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.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/grpwNZ0

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.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/1JGkzXh

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.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/GpBuw5J

5 Themes That Will Define the Art Market in 2026 https://ift.tt/GXDYOyh

Major shifts in consumer sentiment defined 2025’s art market. Tariff turmoil and gallery closures roiled the U.S., while last fall’s blockbuster auction records and buoyant art weeks suggested a comeback. In spite of both industry and economic headwinds, many market professionals ended the year with a dose of optimism. 2026 looks to build on that tentative momentum.

The global economic picture mirrors this art market fragility. The IMF has global growth rates pegged at 3.1% (up from 2.6% in 2025), and inflation is expected to fall to around 3.5–3.7%. This could have a ripple effect on lowering interest rates in advanced economies, easing the cost of borrowing and, potentially, spending on art.

Here, we share five key art market themes to watch in 2026.


1. A momentous year for the Middle East

One region is on art aficionados’ lips this year: the Middle East.

2026 will be a watershed moment for the region’s market, driven by a convergence of major institutional openings and a significant expansion of the regional art fair circuit.

A primary catalyst is the opening of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi in June. The Frank Gehry–designed building will be the Guggenheim’s largest facility yet and is set to anchor the region as a global capital for modern and contemporary art. It joins a slate of other recent significant museum openings in the region, including Zayed National Museum and teamLab Phenomena in Abu Dhabi and the Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum in Doha.

The Qatari capital will also host the inaugural Rubiya Qatar Quadrennial later this year, while Saudi Arabia will look to solidify its growing cultural influence with the third Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale and the fifth AlUla Arts Festival. These events signal the Gulf’s massive push to become a primary global art destination, leveraging star names like Rirkrit Tiravanija at Rubiya and Sara Abdu at AlUla to draw international visitors and diversify its economies through high-level cultural tourism.

Institutional momentum coalesces with a surge of commercial activity. Art Basel will make its Middle Eastern debut with Art Basel Qatar in February, while the inaugural Frieze Abu Dhabi will launch in November, positioned by its organizers as a “unique gateway to the region.” Regional staple Art Dubai, meanwhile, will also celebrate its 20th anniversary with its most expansive edition to date.

Major auction houses are growing and consolidating in the region, too. Following Sotheby’s landmark $17.28 million auction debut in Saudi Arabia last February and its $133 million Abu Dhabi Collectors Week sales in November, the house has officially scheduled the “Origins II” auction later this month in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, headlined by a $3 million Pablo Picasso work. Christie’s, meanwhile, is marking its 20th anniversary in the region by commencing the first full year of commercial operations in the Saudi capital.


2. Who will be this year’s biennale breakouts in the art market?

From the Whitney to West Africa, 2026 will be a banner year for biennales around the world. While Biennales are not strictly commercial, artists who generate buzz from these events often become highly sought after by galleries and collectors.

For instance, the 2024 Venice Biennale main exhibition, “Foreigners Everywhere,” emphasized artists outside the Western canon. It revived interest in previously overlooked artists such as Emmi Whitehorse, Ione Saldanha, and Olga de Amaral, all of whom have gone on to set auction records.

This year, several of the globe’s most influential biennales converge, most notably the 61st Venice Biennale, the 25th Biennale of Sydney, and the 82nd Whitney Biennial in New York, alongside editions in Bangkok, Malta, Lagos, and Diriyah. If there is a unified theme, it is a focus on intimacy and historical reclamation: Curators often highlight decolonial aesthetics and Indigenous sovereignty.

The most significant of these events is the Venice Biennale, which opens in May. Its main exhibition, “In Minor Keys,” was fully conceptualized by the late curator Koyo Kouoh, focusing on “low harmonies” and intimate displays. The artist list is expected to be released in February.

In Venice, the main exhibition is only the starting point: National pavilions, pop-up shows, and institutional showcases will unfold throughout the city, with several discoveries likely to emerge from these presentations. Announced highlights include Amar Kanwar at Palazzo Grassi, Lorna Simpson at Punta della Dogana, and Marina Abramović at Galleria dell’Accademia.


3. Doubling down on quality at auction

Last year, auction houses saw less speculation and more bidding aimed at artworks of historical endurance. As veteran auctioneer Jussi Pylkkänen wrote of the November season, “there was something of a ‘return to order’ as collectors competed for and consistently paid the highest prices for artists with established reputations.”

