Tuesday, July 7, 2026

9 Artists Who Shaped Nordic Modernism
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As the avant-garde reshaped the artistic centers of Europe in the early 20th century, Nordic artists responded in strikingly different ways. Many acted as emissaries, carrying the visual language of the international avant-garde from Paris, Berlin, and Moscow back home, while others turned inward toward a deeply Scandinavian consciousness shaped by extreme seasonal light, landscapes of vast and untamed scale, and cultures in the midst of asserting their national identities.

Modernist art has never been a single, coherent, linear movement, but rather the result of multiple approaches and trajectories, what we may call ‘many modernisms’,” said Else-Brit Kroneberg, head of collections at Kunstsilo in Norway. The museum is custodian to the Tangen Collection, one of the most significant collections of Nordic modernist art, and is currently exhibiting three shows focusing on modernist artists in the Nordic region.

“Artists from the Nordic countries have consistently crossed borders, connecting with peers in other Nordic contexts as well as in major European cities and schools,” said Kroneberg. “They were not merely passive recipients of broader currents but actively contributed to shaping them.”

A few names from this milieu will be familiar to most. The profile of Hilma af Klint has risen dramatically over the past decade, bolstered by shows at the Serpentine Galleries in London and the Guggenheim in New York. Finland’s Helene Schjerfbeck is undergoing a similar reappraisal, with a recent exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art showing the power of her searching self-portraits. Below, discover more modernist Scandinavian artists who are also deserving of wider recognition.

Jakob Weidemann

B. 1923, Norway. D. 2001

Jakob Weidemann was one of the central figures of Norwegian post-war modernism, and the artist most responsible for establishing abstraction in Norway. The roots of this sensibility lie, in part, in World War II. Weidemann served in the Norwegian resistance, and after escaping to Sweden in 1944, a severe explosives accident left him permanently partially blind. The months that followed, in which he could perceive only light, sharpened his relationship to color.

“I will find the character in every little thing,” he reportedly said following a walk to the Vettakollen hiking area. His skogbunn, or “forest floor” paintings, developed from the late 1950s onward, define this approach. All are, to varying degrees, non-figurative visions of nature: aerial views of parceled pastorals and abstracted still lifes. In Autumn Leaves (1959), for example, the viewer is left to assemble the titular image from the rough, pasty tessellated color planes.

Later in his career, when his gaze lifted from the forest floor, light flooded in, giving way to brighter and choppier markmaking as seen in Crocus (1974) and Towards the Light (1976).


Gösta Adrian Nilsson (GAN)

B. 1884, Sweden. D. 1965

Gösta Adrian-Nilsson, often known as GAN, held fickle allegiances to the artistic movements of his time. He moved through Art Nouveau, Expressionism, and Futurism, settling most comfortably into a Cubist idiom that revealed his fascination with machine industry and its muscular force. GAN grew up in Nöden, Lund, Sweden’s working-class quarter, the son of smallholders who ran a grocery shop there. In his paintings, architectural structures such as cranes and locomotives are placed on an equal plane with laboring bodies, all refracted into dynamic geometries that flatten the hierarchy between man and machine.

A queer artist, a homoerotic dimension runs through much of his work. From around 1917, his paintings of industrial progress gave way to lithe, angular sailors, drawn from nights spent cruising the docks and later, his relationship with a young Swedish Navy torpedo operator. These figures’ bulging proportions anticipate Tom of Finland by decades and would feature in his landmark 1918 exhibition “Sjömanskompositioner” (Sailor Compositions) at Gummesson’s art gallery in Stockholm.


Sigrid Hjertén

B. 1885, Sweden. D. 1948

Swedish artist Sigrid Hjertén was one of the few conduits through which Henri Matisse’s radical vision of color would reach Scandinavia. She enrolled at the Académie Matisse run by the artist from 1908–11. Among the large number of Nordic students who attended the Paris school was Isaac Grünewald, whom she would marry in 1911.

An important teaching for Hjertén was to understand color as an autonomous and active means of expression, unencumbered by formal or symbolic associations. Her paintings are subsequently distinctly Fauvist in style with unnatural, often lurid coloring. These naively stylized depictions include domestic figures—sometimes based on herself—as well as Denmark’s chalk cliffs and Parisian rose gardens. In 1912, her exhibition with the group De Åtta (The Eight), which included such works as Från Kornhamnstorg and Den blå skutan (The Blue Boat) (both 1912), marked her official entry into the art world.

