for the artists,” he said.

Sleeping Beauty I, 2025
Ludovic Nkoth
MASSIMODECARLO

This extends to the gallery’s approach to programming. Each exhibition should be a “specific experience,” he said. He points to the range of shows in the London gallery, which occupies a charming floor of an 18th-century Mayfair townhouse. Recently, the gallery has mounted a refined Peter Halley presentation, before switching tack completely to showcase work by the young painter Lenz Geerk: an apt demonstration of the variety in its program.

De Carlo also likes to switch things up in his other galleries. In Paris, the gallery’s storefront—Pièce Unique—acts like a street‑level vitrine. Although there was originally a brick wall facing the street, the architect Kengo Kuma refitted it with a single sheet of glass, collapsing the threshold between city and gallery, turning a small room into a public moment. “It’s like a niche into the street where you can see art,” he said. In October, the space was the subject of much chatter during Art Basel Paris, when it opened Scandi artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset’s October 2025 (2025), a striking, hyperrealistic, life-size sculpture of a gallery assistant slumped forward over a large desk. “Gallery spaces can influence the possibilities of a show,” De Carlo said. “The gallery in that moment is a kind of producer.”

The gallery’s precise approach to artists and programming has been a constant throughout the art market’s twists and turns. Today, De Carlo believes the market is becoming “more serious, with collectors and trends that are less hysterical.” Practically, that means less speculation and more time for collectors to consider purchases. His preferred indicator of success is “more artworks that go directly from the wall of the gallery to the wall of the houses of the collectors,” rather than into storage. Before COVID, he said, too many pieces disappeared into warehouses. If the current market cycle is slower but more deliberate, it could be healthy, aligning commercial interest with the conviction and desire to live with art.

But the future is also dependent on the economy, which will have to create the right conditions “to support our vision and the vision of the audience.” De Carlo described himself as a “well‑informed pessimist,” not because he expects the worst, but because the only approach is to see risk clearly and keep moving. “I always say that a pessimistic person is an optimist with a lot of information,” he said.

His view of Milan, the city that formed him, illustrates this realism. The city’s advantage, he says, is its cultural density: design, fashion, food, and a surprising concentration of institutions and private foundations—Fondazione Trussardi, Fondazione Prada, the Triennale Design Museum, the Pirelli HangarBicocca—within a bikeable radius. “The concentration of all those things makes the city very exciting,” he said.

Yet he doesn’t expect the recent buzz around its art scene—with new galleries opening and wealthy residents drawn in by Italy’s attractive tax regime—to alter local market taste, yet. Milan is “a city that is still linked to some very old values.” He noted that many Milan collectors are most interested in 20th-century Italian artists like Lucio Fontana, Enrico Castellani, and Piero Manzoni, and movements such as Arte Povera. “It’s still a city that is not really completely connected with what’s going on in the future,” he noted. “I do not think that one or two galleries will change this, but it is important that they think that there is a possibility, and this makes Milan more attractive.”

As for the future more broadly, De Carlo sees “two landscapes:” one is “hell;” the other is “who knows what.” He paraphrased a famous quote, “Once you are in hell, go on.” “This is the exciting part of the business,” he said. “We are in a difficult situation, but we have to go on.”



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Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Nan Goldin’s “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency” gets first U.K. show at Gagosian. https://ift.tt/LCchuMg

Gagosian will open an exhibition of 126 photographs from Nan Goldin’s “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency” at its Davies Street gallery in London on January 13th, 2026. The presentation will mark the first time the complete series has been shown in the United Kingdom. It also aligns with the 40th anniversary of the photobook’s publication.

Now 72, Goldin is an American photographer known for documenting the queer community during the AIDS crisis with raw, diaristic images that capture nightlife and the complexities of relationships. Her work is celebrated for shifting photography toward more personal and candid forms of expression.

Goldin worked on “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency” from 1973 to 1986. The photographs examine relationships and gender through images taken of Goldin’s personal life. The work has come to define the downtown New York community in which it was made, as well as evoking the realities of addiction and the challenges of LGBTQ+ life at the time.

“I don’t select people in order to photograph them; I photograph directly from my life,” Goldin said in a press statement. “These pictures come out of relationships, not observation. They are an invitation to my world, but now they have become a record of the generation that was lost.”

Goldin first developed this project as a slideshow of images, playing along with a soundtrack. This artwork was first presented in New York nightclubs before being published as a book by Aperture in 1986. It is currently in its 23rd printing.

The Gagosian exhibition will open during a period of significant international focus on Goldin’s work. A major retrospective devoted to her moving-image work, “This Will Not End Well,” is currently on view at Pirelli HangarBicocca in Milan through February 15, 2026, before traveling to the Grand Palais in Paris from March 18 to June 21, 2026. Goldin’s Stendhal Syndrome (2024) installation is on view at the Vancouver Art Gallery through April 12, 2026.



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Whitney Biennial announces artists for its 2026 edition. https://ift.tt/OkbZa9R

The Whitney Museum of American Art has announced the participating artists for the Whitney Biennial 2026. The biennial exhibition will open...

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