Friday, January 16, 2026

Rebecca Manson’s Giant Porcelain Butterfly Wings Push the Limits of Ceramics https://ift.tt/pDOfh3E

Blues, greens, violets, and oranges shimmer through Rebecca Manson’s 13 massive sculptures of butterfly and moth wings. On view now at the solo exhibition, “Time, You Must Be Laughing,” through February 28th at San Francisco’s Jessica Silverman, their glowing iridescence encourages viewers to take a step back and zoom in close to see the tiny ceramic pieces that make up the scales on the wings. Most startling of all, considering they are made of porcelain, is that, with a flexible adhesive, the sculptures drape on the wall, mimicking textiles.

“I’m a clay nerd, and I’m obsessed with this sort of spontaneity and the movement in the material,” Manson said. “It was a goal for so many years to capture movement and to try and honor the part of the process that is so fluid.”

Black Swallowtail, 2025
Rebecca Manson
Jessica Silverman

Torn Wingtip, 2025
Rebecca Manson
Jessica Silverman

This goal is finally coming to fruition with her growing art world profile. Last month, Jessica Silverman announced representation of Manson. Following group shows at Ballroom Marfa in Texas and the Center for Craft in North Carolina, last summer, she had her first solo museum show, “Barbecue,” at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth in Texas (it later traveled to Arsenal Contemporary in Montreal). For the exhibition, she created more than 40,000 ceramic leaves, along with a barbecue grill, giving the show its name. Like “Time, You Must Be Laughing,” it was intricate, monumental, and presented a new vision for the possibilities of clay.

When Manson was eight years old, she started taking ceramics classes. She loved using the wheel as well as the spirit of cooperation in the class.

“I had a really hard time socially as a kid,” she said. “That was a social space I was finally thriving in.”

Shelly, 2025
Rebecca Manson
Jessica Silverman

To make the microscopically detailed wings in works like Black Swallowtail (2025), Manson first looks at images and makes collages in Photoshop. She then does a sketch, which she digitally prints onto the canvas. She makes hundreds of thousands of small flat pieces of clay, which she and her team call “smushes.” She fires and glazes them to use for the scales on the wings. During our interview, she showed me the many boxes of smushes, divided by color, and the carts which contain all the colors for a single wing. Finally, she and her team glue them onto the canvas, which is then displayed on the wall.

She described this work as “a lot of project management” and admitted it can be tedious. But she said it makes her pay attention—the way she hopes viewers do when looking at the wings.

Manson said she had a hard time in school, unwilling to do anything she didn’t want to do. But to get to the satisfaction of creating what she envisioned, she will endure any amount of monotony. “I can do superhuman things if I just have some curiosity, some spark,” she said. “You have to get through these steps, and it’s about finding something playful in that.”

Nightsnack, 2022-2025
Rebecca Manson
Jessica Silverman

Along with clay, Manson has always loved the natural world, growing up in a semi-rural area of the Hudson Valley in New York. In 2023, she did a residency in the Norwegian Arctic Circle, and she said that observing the frozen landscape and seeing its decline had a profound impact on her work.

When Manson saw a photo of the details of butterfly wings on Instagram, she knew that was her next project. She calls butterflies “pollinator warriors,” both delicate and resilient, and said they encapsulate several important themes—nature, fragility, movement, beauty, and impermanence. The title of the show, for instance, references a 1975 Joni Mitchell song, “Sweet Bird,” about the constancy of change.

Manson’s attention to detail doesn’t stop with the wings. The exhibition also has a swing set, based on the one she had as a kid, with a glass bikini hanging off it. The swimsuit was made by glass artist Jessica Tsai, who made glass onions, chicken, charcoal, and embers for “Barbecue.” With these glass pieces, Manson hoped to create a surprise for the viewer: She compared it to discovering something unexpected on a nature walk. She said this new work with butterflies feels like exactly what she wants to explore about transformation.