Hjertén battled harsh criticism throughout her career and spent the last 12 years of her life far removed from the artistic circles of her youth. Diagnosed with schizophrenia, she lived out her life in a psychiatric hospital where she would die from the consequences of a lobotomy.


Bendik Riis

B. 1911, Norway. D. 1988

Bendik Riis is viewed as something of an outlier in Norwegian art history, not least due to a troubled personal history that kept him largely absent from the global art world stage.

Some of his most affecting works were conceived during a period of involuntary institutionalization at the Gaustad psychiatric hospital in Oslo, where he was sometimes subject to the barbaric pseudo-therapies carried out by physicians. Castraktion visualizes the artist’s fears around castration and lobotomy, while Seks Pærer (Six Pears) (both 1950), exhibited in Oslo in 1952, takes a more absurdist turn. Here, a sextet of pears dances before gnomes, demons and figurative sculptures, presided over by the same figure that haunts Castraktion as an omen of violence.

Discharged in 1952, Riis went on to produce several more oil-on-board pieces such as Bendik og Årolilja (1955). Adorned with traditional Scandinavian rosemaling, he reimagines a tragic Norwegian folk ballad in which lovers are separated by a king and united only in death, casting himself as the bridegroom and claiming the happy ending denied him by both legend and life.


Rolf Nesch

B. 1893, Germany. D. 1975, Norway

A German émigré who became one of Norway’s most significant modern artists, Rolf Nesch emerged from the four years he spent in Hamburg with two innovations that would mark his legacy. Among the first artists to use metal collage in printmaking, he also pioneered a dry pigment powder-painting technique. Here, loose pigments were sprinkled onto a lacquered surface and fixed with varnish, producing a chalky, diffused palette visible in Negerrevy (1930) and the “St. Pauli” series (1931).

Following the Nazis’ ascension to power in 1933, Nesch relocated to Norway, a decision that purportedly stemmed from his belief that “a country that has a Munch must be a good place to live.” Indeed, in the years since, critics have cast Nesch as Edvard Munch’s natural successor. Here he abandoned brush and canvas entirely, his material experimentalism led to works of raw Nordic force. Among them is the “Lofoten” series (1936), in which the craggy Arctic archipelago is rendered in muted silvers and blacks, the cold weight of the northern sea besieging the shorelines.


Rita Kernn-Larsen

B. 1904, Denmark. D.1998

Born to a wealthy family in Hillerød, Denmark, Rita Kernn-Larsen’s practice took shape in Paris, where she studied under Fernand Léger from 1932 to 1934 and first encountered Surrealism, a vocabulary she would continue to develop throughout the decade.

In 1935, she was one of the few women invited into the watershed exhibition “Kubisme=Surrealisme” in Copenhagen, the world’s first international Surrealist exhibition, alongside figures like Jean Arp, René Magritte, and Salvador Dalí. Indeed, there are traces of Dalí’s precise biomorphic surfaces in her painting Valume (Poppy) (1935): a flesh-flushed bloom on a thin stem, growing from an amoeba-like organism. It is an early variation on her recurring femme-arbre, or “woman-tree” motif, which she returns to more explicitly in Self-Portrait (Know Thyself) (1937). The device was popular among male Surrealists like Paul Delvaux, who cast women as fertile and passive in nature, but here Kernn-Larsen redirects it inward, supplanting her own image to appropriate the motif into an act of self-examination rather than projection.


Asger Jorn

B. 1914, Denmark. D. 1973

Verheißungsvolle Schichten, 1968
Asger Jorn
DIE GALERIE

From the late 1930s onward, a new type of expressive painting emerged in reaction to the proliferation of nonfigurative plane geometry. This formed the basis for CoBrA, a loose coalition of artists from Copenhagen, Brussels, and Amsterdam established after World War II. Danish artist Asger Jorn, a founding member, realized the group’s imperatives of spontaneity and “primitiveness” through expressive, naive markmaking drawn from children’s drawings, folk art, and distinctively, Scandinavian myth and medieval Nordic art. These inspirations became even stronger in 1945 when he encountered Munch’s disorderly colorism at the National Gallery in Oslo.

Writing in 1960, Jorn described art as “the invitation to expend energy, with no precise goal other than what spectators themselves can bring to it.” This vitalist principle pushed him from CoBrA’s folk “primitivism” toward the Situationist International, which he co-founded in 1957. His “Modification” series (1959–63) embodies it most fully. Jorn overpainted kitsch flea-market paintings with grotesque faces and violent, gaudy Freudian distortions, gorging and regurgitating rather than erasing the original.