In 2026, expect bidders to continue favoring artists whose markets have already weathered multiple economic cycles and those with institutional validation. A cursory glance at confirmed lots at upcoming auctions seems to confirm this; a $30 million Canaletto painting at Christie’s Old Masters Sale in February should be among the year’s early highlights. Public auctions in 2026 will indeed double down on sales that center on art-historical stalwarts.

In an environment shaped by recent economic volatility, bidders tend to gravitate toward artists with well-established pricing benchmarks and perceived downside protection. Museum exhibitions, retrospectives, and strong provenance will remain key, with auction houses actively foregrounding these credentials to reinforce confidence and stimulate competition. While contemporary and emerging names will not disappear from auctions altogether, they may feature in more tightly curated offerings.


4. A more measured pace in the gallery sector

After a year in which several major galleries shuttered amid market volatility, many others are approaching 2026 as a period of consolidation and confidence-building. Collector attitudes have also grown more discerning: Some 30% of art collectors surveyed in Artsy’s Art Market Trends 2025 report said they’re being more selective with their purchases—a sentiment likely to persist into the year ahead.

With overheads remaining stubbornly high, galleries are increasingly adopting innovative and collaborative models to manage costs. Cross-gallery partnerships and shared spaces are set to further flourish, alongside expanded hybrid approaches that blend physical and digital platforms. Some 75% of galleries surveyed in Art Market Trends 2025 cited economic uncertainty as a major challenge, and 57% reported expanding online presence in response.


5. What does AI consolidation look like in the art market?

In 2025, Time magazine named the “architects of AI” its Person of the Year, noting that artificial intelligence’s “full potential roared into view” and that “there will be no turning back or opting out.”

The art market has reached a similar inflection point. The question is no longer whether AI is having an impact, but how extensively it should be embraced.

Debate around AI-generated art will remain lively as such works attract collector attention. The intensity of these opinions was evident last February, when Christie’s hosted its first all-AI art auction and faced widespread backlash from more than 6,000 artists who claimed in an open letter that AI models, “and the companies behind them, exploit human artists, using their work without permission or payment to build commercial AI products that compete with them.” Will we see more AI at auction houses and art fairs? Time will tell.

This year, copyright transparency may also come into sharper focus. The $1.5 billion settlement of Bartz v. Anthropic last September could help to set a precedent for remunerating artists whose works have been pirated by machine learning.

Operationally, AI adoption is also accelerating. Galleries are increasingly using AI tools for administrative tasks such as cataloguing, sales pitches, and registrarial work, while collectors deploy them for research and provenance checks. But don’t expect the technology to replace the role of the art advisor anytime soon.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/Eq24yRJ

Monday, January 12, 2026

16 Leading Curators Predict the Art Trends of 2026 https://ift.tt/5Tg24ph

Delivery Dancer's Sphere, 2022
Ayoung Kim
Gallery Hyundai

Last January, curators widely agreed that 2025 would be shaped by political instability and mounting pressure on cultural institutions. Over the course of the year, those conditions materialized across the art world, particularly through experimental exhibitions such as Ayoung Kim’s solo show at MoMA PS1 and Rashid Johnson’s “A Poem for Deep Thinkers” at the Guggenheim New York.

When asked to look ahead to 2026, curators today suggested that this shift is deepening rather than dissipating. Across their responses, a set of shared priorities emerged: slower, more deliberate forms of art and exhibition-making; a renewed emphasis on hand-made, material, and craft-based practices; and a growing commitment to collaboration and artist-led formats.

Technology—particularly AI—remains a central topic of discussion, but is increasingly approached with restraint and ethical scrutiny. More often, these technological advancements are positioned alongside, rather than in opposition to, physical materials and personal experience.

Museums, meanwhile, are now playing multiple roles at once: as civic spaces and sites of sanctuary. This is largely due to mounting political and social pressures. Similarly, several biennials, from Venice to Gwangju in South Korea, are pushing forward conversations on care and community.

Here, we spoke to 16 leading curators to share what they see shaping the art world in 2026.


Larry Ossei-Mensah

Curator and co-founder, ARTNOIR

The Bronx, New York

Monument, 2023
Carrie Mae Weems
The End Gallery

“Moving into 2026, I believe more artists and curators will resist fixed categories and linear narratives,” said Larry Ossei-Mensah. “Diasporic thinking will deepen—not as a matter of origin or identity alone, but as a way of understanding movement, memory, material (both tangible and intangible), and entanglement.”