Oilslick, 2025
Rebecca Manson
Jessica Silverman

“There’s this question about what’s happening during their metamorphosis. They fully break down and their cells are recreated. It’s truly a rebirth,” she said. “Change is really hard, and so I’m interested in using beauty as an access point to talk about challenges.”



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New Swatch colletion with Guggenheim will feature Degas, Monet, and more iconic artists. https://ift.tt/HQSi7Rz

Swatch has announced a new collection with the Guggenheim museums in New York and Venice. The Swatch x Guggenheim Collection includes four watch designs inspired by works by Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Paul Klee, and Jackson Pollock. The collection launched globally in stores and online on January 15, 2026.

The collection marks the first time these artists’ works have been featured in the Swatch Art Journey, which began in 2023. The initiative, which partners with museums and galleries around the world, is designed to bring fine art into everyday life through accessible, wearable formats. Previous partners have included the Tate and the Museum of Modern Art. This new release continues Swatch’s long-standing relationship with the Guggenheim Foundation, which dates back to the early 1990s.

Each timepiece in the series references a specific painting in the Guggenheim’s collections. For example, one watch is based on Dancers in Green and Yellow (1903) by Degas, held at the Guggenheim New York. The watch face zooms in on the feet of a ballerina, while the strap reflects the vibrant palette and compositional cropping typical of Degas’s ballet scenes. Another features Monet’s The Palazzo Ducale, Seen from San Giorgio Maggiore (1908), also from the New York museum. In addition to its impressionist imagery, the watch includes a dial that glows orange under UV light.

The only piece in the collection inspired by the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice is based on Pollock’s Alchemy (1947). The design replicates the Abstract Expressionist’s poured-paint technique on both the strap and the face.

All four watches include a double-length second hand, a nod to the transatlantic partnership between the New York and Venice institutions. Swatch and the Guggenheim say the collaboration supports ongoing conservation efforts at both museums and reflects their shared goal of expanding access to modern and contemporary art.



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Thursday, January 15, 2026

Felix Art Fair announces 56 exhibitors for its 2026 edition. https://ift.tt/KrPo6VR

Felix Art Fair has announced the exhibitor list for its eighth edition, set to take place from February 25th to March 1st at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles.

The 2026 edition brings together 56 galleries from Tokyo, Chicago, Buenos Aires, Milan, Seoul, Miami, London, Dallas, New York, and Los Angeles. The lineup includes more than 20 first-time exhibitors, including Los Angeles’s Feia and Tokyo’s SOM GALLERY. Returning galleries include Paris-based gallery sobering and Canadian gallery Patel Brown.

This year, 18 of the exhibitors have a presence in Los Angeles, including Megan Mulrooney, albertz benda, Luis De Jesus Los Angeles, La Loma Projects, The Hole, and Weinstein Gallery. This also includes Morán Morán, whose directors, Mills and Al Morán, co-founded the fair with Los Angeles–based collector Dean Valentine after the 2025 L.A. wildfires.

“We’ve always focused on creating a relaxed and genuinely welcoming experience, and this year’s exhibitor list really reflects that spirit,” Mills told Artsy. “We’re especially excited to bring together a strong group of emerging galleries as first-time exhibitors alongside longtime returning participants. At its core, Felix has always been about offering a place for discovery—allowing for meaningful encounters with new ideas, artists, and galleries.”

The 2026 fair will also coincide with the launch of The Felix Podcast, a new audio project hosted by Valentine alongside Los Angeles–based journalist Janelle Zara. The podcast will feature conversations with figures from across the art world, including philanthropist Jarl Mohn and artists Frances Stark and Joey Terrill.

“We are thrilled to announce the exhibitor list for this year’s fair, which captures the range and energy of contemporary art today,” the three founders said in a joint statement. “As we return to the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel for our eighth edition, we look forward to platforming many emerging galleries alongside a strong group of respected, returning galleries whose programs continue to shape and strengthen the fair.”