Robert Jacobsen

B. 1912, Denmark. D. 1993

Maison de Tolerance/ The House of Tolerance, 1976
Robert Jacobsen
Michael Agerled Gallery

Untiteld, 1912 -1993
Robert Jacobsen
Michael Agerled Gallery

Robert Jacobsen was an autodidact who would become one of the most important Danish sculptors of the 20th century. Early works of his include his “Fabeldyr” (Mythical Creatures), a collection of rough-hewn totemic granite sculptures completed in the 1940s. It’s difficult to identify any defining features in them, though they’re certainly more bestial than human, the squat proportions and bulbous protrusions reminiscent of the strange apparitions in Asger Jorn’s paintings. That’s perhaps unsurprising given that Jacobsen was part of the wider artistic milieu that formed around Jorn during the German occupation of Denmark during WWII.

When Jacobsen moved to Paris in 1947, he shifted from using stone to welded iron, aligning himself with the Constructivism favoured by gallerist Denise René. Working with bike chains, exhaust pipes, cutlery, and gears, he produced two distinct bodies of work. Inspired by the African art he collected, “The Dolls,” as he called them, were small humanoid figures first placed in the homes of friends and family. Arguably more enduring in his legacy were monumental constructivist pieces: tall, iron towers built around a single rigid central pole, from which a curved arch of welded strips sweeps out to one side like a flung limb or sail.

Franciska Clausen

B. 1899, Denmark. D. 1986

The Screw, 1926-1928
Franciska Clausen
Statens Museum for Kunst

Over the course of the 1920s, a burgeoning art scene sprung up in Paris around Académie Moderne, in which several of the more prominent artists were from the Nordic countries. One of them was Franciska Clausen, who arrived in Paris in 1924 from Åbenrå, Denmark, to study there. Her motivation to enrol was, in part, due to an admiration for the work of the artist and filmmaker Fernand Léger who taught at the academy.

Clausen quickly distinguished herself as one of the most outstanding students in her cohort and was handpicked by the man himself to participate in the opening of “L’Art d’Aujourd’hui” (Today’s Art), the first major international exhibition of avant-garde art after World War I. The exhibition boasted a long list of heavyweights, including Pablo Picasso and Albert Gleizes, as well as Sonia and Robert Delaunay. Early compositions, like Mechanical Element (1926) and The Screw (1926) use the machine aesthetics of Léger’s Cubism but are more tightly constructed in their geometry. Later, an interest in movement and optics would see her commit to the circle as a recurring motif as in Circles and Circles and Verticals (both 1930).



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Alex Israel launches cologne collab with Louis Vuitton.
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Alex Israel has reunited with Louis Vuitton to launch a new limited-edition fragrance inspired by Southern California’s iconic “woody” station wagons, continuing the Los Angeles–based artist’s long-running collaboration with the French luxury house.

The Woody Wagon Colognes gift set includes the Woody Wagon, a handcrafted, miniature wooden station wagon collectible that houses the collection’s six colognes. Produced in an edition of just 66—a reference to the historic Route 66—the sculptural object reimagines one of California’s most recognizable automotive icons through Israel’s sun-soaked vision.

The collectible took more than 7,000 hours to produce and was crafted by 60 artisans. Composed of 219 individually assembled elements, it features mahogany wood paneling, Louis Vuitton’s signature monogram motif engraved into its doors, monogram flower wheel details, and leather trim finished in natural beige.

The collaboration marks the latest chapter in Israel’s partnership with Louis Vuitton, which began in 2019 when the artist worked with master perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud on the maison’s Cologne collection. Like the fragrances themselves, the new edition draws heavily on the imagery and mythology of Southern California, a recurring subject throughout Israel’s practice.

“I’m thrilled to continue exploring my favorite landscape, Los Angeles, on this road trip with Jacques Cavallier Belletrud and Louis Vuitton,” Israel said in a statement. “The Woody Wagon has long embodied a certain Californian freedom: surfboard on the roof, family in the back, and the Pacific just over the next hill.”

Alongside the Woody Wagon, Louis Vuitton is also releasing three new translucent travel cases designed for its Sun Song, California Dream, and Afternoon Swim colognes. Produced in editions of 100 each, the resin cases feature color gradients inspired by the West Coast—from ocean blues to California sunsets—and continue Israel’s exploration of light, landscape, and the visual language of Los Angeles.