This year, Ossei-Mensah is “paying closer attention to how artists work across sound, performance, and visual culture to create experiences that are felt as much as they are seen.” He points to a term coined by Arthur Jafa, “besideness,” referring to “relationships between objects, ideas, and points of view…over resolution, leaving space for complexity and contradiction, where the tension sparks new ways of thinking, feeling, and encountering perspectives you hadn’t considered before.”

The curator is looking forward to the 2026 Venice Biennale, which will celebrate the vision of the late curator Koyo Kouoh. In New York, he’ll be watching for MoMA’s exhibition of Samora Pinderhughes, titled “Call and Response,” and Carrie Mae Weems’s “Contested Sites of Memory” at Lincoln Center.


Rodrigo Moura

Artistic director, MALBA

Buenos Aires

Belly Button, 2022
Marina Rheingantz
Fortes D'Aloia & Gabriel

“I believe we will continue to see a growing mainstream interest in practices that have traditionally been categorized as craft or applied arts, such as ceramics and fiber art.” Rodrigo Moura, artistic director of Buenos Aires’s MALBA, told Artsy. The curator noted that long-overlooked artists like Shoko Suzuki, Mestre Didi, Olga de Amaral, and Lee ShinJa are now being championed in the art world, sparking a broader reassessment of craft media.

“This shift is creating new historical reference points for a younger generation of artists, for whom the boundaries between fine art and craft are increasingly blurred—and, in many cases, no longer relevant,” he said.

Moura is looking forward to several exhibitions in 2026, most notably the Venice Biennale. Speaking on the passing of Kouoh, he said, “while it is sad that she is not here to witness the exhibition, there is something profoundly meaningful in seeing her project carried forward.” Additionally, he is looking forward to Marina Rheingantz’s solo exhibition at the Instituto Tomie Ohtake in São Paulo next year—her first major survey in the country.


Stephanie Rosenthal

Project director, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi

Abu Dhabi

Moving Gods Black Thangka, 2014
LuYang
Gether Contemporary

Stephanie Rosenthal, the project director of Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, points to the rise of AI as “a true artistic language” and to a renewed commitment to materiality and craft. “Art in 2025, for me, was defined by a productive tension rather than a divide.” What mattered most, she noted, was that these approaches were no longer oppositional. “Technology, the hand, the body—even questions of care for our planet—they sit together now.” Artists such as Ayoung Kim and LuYang, whose use of gaming engines demonstrates conceptual precision rather than spectacle, are typical of this convergence—one Rosenthal expects to gain wider recognition in 2026.

Rosenthal also observed an institutional shift she expects to continue in 2026. “I also felt a growing presence of First Nations and Indigenous artists in major institutions—not as isolated gestures, but as part of a deeper shift,” she said.

Looking ahead, Rosenthal sees biennials across West Asia and the Arab world—including the Diriyah Biennale and the return of the Alexandria Biennale—as crucial counterpoints to Euro American narratives. In a fragile moment, she added, art remains “a place for rescue, kinship, and conversation”—a role she believes will feel even more urgent in 2026.


Stefanie Hessler

Director, Swiss Institute

New York

Swiss Institute director Stefanie Hessler predicted that in 2026 “we are going to see more emphasis on collaboration and collectivity in response to precarity and censorship,” shaped in part by U.S. administration policies.

“I am reminded of the importance of friendship, of reconsidering the ways we think, live, and dream together,” Hessler said. “I believe questions of humanity and conviviality will continue to be pressing, and I am exploring these topics in my curation of Art Basel Parcours 2026. I believe we will see more international collaborations in defiance of narrowing nationalisms and separationism.”

Looking ahead, Hessler is particularly focused on the 2026 Venice Biennale and the Gwangju Biennale, the latter of which is curated by Singaporean artist Ho Tzu Nyen. She also noted several large-scale exhibitions in the United States, including the Whitney Biennial, the Carnegie International, and Counterpublic in St. Louis, which she is co-curating.

Ashley James

Curator, Guggenheim New York

New York

Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his Wife (The Arnolfini Portrait), 1434
Jan van Eyck
The National Gallery, London

“As the possibilities and perils of AI increasingly dominate the discourse of contemporary art, I think 2025 showed us the ways in which there’s great potential in thinking through ‘technology’ in an expanded sense,” New York–based Guggenheim curator Ashley James told Artsy.