Here is the full list of exhibitors:

  • 193 Gallery
  • 56 Henry
  • Adams and Ollman
  • albertz benda
  • Althuis Hofland Fine Arts
  • ANDREW RAFACZ Gallery
  • ATLA
  • Brigitte Mulholland
  • Carlye Packer
  • COHJU
  • COMA
  • Corbett vs. Dempsey
  • Creative Growth
  • DIMIN
  • DON’T LOOK Projects
  • Era Gallery
  • Entrance
  • Europa
  • Feia
  • Galleri Urbane
  • Gallery Playlist
  • Harkawik
  • The Hole
  • Jacob Arthur Gallery
  • Johansson Projects
  • La Loma Projects
  • Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
  • Marinaro
  • Megan Mulrooney
  • Morán Morán
  • New York Life Gallery
  • NIAD Art Center
  • Nina Johnson
  • One Trick Pony
  • Oolong Gallery
  • parrasch heijnen
  • Patel Brown
  • Plato Gallery
  • Print Bakery (PBG)
  • Slip House
  • sobering
  • SOLOS
  • SOM GALLERY
  • Soulios Gallery
  • Stroll Garden
  • Tappeto Volante
  • Tara Downs
  • Tierra del Sol Gallery
  • Timothy Hawkinson Gallery
  • Tyler Park Presents and Gattopardo
  • Uffner & Liu
  • Ungallery
  • Volume Gallery
  • Weinstein Gallery
  • Yancey Richardson
  • Yossi Milo Gallery


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11 Artists Having Breakout Moments in 2026 https://ift.tt/6LpmQSZ

Becoming a breakout artist takes time. Over the years, ambitious exhibitions, prominent gallery representations, major awards, and significant art fair presentations all lay the groundwork for major attention. In 2026, such curatorial, critical, and professional achievements will finally pay off for the eleven breakout stars on our list. They include seasoned veterans who will receive major shows and public commissions, as well as figures who have steadily built momentum at the emerging stages of their careers. Keep an eye on these talents as they finally get the spotlight they deserve.

Diambe

B. 1993, Rio de Janeiro. Lives and works in São Paulo.

Vida Amorável, 2025
Diambe
Simões de Assis

The nonbinary, Brazilian artist Diambe uses organic materials such as egg tempera and plant dyes to make fantastical landscape paintings. Their twisting, corporeal bronze sculptures originate in beeswax casts. The artist elegantly balances figuration and abstraction as they consider memory, interiority, and psychological tension.

In 2025, São Paulo–based gallery Simões de Assis mounted a strong solo presentation by Diambe at Frieze London. The booth was part of the fair’s curated section “Echoes in the Present,” which explored cultural exchange and the transatlantic slave trade, and earned many critical accolades. Artsy named it a “best booth.”

The artist kicks off 2026 with their largest solo presentation to date: “Bees being beans” at Kunsthalle Basel, curated by Mohamed Almusibli, director and chief curator. The show features a new film and sculptures, furthering Diambe’s explorations of cultural memory, colonial legacies, and the fragility of the natural world.


Tuan Andrew Nguyen

B. 1976, Saigon, Vietnam. Lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City.

Tuan Andrew Nguyen uses documentary strategies and speculative storytelling to create layered, poetic narratives that foreground voices excluded from official histories. The aftermath of the Vietnam War, which displaced the artist and his family in 1979, is often a touchstone for his film, sculpture, and research-driven installations.

In 2025, Nguyen earned a prestigious MacArthur fellowship. He opened the major presentation “We Were Lost in Our Country,” curated by Irene Sunwoo at the Art Institute of Chicago (on view through March 9th) and participated in the São Paulo and Singapore Biennials; it was a year of dense global visibility.

Magic and Mayhem, 2018
Tuan Andrew Nguyen
10 Chancery Lane Gallery

This spring, Nguyen will bring his meditative, politically charged work to a public context when he unveils a new commission for New York’s High Line Plinth. His 27-foot-tall, sandstone sculpture of the Buddha, titled The Light That Shines Through the Universe, is inspired by the colossal, 6th-century Bamiyan Buddhas that were destroyed by the Taliban in 2001. Nguyen’s work will be a monument to heritage and peace.


