Monday, May 18, 2026

Nan Goldin will present major London exhibition at the Hayward in 2026.
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American artist and activist Nan Goldin will open a major show at London’s Hayward Gallery this fall, marking her first institutional presentation in the U.K. since 2002. Titled “You Never Did Anything Wrong,” the exhibition will run from November 24, 2026, through March 7, 2027. It will conclude the Southbank Centre’s 75th anniversary year.

Over the past 50 years, Goldin has become one of the most influential photographers of her generation. She’s known for her raw, intimate portraits of addiction, romance, grief, queer life, and friendship. Her diaristic approach to color photography has foregrounded emotional vulnerability.

The Hayward Gallery show will bring together important photographs and slideshow works spanning Goldin’s career. The artist has described her oeuvre as “a record of my life that no one can revise.” Her lens has frequently focused on her own life and her social circle. According to the Southbank Centre, this exhibition will explore Goldin’s evolving commitment to documenting these relationships and communities often excluded from mainstream representation.

This work is closely associated with the artist’s political activism. In recent years, she’s become an outspoken advocate for those affected by the opioid crisis.

“While U.K. audiences may have seen glimpses of Nan’s story, this major exhibition will offer a long overdue institutional-scale immersion into the world of a true revolutionary,” Rachel Thomas, the Hayward Gallery’s Roden Chief Curator, said in a statement. “The Hayward’s show extends an invitation to experience work that is essential for understanding the interconnectedness of personal experience and political action, revealing the human condition in all of its beauty and fragility.”

Mark Ball, the Southbank Centre’s Artistic Director, described Goldin as an artist who “reshaped the language of photography.”

“At the Hayward Gallery, we are thrilled to host her first major U.K. exhibition for over two decades with work that captures the soul of her practice,” Ball said. “To bring her radical vision to our Brutalist spaces is a moment of immense pride, offering our audiences an encounter with an artist who has never looked away.”

Goldin’s last U.K. institutional exhibition was “The Devil’s Playground,” a large-scale European traveling retrospective which opened at Whitechapel Gallery in 2002. In 2025, Goldin’s most famous series, “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency,” made its U.K. debut at Gagosian in London.



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Art Dubai’s 20th edition rallies its local art community amid regional tensions.
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Art Dubai, the United Arab Emirates’ premier art fair, opened its 20th edition this past weekend with a scaled-down, regionally focused program after being postponed earlier this year due to the Iran–Israel war.

The fair, billed as a “Special Edition,” opened to VIP guests on May 14 at the Madinat Jumeirah resort and ran through May 17. For the first time, entry is free. Organizers have pared the lineup to 50 galleries—most from the region, including Abu Dhabi, Beirut, Jeddah, Ramallah, and Dubai—showing contemporary, modern, and digital work in a single hall.

The fair had been delayed after missile and drone attacks across the Gulf disrupted daily life beginning in late February, prompting gallery closures and travel restrictions in a region that functions as a major business and tourism hub. A ceasefire is currently in place.

“Our galleries, collectors, and partners have come together and really shown up,” said Dunja Gottweis, who was appointed director of Art Dubai in 2025. “Through the detailed conversations held with our partners and long-term stakeholders, it was evident that this was a moment for our community to come and to stand together.”

Gottweis said the response since the postponement had been “incredible,” adding that Dubai’s “entrepreneurial spirit” had shaped the fair's recovery.

Among the returning exhibitors is Dubai-based Ayyam Gallery, which specializes in contemporary Syrian art and is also marking its 20th anniversary this year. “For the first time in 20 years of Art Dubai and Ayyam Gallery, I feel a real sense of community and genuine collaborations that focus on the regional scene and the main players from our part of the world, rather than on Western approval,” said the gallery’s director, Maya Samawi. “The fair is smaller, but hopefully more impactful than ever.”

Ramallah’s Gallery One presented a solo booth by Palestinian artist Amjad Ghannam, making his Art Dubai debut with “This Is Not the Third World,” a series of paintings that draw on Pablo Picasso’s visual language to address political trauma in the Arab world. “I didn't know what to expect, and I was honestly pleasantly surprised with the audience's presence,” Ghannam said. “Thankfully, there were some good sales too.”

Gaza, 2025
Amjad Ghannam
Gallery One

Jeddah’s Hafez Gallery showed Lebanese artist Lana Khayat, whose booth features textured floral paintings and an installation of 1,000 handmade sculptural flowers made of wire, sponge, and patterned cloth. Khayat described the installation as a gift to the city. “It’s a city that has given me so much,” she said. “I felt with everything that's been happening, I needed to give something back.”

Beyond the gallery booths, the fair included onsite installations by Armenian-Syrian artist Kevork Mourad and Emirati artist Hashel Al Lamki, among others, alongside talks, book launches, and DJ sets. An institutional section featured roughly 20 works of modern Arab art from the Sharjah-based Barjeel Art Foundation.

Collectors said the smaller, regionally focused format had its advantages. Lebanese collector Charles Al Sidaoui, who has lived in Dubai for nearly 30 years, called the fair well-curated and easier to navigate than in previous years. "I think for the artists living in this region it was a blessing in disguise, because they were given more attention and focus," he said.