“Going into 2026, I’m also thinking about intersections of technology and art but in a different vein,” she said. After years of cultivating visibility through social media, James predicts both retreats and conceptual re-engagements, as artists confront platforms that no longer function as transparent social mirrors. The digital becomes material to critique, rather than a neutral tool. “As tech companies increasingly merge and modes of revenue generation shift, gone are the days of social feeds being reliable, real-time reflections of the social happenings, including in the art space,” James said.

James expressed her excitement about the upcoming programming at the Guggenheim, but also noted she felt “giddy” about Jan van Eyck’s “The Portraits” at the National Gallery, London, which opens November 21st.


Liz Park

Curator, Carnegie Museum of Art

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Looking back at 2025, Liz Park, curator at the Carnegie Museum of Art, “felt most energized and impacted by the exhibition ‘Monuments’ at MOCA Los Angeles and The Brick.” She noted that the exhibition was “a sobering and empowering reminder that in our work as creative practitioners and arts workers, we can represent, remember, and carry forward many difficult and complex truths and histories.”

Park predicts that the year ahead will be shaped by the same political and social turbulence that defined the year before, with these pressures informing exhibitions across institutions. “My hope is that these large-scale survey exhibitions serve as generative meeting grounds where we can be daring with artistic expressions and ideas, and where we honor relationships and the spirit of many artistic communities across continents.”


Rand Suffolk

Director, High Museum of Art

Atlanta

Rand Suffolk, director of Atlanta’s High Museum of Art, believes that amid global turmoil, museums should be thought of as like a “sanctuary.” As the museum approaches its centennial this year, one question he returns to is: “How can we address the issues of our time while offering spaces for reflection and connection?” He pointed out that many museums, including the Brooklyn Museum and the Studio Museum in Harlem, started taking a closer look at their own processes in the last year.

“Institutions embraced the collections they have, while reinterpreting them through frameworks that reflect a more complex, interconnected understanding of art history,” he said. “This balance feels especially important, and how museums hold both roles will influence curatorial decision-making across the field.”

In 2026, Suffolk noted that he is most excited for “The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans” at the Whitney Museum of American Art this spring, “candidly, because it’s an exhibition The High organized,” he admitted, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s “Man Ray: When Objects Dream.”


Melanie Pocock

Artistic director, Ikon Gallery

Birmingham, United Kingdom

The street (c.1968). Black and white photographic print. Courtesy Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham., ca. 1968
Janet Mendelsohn
Ikon Gallery

We’ll continue to see the art world responding to the world’s intractable geopolitical and environmental crises through the work of artists that have consistently sought to highlight, critique, and counter these,” said Melanie Pocock, artistic director of Ikon Gallery.

Pocock also highlighted the growing visibility of Indigenous artists in 2025, a shift she expects to deepen in 2026. “Rich in ground-up, collective practices inspired by Indigenous cultures, it’s a region of increasing interest to institutions committed to expanding their purview beyond Euramerica,” she said. “Indigenous practices sensitive to non-humancentric ecosystems will be significant, as will collectively curated and artist-led formats.”

Pocock is particularly excited about two major biennials in Asia: the Gwangju Biennale, which she said “promises to be as imaginative and epic as [curator Ho Tzu Nyen]’s own films and installations,” and the Bangkok Art Biennale, which will look “at the coexistence of opposites such as compassion and cruelty, and truth and distortion.”


Folakunle Oshun

Director, Lagos Biennial

Lagos

“Without wanting to sound pessimistic, I expect much of the same,” Folakunle Oshun, director of the Lagos Biennial, told Artsy. “Large capital continues to absorb everything, and it is increasingly urgent to interrogate who and what actually influence[s] artistic production. We will see more large-scale installations, largely because art fairs can now afford to commission them without caring whether the work sells. Yet the sense of inauthenticity persists.”

“More than anything, we may need to focus on simply staying alive in 2026,” Oshun continued. “Art will either sort itself out or, at best, serve as a narrative device for this reality.”

“I will be visiting the Venice Biennale primarily to see the American Pavilion,” said Oshun. “This will likely be a year in which national pavilions, unfortunately, overshadow everything else, driven by political posturing and global tension. That said, I am genuinely curious to see how far art can go. If there were ever a moment to test the potency of art, this is it.”