Israel’s interdisciplinary practice is rooted in the myth of Hollywood, consumer culture, and the construction of the California dream. He has exhibited at the Aspen Art Museum and The Bass in Miami Beach and has collaborated with brands ranging from BMW to Snapchat. His ongoing partnership with Louis Vuitton reflects the luxury house’s broader engagement with contemporary artists, following collaborations with figures including Yayoi Kusama, Takashi Murakami, Jeff Koons, and, more recently, Keith Haring.

The Woody Wagon colognes will be available by preorder in a limited edition of 66 beginning this summer, with deliveries expected in late September. The edition is priced at $11,700, while the travel cases will retail for $1,400 each.



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Monday, July 6, 2026

Maurizio Cattelan to present first major solo museum show in Germany.
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Maurizio Cattelan will present his first major solo museum exhibition in Germany at Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie this fall. The comprehensive survey will pair some of the irreverent Italian artist’s best-known works with new site-specific commissions.

Maurizio Cattelan. NIGHT” will open September 10th during Berlin Art Week and will be on view through March 7, 2027.

The exhibition coincides with Cattelan’s selection as the winner of the 2026 edition of the Preis der Nationalgalerie, one of Germany’s leading contemporary art prizes. The exhibition will bring together landmark works spanning more than three decades of the artist’s career—including Him (2001), Novecento (1997), La Rivoluzione Siamo Noi (2000), and Untitled (2003)—alongside newly commissioned works created specifically for the modernist glass-and-steel museum designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.

A new site-specific commission will be at the center of the Neue Nationalgalerie exhibition and will intervene in the spatial framework of the museum’s architecture, reshaping how visitors move through and experience the landmark building.

Born in Padua in 1960, Cattelan has built a career around provocative sculptures and installations that fuse dark humor with political and historical critique. Since emerging in the early 1990s, he has repeatedly challenged ideas of authority, religion, memory, and authorship through works that have become some of the most recognizable—and controversial—in contemporary art. His practice includes Comedian (2019), the banana duct-taped to a wall that became a global cultural phenomenon, as well as sculptures of Pope John Paul II struck by a meteorite, Adolf Hitler kneeling in prayer, and a miniature version of himself hanging from a coat rack.

Presented in Berlin, “NIGHT” places many of those longstanding concerns within a German historical context. According to the museum, the exhibition will examine questions of collective memory and representation.

“As a German born, living abroad for most of my adult life, Maurizio Cattelan’s work always had a very German reading for me,” Neue Nationalgalerie director Klaus Biesenbach said in a statement, citing works including Him and Untitled. “Now we will be able to experience and see Cattelan’s work in Berlin.”

Curated by Lisa Botti in collaboration with Biesenbach and the artist, the exhibition inaugurates a new chapter for the Preis der Nationalgalerie, which, after 25 years, is shifting to a single-artist exhibition format in the Neue Nationalgalerie’s expansive upper-level hall.



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Friday, July 3, 2026

Acclaimed art organization Swiss Institute to open permanent New York location in 2027.
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Swiss Institute (SI), one of New York’s leading platforms for experimental contemporary art, has announced the acquisition of the ground floor and lower level of 250 Bowery in Manhattan. The move marks the first time in its 40-year history that the institution has owned its premises. The new location will open to the public in spring 2027 and will remain free of charge.

Founded in 1986 by artists and art patrons, SI has established itself as a distinctive force in the city’s cultural landscape, known for championing emerging and under-recognized artists, fostering cross-cultural exchange between Switzerland and the international art world, and maintaining free public admission throughout its history.

SI has occupied a succession of rented spaces across the city, from a townhouse on West 67th Street to SoHo, Tribeca, and most recently, 38 St. Marks Place in the East Village. It has built a reputation for rigorous, forward-thinking programming and an early platform for artists including Pipilotti Rist, Thomas Hirschhorn, Christian Marclay, Nicolas Party, and Peter Fischli & David Weiss.

The move to 250 Bowery expands the institution’s footprint from approximately 7,000 to 11,000 square feet and places it alongside the New Museum, Giorno Poetry Systems, and Participant Inc. in one of the city’s oldest cultural areas.

The renovation has been entrusted to Los Angeles–based architecture firm Johnston Marklee, whose recent projects include the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program space, the Menil Drawing Institute in Houston, and a renovation of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. The firm’s design prioritizes flexibility, modularity, and environmental sustainability, incorporating reclaimed materials, energy-efficient lighting, and reusable exhibition infrastructure. Work begins this fall.