Balraj Khanna

B. 1939, Punjab, India. D. 2024, London.

Untitled (Organic Forms), 1974
Balraj Khanna
Grosvenor Gallery

Lake, 1986
Balraj Khanna
Jhaveri Contemporary

Self-taught painter Balraj Khanna helped shape Britain’s rich community of Indian artists. He was born in India, moved to the United Kingdom in 1962, and became a member of the Indian Painters’ Collective. Khanna was also an acclaimed writer, gallery owner, and curator, positions he leveraged to support his peers.

Khanna’s own work, which spans abstraction and figuration, reflects a transnational modernism shaped by his own experiences with migration and postcolonial identity. The artist’s vibrant paintings feature celestial, organic patterns, and hints of puppet-like figures. Khanna experimented with mixed media later in his career, and sand and spray painting are also key to his oeuvre.

Shortly after the artist’s 2024 death, Jhaveri Contemporary featured his work at Independent 20th Century in 2025. In September 2026, Ikon Gallery in Birmingham, England, is staging a major retrospective of Khanna’s work, featuring early, rarely exhibited works from the 1960s and offering a long-overdue celebration of his contributions as an artist and advocate.


Klára Hosnedlová

B. 1990, Uherské Hradiště, Czech Republic. Lives and works in Berlin.

Klára Hosnedlová creates large-scale, immersive sculptural installations that combine textiles, glass, metal, sandstone, and other materials to examine nationalism, labor, and the construction of collective identity. Her environments create simultaneously protective and oppressive spaces as they draw from Eastern European histories, folklore, craft, and militarized aesthetics.

In 2025, Hosnedlová’s career flourished. White Cube announced its representation of the artist, and she opened “embrace,” her largest institutional solo show to date at the Hamburger Bahnhof.

Hosnedlová enters 2026 with equal momentum. In February, she will open her inaugural solo exhibition with White Cube in its London location. Later this spring, Hosnedlová will debut a site-specific installation in the atrium stairway of New York’s soon-to-reopenNew Museum. This marks the artist’s first U.S. museum commission.


Kim Hankyul

B. 1990, Busan. Lives and works in Oslo.

Kim Hankyul creates striking kinetic sculptures and installations that explore vulnerability, the body, and the slippage of reality in the digital age. He works across disciplines, combining objects like sound equipment, models of skeletons, and lights to create environments that feel intimate yet disquieting and emotionally charged.

In February, Hankyul will open a solo exhibition “SOLO/OSLO: Kim Hankyul,” curated by Tominga O’Donnell at the Munch Museum. It’s Hankyul’s most complex exhibition to date: He’ll take over the museum’s expansive 10th floor, significantly scaling his work via an immersive installation that will hang from the ceiling and span over 16 feet.


Gabriel Chaile

B. 1985, San Miguel de Tucumán, Argentina. Lives and works in Lisbon.

Gabriel Chaile’s sculptures draw on Indigenous knowledge systems, pre-Columbian architecture, and communal rituals. These interests often manifest in large-scale clay and adobe forms that resemble vessels, bodies, or dwellings. Chaile’s work collapses distinctions between sculpture and shelter, foregrounding ideas of care, ancestry, and collective memory.

The Argentine artist has gained steady international acclaim in recent years. In 2022, his work was included in the Venice Biennale, followed by a public commission on the High Line that opened in 2023. Last year, Chaile opened his first New York solo show at Marianne Boesky Gallery, which included a series of large-scale adobe sculptures, photographs, and drawings inspired by the artist’s experiences during a No Kings Day protest in Montana.

In April, Chaile will open his first major solo show in London at Whitechapel Gallery. Chaile is extending his interest in community and Indigenous practices, shifting his lens to the cultural and historical legacy of London’s East End, where the gallery is located.