Meanwhile, Oshun is looking forward to John Lalor’s immersive film installation, EASTER WEEKEND, at the Irish Museum of Modern Art this month. “And in October, inevitably, all roads will lead to the Lagos Biennial,” he concluded.


Roxana Marcoci

Senior curator of photography, The Museum of Modern Art

New York

Roxana Marcoci, senior curator of photography, The Museum of Modern Art, expects 2026’s art world to be deeply engaged in dialogue with its own past. “Art will maintain a dialectical relationship with its own history,” she told Artsy. As artists draw from archives, craft and performance emerge not as revivals but as “relational and ethically charged” forms. Process-oriented practices that combine human imagination, AI, data, and material will continue to expand, while decolonial approaches critically reassess modernist strategies, probing questions of authorship, medium, and institutional authority.

“Simultaneously, the continued rise of immersive, AI-augmented practices will not displace traditional mediums such as painting and sculpture but instead reframe them within a boundary-crossing ‘phygital’ continuum, where new conceptions of humanity, embodiment, and material agency become central theoretical concerns,” she explained.

The curator expects these ideas to surface at major exhibitions throughout the year, particularly in New York at the Whitney Biennial, “Greater New York” at MoMA PS1, and the New Museum’s Triennial. She highlighted several monographic exhibitions, including Marcel Duchamp at MoMA, Carol Bove at the Guggenheim, Raphael at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Pierre Huyghe at the Fondation Beyeler.


Sara Raza

Artistic director and chief curator, Centre for Contemporary Arts Tashkent

Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Cartesian Sculpture, 2014
Carol Bove
Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens

“Collaborations that are more horizontal or unexpected and decentralized will become more pronounced,” Sara Raza, the new chief curator of Centre for Contemporary Arts Tashkent in Uzbekistan, told Artsy. “Artists, I believe, will also take a curatorial lead in making explicit their role in art historical movements that are less tacit, and not necessarily curatorially or theoretically driven.”

Raza noted that she is looking forward to several major exhibitions in the new year, including the Diriyah Biennale, Whitney Biennial, and Venice Biennale. She also noted that she is excited for the inaugural Art Basel Qatar and the “compelling and dense” work of sculptor Carol Bove in her upcoming solo show at the Guggenheim New York.


Juana Williams

Curator, Detroit Salon

Detroit

“I’m looking forward to encountering more world-building through art in 2026,” Juana Williams, curator for Detroit Salon, told Artsy. “In the past few years, artists and curators have been responding to the moment we’re in, questioning what’s true and exploring how repair might be possible. With so much fragility and tension in this current cultural moment, a lot of artists have constructed imaginative worlds that feel believable but intentionally unstable, inviting audiences to interpret and imagine together.”

“Through this work, artists are expanding, and in some cases repairing, reality,” Williams said, underscoring how new technology is increasingly relevant in contemporary art. “As technology, especially AI, becomes more common in art-making, I’m seeing artists return to materiality as resistance against hyper-digitization. In 2026, I anticipate we’ll see even more tension and dialogue between the digital and the analog.”


Faisal Al Hassan

Director, 421 Arts Campus

Abu Dhabi

“I suspect 2026 will be less about declaring new positions and more about living with the ones we’ve already articulated,” Faisal Al Hassan, director of Abu Dhabi’s 421 Arts Campus, told Artsy. “In relation to AI, that likely means a move toward more deliberate constraints: artists choosing when and how to use these tools, and institutions being pushed to clarify their positions around authorship, conservation, and legitimacy. The question won’t be whether AI is used, but under what conditions, and to what end.”

“I also expect a deeper commitment to slower, reparative forms of programming—not as language, but as structure,” he said, asserting that institutions will be more likely to fund “multi-year commissions, research-led exhibitions, and educational formats that aren’t treated as secondary.”

Al Hassan also believes the way the international art community views the Middle East will change. “Regionally, the Gulf and wider SWANA [Southwest Asia and North Africa] will continue to function less as a ‘scene’ and more as a connective zone, linking Africa, South Asia, and the Eastern Mediterranean,” he noted. “As market attention intensifies, I imagine there will be a parallel push toward specificity: projects that insist on local histories, languages, and rhythms, even when operating on global platforms.”