The opening exhibition, “The Environment,” will be an international group show drawing on an artist-led community project initiated by experimental filmmaker Bud Wirtschafter in downtown New York between 1966 and 1968. Artworks will be presented not only within SI but across building façades, community gardens, and other public spaces. While renovations are underway, SI will continue offsite programming, including “Kino East,” a fall 2026 exhibition by Zürich-based Polish artist Rafał Skoczek, who will transform a disused commercial space into an evolving site for gathering and exchange.

In a statement, Stefanie Hessler, director of SI, said the move represented “both a culmination and a beginning,” adding that owning a permanent space for the first time would allow the institution to “put down roots and continue to grow.”



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Thursday, July 2, 2026

An Art Lover’s Guide to São Paulo
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São Paulo is a cultural powerhouse, and it’s home to the São Paulo Bienal (the second-oldest in the world) as well as Latin America's largest art fair, SP-Arte. Yet for all its scale, the city’s art scene “feels like it grew in secret, slowly, almost by accident,” in the words of Fernanda Brenner, founding artistic director of the nonprofit space Pivô. São Paulo spans more than 1,500 square kilometers and defies easy navigation; what holds it together for art lovers is a network of distinct cultural clusters—gallery districts, modernist landmarks, artist-run spaces—each with its own rhythm.

As the influential gallerist Nara Roesler, whose gallery turns 50 this year, told Artsy, the city “provides an opportunity to experience a cultural ecosystem that is constantly evolving and to discover the richness and diversity of Brazilian and Latin American art through the people who make the city so dynamic.”

This guide offers a bespoke selection of galleries, museums, and favorite places to unwind, selected by those in the city’s art scene. Click the links to see their Google Maps or Artsy pages.


The key neighborhoods for art lovers in São Paulo

“In a city as vast and complex, where mobility remains a challenge, the emergence of vibrant cultural clusters has become increasingly important in fostering connections and shaping meaningful artistic communities,” said Kiki Mazzucchelli, co-founder of the newly inaugurated gallery Mazzucchelli Cardoso and co-curator of ABERTO, an art project occupying landmark buildings.

Four clusters anchor the São Paulo art map.

Jardins

The city’s upscale residential and luxury shopping district, where leafy streets and modernist houses hold most of São Paulo’s most established galleries within walking distance.

Center and Higienópolis

The historic downtown that Brenner describes as “left behind by money and somehow more alive for it—a place where art and the thinking it invites seem to gather in the cracks.” Mazzucchelli highlights the modernist icon Galeria Metrópole, “recently occupied by several project spaces: Surplus, run by curator Erica Burini and artist Kauê Garcia; 25M, a former retail space that fosters experimental practices; and pop-ups that take place in different shops.” Adjacent Higienópolis is home to modernist apartment blocks built in the 1940s–50s by architects fleeing war-torn Europe.

  • Verve: founded in 2013 by artists Allan Seabra and Ian Duarte Lucas; focused on Brazilian contemporary art.
  • A Gentil Carioca: founded in 2003 by artists Márcio Botner, Ernesto Neto, and Laura Lima; has kept a pulse on exciting contemporary Brazilian art ever since.
  • Central: founded in 2016 by Fernanda Restom; presents a wide, conceptually rich program.
  • Vermelho: founded in 2002; features Latin American and Brazilian contemporary artists including Claudia Andujar and Tania Candiani.

Vila Madalena

The city’s bohemian heart—gallery-dense, café-lined, where artists actually meet after openings.

  • Almeida & Dale: founded in 1998; known for exhibitions of internationally renowned artists such as Lygia Clark, while also championing a new generation of Black Brazilian and Indigenous artists.
  • Raquel Arnaud: Arnaud has supported Brazilian and Latin American artists since 1973, representing some of the essential Concrete and Neo-Concrete artists.

Barra Funda

A rapidly changing neighborhood, traditionally home to commercial warehouses, which is now home to energetic galleries and art collectives.

  • Fortes D’Aloia Gabriel: a trailblazer in São Paulo’s contemporary scene since 2001; shows the 1980s generation—Leda Catunda, Beatriz Milhazes—alongside younger artists in multimedia and performance.
  • Mendes Wood DM: Since opening in 2010, the gallery added a second São Paulo location at Rua Iramaia 105—the modernist Casa Iramaia, worth visiting for the architecture alone. It represents a robust roster of contemporary Latin American and international artists.
  • GDA Artistas: an artist-run collective dedicated to experimental and conceptual contemporary art practices; founded in 2021.

The museums and private collections to know in São Paulo

“São Paulo is perhaps the city where contemporary art most directly confronts the contradictions of the present,” Amanda Cordeiro, curator at MASP, told Artsy. “What makes it unique is not merely its scale, but the friction between a certain urban utopia born of plural modernisms and the urgent realities of a deeply unequal and diverse city.”