Al Sidaoui said the war had made buyers more cautious but had not dampened overall interest. “There is obviously some kind of uncertainty surrounding us, and we are being careful. Now, we're thinking twice before making an acquisition, especially if it’s of a certain price point. However, there is still interest in acquiring art,” he said. “People are so fed up with the situation, they need events like Art Dubai to come and enjoy their lives like they used to do in the past.”



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What Sold at Frieze New York 2026
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Frieze New York 2026 closed on Sunday, May 17, capping its 15th edition and a packed New York Art Week of fairs, openings, and other festivities. This year’s edition featured 68 galleries from 25 countries.

Some 25,000 visitors passed through The Shed in Hudson Yards over the fair’s five-day run, which opened with a VIP preview last Wednesday that drew celebrities, art world luminaries, and a healthy clutch of sales.

“Frieze’s VIP day was as busy as one would expect—corridors were jammed, and dealers were hard to reach, as many conversations were taking place in the first few hours,” art advisor Matteo Baschirotti told Artsy, noting that “most” of the works he had his eye on had sold by the second day.

That momentum mirrored a broader bullishness across the city’s commercial art world. Auction houses are gearing up for a week of sales expected to total between $1.8 billion and $2.6 billion, and dealers at other fairs—whether focused on emerging art at Independent and NADA or blue-chip and historical works at TEFAF—reported similarly buoyant moods.

“The energy in New York is unbeatable, and we were glad to welcome not only our local collectors, but many international visitors who traveled specifically for the fair,” said Matthew Wood, co-founder of Mendes Wood DM.

Here is a breakdown of the sales reported by galleries at Frieze New York 2026.

Leading sales at Frieze New York 2026

White Cube led sales at the fair with two works by El Anatsui: LuwVor I (2025) for $2.2 million and MivEvi III (2025) for $1.9 million. Other works sold by the gallery included:

Thaddaeus Ropac reported sales for artists across its roster, led by Georg Baselitz’s Stunde der Nachtigall (2012) for €1.4 million ($1.54 million). Other sales reported included:

Phantom and A Map / poetry 05WBXS01V3, 2018-2024
Kyungah Ham
Kukje Gallery

Kukje Gallery led sales with a work by Ha Chong-hyun for a price in the range of $390,000 to $468,000. The gallery also reported the sale of the following:

Tina Kim Gallery’s sales were led by a painting by Ha Chong-hyun for $390,000. It also sold a second painting by the artist for $180,000 and reported additional sales, including:

Almine Rech placed a major light work by James Turrell in the range of $900,000 to $1 million.

Pace Gallery sold “numerous” pieces from its dual presentation of works by Maya Lin and Leo Villareal, with prices in the range of $100,000 to $200,000 per work.


More sales reported at Frieze New York 2026

Water Flowing I, 2026
Reika Takebayashi
Public Gallery

Stone Forming II, 2026
Reika Takebayashi
Public Gallery



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Friday, May 15, 2026

Our 7 Favorite Artworks Under $10,000 from the 2026 New York Art Week Fairs
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Never one to do things by halves, New York this week is playing host to more than 350 art fair booths across various venues in Manhattan.

The six fairs listed below form the spine of New York Art Week, when the city’s art scene comes alive with gallery openings, events, auctions, and enough programming to keep art lovers’ step counts—and calendar events—high.

With a higher concentration of fairs, galleries, and auctions than any other city, the lineup affirms New York’s status as the de facto capital of the art world. Each fair offers something distinct, too: Frieze brings the top end of contemporary art (read our rundown of the best booths from the fair here); NADA spotlights galleries and artists at the cutting edge; 1-54 foregrounds artists from Africa and its diaspora; TEFAF brings blue-chip panache; Independent hosts focused single-artist presentations aplenty; and Future Fair platforms a broad swath of newer names and dealers from the tri-state area.

Artsy’s editorial team has scoured them all to pick out seven of our choice works priced under $10,000.


NADA New York

Through May 17th

The Starrett-Lehigh Building, 601 W. 26th Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10001

Founded in 2002 to support young galleries, the nonprofit New Art Dealers Alliance (NADA) brings that mission to its New York fair—the largest of New York Art Week, with 120 exhibitors. Here, visitors will discover works by younger and emerging artists.


Bu Shi

Oyster, 2026

Presented by SARAHCROWN New York

Price: $3,900

Oyster, 2026
Bu Shi
SARAHCROWN New York

The palm-sized paintings of Chinese artist Bu Shi hold an amulet-like power. The artist, who lives in Ravenna, Italy, employs an unnatural, jewel-tone palette to create landscapes and still lifes that engage with occult themes. Having practiced seal engraving and calligraphy, the artist brings his attention to detail to these intricate paintings.

Oyster (2026), on view with New York gallery SARAHCROWN, depicts two jagged oyster shells set in a darkened arched cove. Resting beside the shells is a cameo ring with a woman’s face, a white artichoke-shaped sculpture, and a burning red candle.