Virginia Shore

Curator, Obama Presidential Center

Chicago

Virginia Shore, the curator for the forthcoming Obama Presidential Center in Chicago, distilled her key trends for 2026 into a few themes: “Looking ahead to 2026, I anticipate a continued emphasis on hand-made processes and repurposed or recycled materials,” she said. “Exhibitions are likely to expand beyond traditional venues, with more projects unfolding in alternative and hybrid spaces, as artists and curators seek new modes of access and experimentation. We’ll also see a rise in multimedia practices and cross-disciplinary collaborations. Together, these directions signal a year defined by resourcefulness, collaboration, and expanded formats for making and showing work.”

Looking ahead, she is most eager to see the 2026 Venice Biennale, which she believes will ensure Kouoh’s “profound impact on global contemporary art continues to resonate in Venice.” She also highlights Tate Modern’s major Ana Mendieta exhibition, Nick Cave’s immersive “Mammoth” exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and Noah Davis’s traveling retrospective, which kicks off at the Philadelphia Art Museum on January 24th.


Daniel S. Palmer

Chief curator, SCAD Museum of Art

Savannah, Georgia

The transformation of Ogo into a fox (série 'Desktop'), 2014
Camille Henrot
Hauser & Wirth

Daniel S. Palmer, chief curator at the SCAD Museum of Art, shared his optimism for 2026. “I believe that the foundation of art in 2026 will be centered around our hopefulness that art has the true power to improve the world, and the importance of not losing sight of what really matters,” he said. “In the year to come, it will be important that we stay vigilant about advocating for artists and protecting creative expression.”

Palmer is particularly eager for a packed biennial year, with the Venice, Whitney, and Toronto biennials all on his radar, citing the strength of their curatorial teams and artist lineups. He additionally singled out the forthcoming program at Public Art Fund—where he previously worked—as a highlight of the year ahead. The organization’s new commissions will bring contemporary art into public space through solo projects by Genesis Belanger in City Hall Park, Woody De Othello at Brooklyn Bridge Park, and Camille Henrot at Doris C. Freedman Plaza, all in New York City.


Jess Baxter

Assistant Curator, Tate Modern

London

In 2025, Jess Baxter, an assistant curator at London’s Tate Modern, noted that “artists are increasingly exploring trans-temporalities and past wounds (physical, personal, or societal), to look at how memory fractures and how time loops back in on itself.” ​​She framed this turn as a response to contemporary global instability. “I suspect it is a reaction to the horrors we are constantly seeing across the world, boiled down into our phones,” she added.

That sense of destabilized perception carries directly into Baxter’s outlook for 2026. “Like it or loathe it, AI has birthed a seismic shift in how we look and trust in what we see,” said Baxter. “In 2026, we will increasingly be asking ourselves if what I’m seeing is real, so I have no doubt artists will continue to use and/or critique the tools of technological advancement or internet culture as in the work of Hito Steyerl, Aziza Kadyri, or Ebun Sodipo.”

That said, Baxter hopes that amid “the AI slop, museums will remain places for slowing down, rest, and recuperation.” She highlighted Tracey Emin’s major exhibition at Tate Modern and Bugarin + Castle’s presentation at the Venice Biennale, representing Scotland.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/WIeBD4K

Beatriz González, who painted the trauma of Colombia’s political turmoil, has died at 93. https://ift.tt/X95TOlu

Colombian artist Beatriz González, known for paintings that exposed the traumatic impact of politics on everyday life, died on January 9th at her home in Bogotá, at 93. Galerie Peter Kilchmann, her Zurich-based representative, announced her death.

González made a career by repainting press photographs of Colombia’s presidents, massacres, and public mourning in a visual language borrowed from cheap prints and domestic décor. Her work treated press images as familiar objects. She replicated them, often in a purposefully garish style—revealing how a society learns to live with the spectacle of its own violence.

London’s Barbican Centre is about to mount the artist’s first U.K. retrospective from February 25th to May 10th, featuring more than 150 works by the artist. Her first U.S. retrospective was mounted by the Perez Art Museum Miami in 2019, and a previous retrospective traveled to the Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid, and the KW Institute of Contemporary Art, Berlin.

Untitled (Based upon “Boceto para decoración de interiores” 1981), 2021
Beatriz González
Fondation Beyeler

“Through her powerful and often vividly colored paintings, she preserved the memory of events and victims that were frequently absent from official histories,” Galerie Peter Kilchmann wrote on Instagram, announcing the artist’s passing.