Benni Bosetto

B. 1987, Merate, Italy. Lives and works in Milan.

Untitled, 2019
Benni Bosetto
Palazzo Monti

Italian artist Benni Bosetto draws inspiration from literature, cinema, mythology, and psychoanalysis to explore the myriad forces that shape identity and ideas about the body. She makes dense, finely drawn compositions, while a restrained grayscale palette often pervades her expansive, multifaceted practice: Sculpture, installation, and performance are also key to her work.

For her first major institutional solo show, at Pirelli HangarBicocca in Milan, Bosetto will reimagine the gallery space as a domestic interior that blurs the public and private. The exhibition is inspired by Daphne du Maurier’s 1938 psychological thriller Rebecca, in which a wealthy man’s second wife is haunted by her new home and the mysteries surrounding her deceased predecessor. Bosetto’s installation will immerse visitors in a dreamlike setting, inviting them to consider their own relationship to identity, care, and intimacy.


Pat Oleszko

B. 1947, Detroit. Lives and works in New York.

In 2026, Pat Oleszko gets a long-overdue institutional reckoning. The 78-year-old pioneer of feminist performance and sculpture blends humor, confrontation, and bodily exaggeration to challenge gender norms and institutional authority. Both the artist and her work are easily recognizable: Oleszko often wears playful outfits that feature cartoonish, inflatable breasts and exuberant hats. Indeed, costume and quirky, inflatable figures have become Oleszko’s signatures. Over the last 50 years, the artist has steadily earned critical regard and staged performances and presentations at major museums like MoMA, but she’s remained relatively under the radar.

In 2024, New York’s David Peter Francis gallery staged Oleszko’s first New York solo show in nearly 25 years. The next year, they announced their representation of the artist and mounted a solo presentation of her work at Art Basel Miami Beach. It memorably included 13-foot inflatable legs and feet inspired by the Wicked Witch of the East from “The Wizard of Oz.” In 2026, Oleszko will be included in the Whitney Biennial and in “Fool Disclosure” at SculptureCenter, her first New York solo exhibition in 35 years. These milestones will honor her influence and reintroduce her radical practice to contemporary audiences.


Seba Calfuqueo

B. 1991, Santiago. Lives and works in Santiago.

Image weaver, Image technologies , 2024
Seba Calfuqueo
Galeria Marília Razuk

Seba Calfuqueo draws on her Mapuche cultural heritage and trans identity to confront extraction, colonial violence, and gendered power structures. She uses her body as a site of resistance and transformation throughout her performances, films, ceramics, and installations. Water, and the sacred bodies that carry it, is a recurring motif.

2024 was a big year for the artist. She mounted a solo presentation at the New Museum and participated in the Whitney Biennial and Venice Biennale. TRAY TRAY KO (2022), her video installation at the Whitney, depicted Calfuqueo carrying a long, blue cloth through a river and into a waterfall, underscoring the environment’s immense power.

In October 2026, Calfuqueo’s first European solo exhibition, “CAUTÍN,” will open at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza in Madrid. Her installation will feature pottery, large-format paintings, videos, and performance. All draw inspiration from the Cautín River in Chile, which has become emblematic of colonial extraction: The Mapuche fight to protect their land as the Chilean state diverts their water source for irrigation and hydroelectric developments. Throughout all this work, Calfuqueo centers Indigenous knowledge and promotes environmental justice and feminism through a First Nations perspective.


Tony Lewis

B. 1986, Los Angeles. Lives and works in Chicago.

Flowers, 2020
Tony Lewis
MASSIMODECARLO

Tony Lewis uses graphite powder to create large-scale, often monochromatic drawings that center on Black linguistic traditions and consider the relationship between visual art and language. His practice also includes collages, digital works, and installations that also exemplify the artist’s pared-down, typographic style: Lewis repeats, distorts, and absents symbols like letters in his larger compositions, which expose how social and political structures shape meaning. Olney Gleason announced their representation of the artist last year. In May, Lewis will open his first New York solo show with the gallery. The exhibition will include new bodies of work that continue the artist’s investigations of race, politics, and systems of power.