  • Museum of Art of São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP): the city’s most important museum, housed in Lina Bo Bardi’s monolithic concrete-and-glass building from 1968—and, since 2025, also in the 14-story monolithic Annex across the street. The collection spans canonical European modernism and contemporary art from the Global South. Cordeiro singles out MASP’s vão livre, the vast open space beneath the building, as “the museum’s most defining image—suspended, yet open to a space that belongs to the city.”
  • Pinacoteca Luz and PINA Contemporânea: an essential historical span of Brazilian art. As chief curator Ana Maria Maia told Artsy, “the museum’s mission is to consider Brazilian art in dialogue with cultures from around the world, which stems from São Paulo’s cosmopolitan identity.”
  • Andrea & José Olympio Pereira Collection at Galpão da Lapa: Opened to the public in 2026, this private collection—displayed in a vast warehouse in Lapa—is a treasure trove of Brazilian modern and contemporary art. The Olympio Pereiras holds more than 2,400 works shown in rotating displays. Book in advance on the Galpão da Lapa website.
  • Pivô: the nonprofit exhibition space and art research residency, delivering stellar shows since Brenner founded it in 2012. It sits inside Copan, the S-shaped mega-block designed by Oscar Niemeyer. “What stays with me is how art here slips out from behind glass and into the everyday,” Brenner said of the area. “On the ground floors of the building it all runs together—the Megafauna bookshop, Bel Coelho’s Cuia with its natural wine and food that tastes like memory, and a few steps down Fel, pouring some of the best cocktails in town, where you can most definitely find me when I am around.”
  • Instituto Moreira Salles (IMS): Brazil’s preeminent photography institution, “whose archives and program are among the finest in Brazil” Brenner said. IMS opened in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 and in São Paulo in 2017. A site-specific large-scale installation by Richard Serra graces the back garden.
  • Tomie Ohtake Institute: Designed by Ruy Ohtake and opened in 2001, the institute has staged some of Brazil’s most ambitious recent exhibitions—including 2018’s “Afro-Atlantic Histories,” co-hosted with MASP.

Where the art world in São Paulo eats, drinks, and shops

The places where artists, gallerists, and curators actually gather are easy to miss without a local steer.

For drinks

Bar Balcão, Carneiro’s top pick with its single curving bar, has been a meeting point for the city’s critics, actors, artists, and curators for decades. In Vila Madalena, São Cristóvão is where artists gather after openings, according to Hena Lee, partner-director of Almeida & Dale; it’s also excellent for a traditional feijoada on a Saturday. The Punch, an intimate Japanese-style cocktail bar, is strictly by reservation and turns out innovative drinks with unusual ingredients; Guarita is more mixology-forward, with bartenders happy to build drinks to your palate. SubAstor is the classic Caipirinha stop—try something with seasonal fruits like tangerine or cajú. Beverino is a much-loved wine bar with a curated stock of biodynamic bottles you can pick off the shelves yourself.

For dinner

A Figueira Rubaiyat sets the city’s most photographed table around a centuries-old fig tree—it’s the high-end pick. In Centro, Bar da Dona Onça and Casa do Porco are inseparable from Pivô’s neighborhood; both are helmed by chef Janaína Rueda. “Janaína Rueda, a genius who laid the first stone of Copan’s new life right when we got there almost 15 years ago, turned home cooking into something communal,” said Brenner, “and with Casa do Porco, she keeps reshaping what the city can taste.” Chou offers an intimate garden and a menu built around seasonal ingredients. Le Freak is “a lively spot with a crowd that often includes artists, curators, and other people from São Paulo’s cultural community,” per Mazzucchelli. Metzi does ambitious Brazilian Mexican fusion; Hirá Ramen Izakaya is Lee’s pick for ramen. Piselli Jardins is the go-to for fresh pasta and a stellar wine list, and Shoshana, a tiny and much-cherished Jewish restaurant a few steps from Centro’s community arts center Casa do Povo, is a local staple.

For lunch

A Baianeira—Carneiro’s pick—inside MASP and led by chef Manuelle Ferraz, serves traditional Bahian and Mineiro cuisine. Cuia, on the ground floor of the Copan building, is Mazzucchelli’s pick: “a relaxed spot with excellent Brazilian-inspired cuisine, popular among people from the local creative scene.” In Jardins, Le Jazz is the reliable French bistro that draws an arty crowd (equally good for a casual dinner), while Botanikafé is the young-crowd go-to for sandwiches, vegetarian fare, and a fortifying espresso before dashing back to the galleries.