Born in 1932 in Bucaramanga, Colombia, González came of age during La Violencia, a period of violent political upheaval in her home country during the 1940s and ’50s. She briefly pursued architecture at the National University of Colombia before dropping out. Instead, she enrolled at the University of the Andes to study graphic design—one of just 90 women at the university. She graduated with a bachelor’s in fine arts in 1962.

Apocalipsis camuflado (Camouflaged Apocalypse), 1989
Beatriz González
Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM)

In the early 1960s and ’70s, González gained fame for her reproductions of masterpieces by Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci, rendered in a deliberately flattened, off-key style. These subversive works led critics to group her with Pop Art, though González herself rejected the label. Another widely discussed painting, Suicidas del Sisga (1965), depicted a young couple who leapt into the Sisga Dam after believing they could not preserve their purity in life, marking her early turn toward the tragic undercurrents of Colombian society.

“I was always the transgressor; Beatriz González, the controversial artist; I was repeatedly saddled with that adjective,” she told ArtNexus. “I didn’t like the word controversial all that much.”

González’s work took a dramatic turn in 1985, following the M-19 guerrilla attack on the Palace of Justice in Bogotá. The event left 94 people dead and went down in history as one of the most tragic events in contemporary Colombian history. From then on, her work focused almost exclusively on political imagery, depicting mothers weeping following the Las Delicias massacre in 1996, for instance. This macabre tone carried into the 2000s. For instance, for the installation Auras anónimas (2023) González printed silhouettes of workers carrying corpses on more than 8,000 wall niches at the Central Cemetery in Bogotá.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/fAmCKzN

Friday, January 9, 2026

5 Standout Shows to See at Small Galleries This January https://ift.tt/6CNPFBS

Visitor, 2025
Gwen Evans
Monti8

In this monthly roundup, we spotlight five stellar exhibitions at small and rising galleries.


Justus de Rode

Views of Nature

Open Doors Gallery, London

Through Mar. 31st

We left the cave at nightfall, 2025
Justus de Rode
Open Doors Gallery

In the early days of our planet, 2024
Justus de Rode
Open Doors Gallery

Dutch artist Justus de Rode studied the writings of 19th-century naturalist Alexander von Humboldt to create his new cyanotypes. Drawing on Humboldt’s 1808 travelogue Ansichten der Natur, which he translated for the title of the exhibition, de Rode uses von Humboldt’s ideas as starting points for his artworks. Using cyanotype—a process associated with botanical research—he tones the prints with natural tannins. His subjects, ranging from mushrooms to dogs, appear with varying degrees of abstraction. These muted, haunting works comprise “Views of Nature” at Open Doors Gallery.

In the show, the Amsterdam-based artist also presents several cyanotypes in which the setting remains legible, as in We left the cave at nightfall (2025), which depicts a rocky floor receding into a dark, cavernous depth. Elsewhere, de Rode narrows his focus to animals and insects: In the cracked bark of trees (2025) offers an intimate view of an insect, rendered within a mystical, sparkling environment. Other works move in the opposite direction, deliberately obscuring their imagery and giving way to more expressive, tempestuous compositions, such as the storm-like abstraction In the early days of our planet (2024).

De Rode completed his master’s degree in film and photographic studies at Leiden University in 2022. His photography frequently turns to nature and organic forms to evoke emotions.


Gwen Evans

The Space Between

Monti8, Rome

Through Jan. 24th

Threshold, 2025
Gwen Evans
Monti8

Impasse, 2025
Gwen Evans
Monti8

Gwen Evans recasts ordinary domestic scenes as subtly destabilized spaces in her dreamy paintings. In a recent interview with artist David Hancock, Evans revealed she wants to “provoke a sense of unease in the viewer,” echoing Sigmund Freud’s description of the uncanny as “a class of frightening which leads back to what is known of old and long familiar.” In “The Space Between” at Monti8, Evans explores this tension by rendering day-to-day activities with surprising distortions or haunting encounters, unsettling the viewer.