Nat Faulkner

B. 1995, Chippenham, U.K. Lives and works in London.

London-based artist Nat Faulkner works at the intersection of photography and sculpture with an emphasis on experimentation. Rather than treating photography as a tool for representation, Faulkner focuses on its material conditions—light, chemistry, time, and chance. He transforms the darkroom itself into an active site of production and discovery.

Faulkner’s works include large-scale analogue prints, sculptural objects, and installations that foreground the physical residues of photographic processes, such as silver-rich surfaces and chemically altered materials. By reimagining traditional processes like “silvering” (in which metallic silver oxidizes to create a shiny haze), Faulkner pushes the boundaries of his medium.

Faulkner has enjoyed recent exhibitions in London, Milan, and New York. In 2024, he won the Camden Art Centre Emerging Artist Prize at Frieze London for his presentation with London-based gallery Brunette Coleman. The prize culminates in Faulkner’s first U.K. institutional solo exhibition at Camden Art Centre this January. Titled “Strong Water,” the show features new work that further explores the process and materials of photographic production.



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Wednesday, January 14, 2026

$50,000 USA Fellowships for 2026 awarded to 6 visual artists. https://ift.tt/iQyW2Gj

The United States Artists (USA) has announced 50 artists and collectives for its 2026 USA fellowships, ranging across 10 disciplines, and the recipient of its Beeresford Prize. This year, the fellowships were awarded to six visual artists: Edra Soto, Eric-Paul Riege, Macon Reed, Maia Chao, Mercedes Dorame, and Raheleh Filsoofi.

The USA Fellowship awards artists $50,000 in unrestricted cash, allowing recipients to decide how best to support their lives and practices. The Berresford Prize honors a single cultural practitioner for their work supporting artists. This year, the prize was awarded to Lori Lea Pourier (Oglala Lakota), the founder of the First People’s Fund.

“For two decades, United States Artists has advanced a simple yet powerful conviction—that artists are essential to the imagination and health of our society,” said Judilee Reed, president and CEO of United States Artists. “Our commitment to unrestricted support, with programs such as the USA Fellowship, has enabled artists across every discipline and place to sustain their livelihoods, take creative risks, and define their own paths forward.”

Chicago-based Edra Soto is the director of outdoor project space The Franklin, whose interdisciplinary work explores social and political power structures. Her new installation, the place of dwelling, opens at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in January 2026. Based in Philadelphia, Maia Chao makes performance and video work with an anthropological approach, documenting the lives of people in the U.S. She will be participating in the 2026 Whitney Biennial.

A photographer based in California, Mercedes Dorame taps into her Tongva ancestry to inspire her nature-inspired works. Meanwhile, Raheleh Filsoofi is a nomadic artist whose work focuses on immigration and social activism, with clay and sound as her primary media. New Orleans–based artist Macon Reed is known for large-scale installations built from handmade structural elements that explore queerness and feminism. Finally, New Mexico–based artist Eric-Paul Riege uses fiber and textiles to create giant installations and sculptures, inspired by his Indigenous heritage.

The craft category honored six artists, including Anina Major, Anthony Sonnenberg, Corey Pemberton, Norwood Viviano, Robell Awake, and Xenobia Bailey.

The United States Artists’s Fellowship program was launched in 2006. In the past two decades, USA has awarded $53 million total to more than 1,000 individuals. Previous recipients include Howardena Pindell, María Magdalena Campos-Pons, and Gala Porras-Kim.



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The Rijksmuseum announces new outdoor sculpture garden, scheduled to open this fall. https://ift.tt/9wuBFGg

An exceptional private donation will allow Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum to develop a new public sculpture garden featuring works by Louise Bourgeois and Alexander Calder. The Don Quixote Foundation committed €60 million ($69.89 million) to support the creation of the garden and place a number of sculptures with the museum on a long-term loan. The new garden is slated to open in fall 2026.