Top tips for art lovers visiting São Paulo

How to plan: São Paulo sprawls. Trying to cross gallery districts on a whim doesn’t work. Build the day by cluster—Jardins in the morning, Centro after lunch, Vila Madalena for early evening openings and dinner. Galleries are walkable within their cluster, but Uber is the standard way to move between them. The metro doesn’t reach most gallery areas, and rush-hour traffic across the city is unforgiving.

What locals know: Most galleries close Sundays and Mondays, with shorter Saturday hours; many of the strongest project spaces operate by appointment only—email ahead. Opening nights rarely start before 7 p.m. and often run late, spilling into dinner. As Brenner puts it: “Nobody is ever in a hurry to go home.”

Bringing work home: Exporting art from Brazil requires more paperwork than from European or U.S. galleries. Most São Paulo galleries handle international shipping routinely, but build in lead time. Speaking Portuguese helps; English is widely spoken in commercial galleries.



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René Magritte–inspired jersey worn by Belgian soccer team during World Cup 2026 knockout match.
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Belgium’s Red Devils advanced to the Round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup with a dramatic 3–2 extra-time victory over Senegal in Seattle on July 1st, wearing a jersey designed as an explicit homage to Belgian Surrealist artist René Magritte.

Created in partnership with Adidas, the shirt features a robin’s egg blue base color and a pattern of repeated pink and blue soccer balls, evoking Magritte’s recurring motif of round shapes such as apples, moons, and suns, which feature in his most celebrated works. Small horizontal lines throughout the print are a further nod to the game itself, representing the lines of a soccer pitch. The most direct reference to Magritte appears at the collar, where subtle script reads Ceci n’est pas un maillot (“This is not a jersey”), a direct homage to his 1928–29 painting The Treachery of Images, in which a painted pipe sits beneath the words Ceci n’est pas une pipe.

Magritte, who was born in 1898 and died in 1967, spent much of his career in Brussels, producing works that subverted the relationship between image, language, and reality. His preoccupation with the afternoon and evening sky—a signature blue featured in many of his canvases—is widely seen as the source of the jersey’s dominant tone.

This is the fourth time Belgium has used its away kit to celebrate an element of national culture. Previous editions honored the country’s cycling heritage at the 2016 European Championship, the Belgian music festival Tomorrowland at the 2022 World Cup, and the cartoonist Hergé’s Tintin at Euro 2024.

The Royal Belgian Football Association described the design as one that “sparks the imagination and invites conversation.” Authentic versions are available through Adidas for $150. Belgium will play the U.S. in the Round of 16 on Tuesday, July 7th.



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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Five Footballers Who Love Contemporary Art
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Soccer, 1983
Robert Peak
RoGallery

Whether they call it soccer, football, or the beautiful game, soccer and art share points of intersection beyond aesthetics. Both are primarily visual experiences that viewers feel passionate about. Some stadiums have been compared to cathedrals or museums for the sport, and a direct crossover between soccer and art has deep roots.


Many artists have made works about soccer. Zinedine Zidane, for instance, who won the World Cup with France in 1998, has been the subject of at least two artworks: Philippe Parreno and Douglas Gordon’s film Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait (2006), in which 17 cameras followed the player in real time for one game, and Adel Abdessemed’s sculpture of the player in his last World Cup appearance (Headbutt, 2012).

Still, the art-and-soccer discourse tends to focus on representations of the game. But several players have themselves expressed an interest in and engaged with contemporary art as painters, curators, collectors and hobbyists.

Here, we spotlight five names engaged in art.


David Beckham

The consummate collector

One of the most famous players ever to kick a soccer ball, the English former midfielder (and current A-lister) started collecting art with his wife, fashion designer Victoria Beckham, in the early 2000s.

A product of their time coming up in 1990s Britain, the couple bought works by several Young British Artists, including Damien Hirst, Jake & Dinos Chapman, Sam Taylor-Johnson, and Tracey Emin. To their collection, they have since added pieces by the likes of Nan Goldin, Banksy, Yayoi Kusama, and Yoshitomo Nara, as well as some older works by Edgar Degas and Claude Monet.

Beckham, ubiquitous in Qatar during the first edition of Art Basel Qatar earlier this year, has often professed an interest in art and design, and has stated before that had he not become a soccer player, he would have wanted to be an artist.

Victoria hosted an exhibition of Old Master works at her store in Mayfair in association with Sotheby’s in 2018, and last year curated an exhibition with the auction house of works by 10 artists, including George Condo, Richard Prince, and Yves Klein. Some works were also shown at her fashion boutique on Dover Street in West London.