In Visitor (2025), an oil painting, a woman holding a basket faces a haunting silhouette partially concealed behind a patterned blanket billowing on a clothesline. The scene creates a horror-movie sense of foreboding, as the obscured figure seems to hide in plain sight. Many of her works focus on domestic frames, whether that’s the opening of a kitchen cabinet in the crayon-on-paper work Impasse (2025) or a stained glass window in Threshold (2025), where a ghostly figure peers through the sunlit aperture. Across these works, Evans captures the fleeting moments where strange, otherworldly elements can enter our personal space.

Based in Manchester, United Kingdom, Evans graduated from the Manchester School of Art in 2019. Her work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at William Hine Gallery in London and HOME in Manchester.


Sera Holland

Kaleidoscope

THEFOURTH, Cape Town

Through Feb. 5th

Monochromania VII, 2025
Sera Holland
THEFOURTH

Tapestry VIII, 2025
Sera Holland
THEFOURTH

Working in dense, accumulated layers, South African artist Sera Holland treats paint as a physical material to be built up in three dimensions. After studying graphic design at Stellenbosch University, Holland lived and worked in Dublin before returning to Cape Town, where she ran a textile design business for a decade prior to refocusing on painting. Her background in textile design shapes the four bodies of highly textured, mostly color-soaked impasto paintings on view in her first solo show at Cape Town’s THEFOURTH, “Kaleidoscope.”

Holland’s “Chromatopography” series presents thickly sculpted abstract surfaces with large ridges and folds intended to catch shifting light. Meanwhile, her “Tapestry” works adopt the logic of weaving, building abstract images through smaller, layered, thread-like marks, reminiscent of cloth. “Monochromania” limits her color palette to foreground texture, occasionally using gold leaf to dot the white or black surfaces. Lastly, the “Onomatopoeia” series repurposes leftover studio paint into instinctive, disordered canvases, reminiscent of used palettes.


Figure in the Field

Morgan Lehman Gallery, New York

Through Feb. 21st

A Loving Embrace, 2025
Amy MacKay
Morgan Lehman Gallery

Nocturne: What the Bee Has Seen,, 2023
Claire Nicolet
Morgan Lehman Gallery

What happens when the background of an artwork is just as important as the foreground? “Figure in the Field,” curated by Brooklyn painter Jan Dickey at New York’s Morgan Lehman Gallery, brings together nine artists who draw attention to the background as an active part of the image. The exhibition shows how each of the nine painters negotiate the relationship between figure and field differently.

New York–based artist Dan Gausman’s Volaris Vortex (2025) uses professional tennis-court paint on concrete in a work that redraws court lines into spiraling arcs. Here, he turns the playing surface itself, usually seen as a backdrop, into the primary subject. Meanwhile, French painter Claire Nicolet’s Nocturne: What the Bee Has Seen(2023) depicts stylized plants and clouds in layered blues, flattening the landscape almost as if it were a pattern. On the other hand, American artist Amy MacKay lets the background consume her figure. A Loving Embrace(2025) consists of layered pastel oil paint that depicts two translucent figures, which seem to appear gradually within the surrounding color field rather than standing apart from it.


Concetta Modica and Ignazio Mortellaro

All Fall Down

Francesco Pantaleone, Palermo, Italy

Through Mar. 14th

nella carne dei giorni, 2016
Ignazio Mortellaro
Francesco Pantaleone

composizione intrepida - fearless compositon, 2025
Concetta Modica
Francesco Pantaleone

Many of the sculptures in Concetta Modica and Ignazio Mortellaro’s two-person exhibition, “All Fall Down,” appear perpetually on the verge of collapse. Works are placed onto the ground, suspended in the air, or leaning precariously on the wall, leaving most of the white walls at Palermo’s Francesco Pantaleone bare. The entire exhibition shows this perilous balance, where metal rods lean and golden sculptures float in the gallery space.

Works such as Mortellaro’s nella carne dei giorni (2016), composed of brass and iron rods, and Modica’s Testimone (2026), a bronze-cast rod suspended between two stone blocks and held by a rope, emphasize fragility through their unstable arrangements and material contrasts. One of the standout works of the exhibition is Modica’s composizione intrepida - fearless composition (2025), a steel structure rising 5-and-a-half feet and fitted with four ceramic elements. Three of these—shaped like a teapot, a lamb, and what resembles a smushed brain—hang at different heights. Here, the exhibition’s title is made literal. For these artists, falling evokes the inevitability of time, with each object caught in action before an inevitable release.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/56PjxCl

$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 t...

Latest Post