The new site, known as the Don Quixote Pavilion and Garden at the Rijksmuseum, is intended to serve as a permanent exhibition space for modern and contemporary sculpture. “Local residents, city dwellers, and art lovers will soon be enjoying the tranquil natural surroundings and artistic beauty,” Femke Halsema, Mayor of Amsterdam, said in a statement.

Works on view will also include those by Alberto Giacometti, Jean Arp, Roni Horn, and Henry Moore. The garden will also be used for temporary programming; however, exact details have yet to be announced.

The garden will incorporate the three nearby pavilions with the Carel Willinkplantsoen park, next door to the museum. The exhibition structures will be built by the London firm Foster + Partners, while the garden will be designed by the Belgian landscape architect Piet Blanckaert.

“This is a donation of historic significance, and a historic moment for the Rijksmuseum,” Taco Dibbits, General Director of the Rijksmuseum, said in a statement. “It will give modern sculpture the visibility it deserves. It also marks an unprecedented enhancement of the Rijksmuseum’s collection of 20th-century art.”

The Don Quixote Foundation has supported the museum’s annual sculpture exhibition since 2013. The organization’s donation ensures that visitors can visit the show free of charge. The forthcoming sculpture garden will also be free and open to the public every day.



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Tuesday, January 13, 2026

New York’s New Museum to reopen with major new commissions on March 21st. https://ift.tt/Kehql8Q

New York’s New Museum will open its 60,000-square-foot building expansion on March 21st, following two years of closure. The museum will feature new artist commissions by Tschabalala Self, Klára Hosnedlová, and Sarah Lucas.

The New Museum closed in March 2024 to undertake an expansion of its SANAA-designed flagship building in New York’s Lower East Side. The new building was designed by New York design firm OMA’s Shohei Shigematsu and Rem Koolhaas in partnership with executive architect Cooper Robertson. The museum was slated to reopen last fall, but delays to the renovation forced a postponement. The museum now totals approximately 120,000 square feet.

The inaugural exhibition will be “New Humans: Memories of the Future,” featuring works by more than 200 artists, writers, scientists, architects, and filmmakers. In a statement, the museum said the show will explore “what it means to be ‘human.’” Some artists featured include Francis Bacon, H.R. Giger, Sophia Al-Maria, and Hito Steyerl. For the opening weekend—March 21st and 22nd—admission will be free to the public.

“Since our founding nearly 50 years ago, the New Museum has been a home for the most groundbreaking art of today and a haven for the artists who make it,” Lisa Phillips, director of the New Museum, said in a statement. “Our new 120,000-square-foot building on the Bowery signals our redoubled commitment to new art and new ideas, and to the museum as an ever-evolving site for risk-taking, collaboration, and experimentation.”

Alongside its reopening exhibition, the New Museum will debut a trio of permanent, site-responsive commissions. Self will create a new work integrated into the museum’s Bowery façade, while Czech artist Hosnedlová is installing a large-scale sculpture that rises through the new Atrium Stair, making the building’s vertical circulation part of the artwork itself. Outside, a new piece by Lucas will activate the museum’s public plaza, extending the institution’s program into the street.

The expansion includes 9,600 square feet of additional exhibition space and 3,210 square feet dedicated to artist studios and education spaces. The project also included an enlarged seventh-floor Sky Room and a 74-seat Forum space. The museum will also inaugurate a new restaurant run by Henry Rich of the Oberon Group and led by executive chef Julia Sherman, as well as a new bookstore.



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Rebecca Manson’s Giant Porcelain Butterfly Wings Push the Limits of Ceramics https://ift.tt/pDOfh3E

Blues, greens, violets, and oranges shimmer through Rebecca Manson ’s 13 massive sculptures of butterfly and moth wings. On view now at the...

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