Victoria hosted an exhibition of Old Master works at her store in Mayfair in association with Sotheby’s in 2018, and last year curated an exhibition with the auction house of works by 10 artists, including George Condo, Richard Prince, and Yves Klein. Some works were also shown at her fashion boutique on Dover Street in West London.

Beckham shares his interest in art collecting with his former England manager Fabio Capello, who has a collection that includes several works by Wassily Kandinsky. Another prominent former soccer player and collector is German midfielder Michael Ballack, who won the World Cup with his country in 2014 and has recently been spotted at art fairs, including Art Basel Paris and Frieze.


Juan Mata

The keen curator

When Juan Mata played for Manchester United, he regularly visited the local Whitworth Gallery. In a 2015 blog post, he wrote of finding inspiration for his playing in an exhibition by Cai Guo-Qiang.

When Mata met curator Hans-Ulrich Obrist, his long-standing interest in art and Obrist’s matched interest in soccer led them to collaborate (along with writer, filmmaker, and curator Josh Willdigg) on the exhibition “Football City, Art United” as part of the 2025 Manchester International Festival. They paired a team of 11 soccer players—including Ella Toone, who plays for the Manchester United women’s team, and their former United star Eric Cantona—with a “starting eleven” of artists.

Cantona, for instance, was paired with conceptual artist Ryan Gander, and they created three artworks together; Toone was matched with art collective Keiken, who created a massive sculpture of a mask-portrait, The Divine Puppeteer (2025), based on Toone’s spirit animal.


David James

The practicing painter

The day after Spain beat Saudi Arabia 4–0 in the 2026 World Cup, former England and Liverpool goalkeeper David James posted a manga-style drawing of Spain’s young star attacker Lamine Yamal in his national team kit, posture mid-jump, seen from behind, head (including very recognizable bleached-blond hair) turned back.

It wasn’t just a doodle: James has been painting since his playing days to relax and has garnered a reputation for portraying soccer-related subjects. These have included a portrait of trailblazing female soccer player Gill Sayell and a painting of Bobby Moore, who captained England on their only World Cup title win (thus far), shaking hands with Queen Elizabeth II (he painted it for a charity auction for the Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer Research U.K.).

But James’s art goes beyond soccer subjects. He also paints his cats, landscapes, interior scenes, and a copy of the Notting Hill movie poster, replacing Hugh Grant with himself (citing the lack of ethnic diversity in the movie; it was also made for a charity auction).


Lotte Wubben-Moy

The cerebral subject

English defender Lotte Wubben-Moy has been the subject of a couple of paintings by soccer-loving artist Rose Wylie. The collaboration entailed Wiley transforming snapshots from daily life—training, match days, behind-the-scenes photographs—that Wubben-Moy sent her into a series of paintings and drawings, playful in their own right. Wubben-Moy was a perfect choice for the project, as she was already interested in art. “Football is art. I really believe that. It’s a space where you can create, express yourself and be free,” she wrote in a piece for The Players’ Tribune.

The origin of these ideas, she explained, traces back to her upbringing in East London, an area rich in young creatives, artists’ studios, music venues, and soccer cages that she played in as a kid. Wubben-Moy draws inspiration from both, looking back at her childhood in this creative part of town and describing her life and community in these terms—how the color of the grass was like paint, “the pitch was our big rectangular canvas.”

Playing as a professional for Arsenal Women, she also started Lots to Explore, a community project encouraging creative pursuits like art and writing that offers free sessions for young girls in North London, blending soccer and creativity.


Héctor Bellerin

The game’s aesthete

In an interview with the Guardian, Real Betis player Héctor Bellerin recalled a conversation with an artist friend about art helping him through a period of struggling with mental health. “I used to pass by and say I liked things, but then I started to analyse the meanings more,” he said.

Bellerin, a defender who played for Spain and spent 10 years at London club Arsenal, is well-recognized for the diversity of his interests beyond sport. He is an avid reader who posts the books he reads on Instagram, and he once commissioned a portrait of himself from London street artist ENDLESS. He met the British street artist alongside his then Arsenal teammate Alex Iwobi at a solo exhibition of the artist’s work in 2017. The following year, the artist gifted Bellerin a print of himself.

Bellerin is also an amateur photographer as well. In 2021, Bellerin also co-curated a photography exhibition of photos taken by Syrian children refugees who were given cameras by the charity Coaching for Life.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/D691cQI

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