Painted in subtly variegated dark hues, the work encourages the eye to search to discover small details. It’s a delightful and intimate viewing experience. Shi’s first solo show, “The Lighthouse,” is currently on view downtown at the gallery, bringing together mysterious scenes of rocky coasts, isolated beaches, and solitary islands.

—Katie White


Margaret R. Thompson

For Ithell, The Cardinal Flame, 2026

Presented by Red Arrow Gallery

Price: $5,000

For Ithell, The Cardinal Flame, 2026
Margaret R Thompson
Red Arrow Gallery

This painting by Margaret R. Thompson is one in a booth of new works with Red Arrow Gallery at NADA New York. Thompson nods to the great Surrealist artist Ithell Colquhoun in her title, though I also sense influences from masters of mysticism and transcendentalism like Agnes Pelton and Hilma af Klint, who used painting to explore spirituality and unseen forces.

This particular painting, with imagery that recalls the sea, sun, sky, and fire, is made with volcanic rock, collected earth, temple oil, and natural pigments. I love how the material keeps the painting grounded, even as it opens up space for the mind to wander and offers a small escape from the pressures of the everyday.

—Casey Lesser


Emily Ponsonby

Embroidered Souls, 2026

Presented by Gillian Jason Gallery

Price: £6,500–£6,750 ($8,670–$9,000)

Embroidered Souls, 2026
Emily Ponsonby
Gillian Jason Gallery

One of my favorite discoveries at NADA was Emily Ponsonby, who has a lovely solo booth with Gillian Jason Gallery. Ponsonby works in encaustic—a historic technique using wax and pigment—which gives her paintings a hazy softness. The process feels especially personal: the Dorset, south England–based artist’s father was a beekeeper, and her surfaces hold traces of layering, scraping, and touch.

In Embroidered Souls (2025), Ponsonby captures that moment of ease when you can take off your socks and rest—it might be at the end of a day or after a run or during a picnic. The title is also telling, suggesting these soles have been through a lot, or are embroidered with stories. Like the rest of Ponsonby’s work on view, it feels pulled from a fond memory.

—C.L.


TEFAF New York

Through May 20th

Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10065

Founded in 1988, The European Fine Art Foundation (TEFAF) has built its flagship Maastricht fair into a byword for lavish historical presentations and old-money ambience. Its smaller New York edition, launched in 2016, skews more 20th-century than its continental counterpart, but remains the week’s most blue-chip fair, where works by the market’s loftiest names are commonplace.


Hilda Palafox

Paisaje II, 2025

Presented by Sean Kelly Gallery

Price: $5,000

Paisaje II, 2025
Hilda Palafox
Sean Kelly Gallery

Mexico City artist Hilda Palafox is known for her monumental depictions of women across painting, murals, ceramics, textiles, and drawing. Earlier this year, Sean Kelly Gallery presented recent works by the artist in the exhibition “De Tierra y Susurros.”

At TEFAF, the gallery is showcasing a handful of small-scale works in acrylic and charcoal on paper. These black-and-white works are almost photographic in appearance, linking themes of the female body to ecology. In Paisaje II 2025, the white silhouette of a blossom hovers over an open mouth in an image both sensual and striking.

—K.W.


1-54 New York

Through May 17th

The Starrett-Lehigh Building, 600 W. 27th Street, New York, NY 10001

The only fair focused entirely on contemporary art from Africa and its diaspora, 1-54 launched in London during Frieze Week in October and has run a New York edition since 2015. This year, the fair returns to the Starrett-Lehigh Building (the same venue as NADA) and will feature 26 exhibitors, including a curated section focused on Brazil.


Shourouk Rhaiem

Lessive Cléopâtre, 2025

Presented by 193 Gallery

Price: €8,500 ($9,955)

Lessive Cleopatre, 2025
Shourouk Rhaiem
193 Gallery

At the booth of Paris’s 193 Gallery, Shourouk Rhaiem’s Lessive Cléopâtre (2025)—a faithful, crystal-encrusted replica of the vintage French laundry-detergent box of the same name—sparkles with clever humor. The original packaging, with its kohl-eyed Cleopatra and a tagline promising “Blancheur Divine” (Divine Whiteness), carries the casual orientalism of its era. French artist Rhaiem, who is of Tunisian descent, covers the packaging with tiny rhinestones, elevating this laundry-room banality into something closer to a Fabergé egg.

Rhaiem spent the 2000s as a fine jeweler at her Shourouk Paris label before extending her embroidery and crystalwork into sculpture. The bedazzled replica has become her signature: staples of French consumer culture, such as cigarette packs and household products, are recast in gemwork, elevating their associations with domestic labor and advertising. The Cléopâtre on view was included in “Le mystère Cléopâtre” at Paris’s Institut du Monde Arabe last year.

—Arun Kakar


Independent

Through May 17th

Pier 36, 299 South Street, New York, NY 10002

Founded in 2010 with a strong emphasis on curation, Independent is known for its open-booth-style format and in-depth artist focus. More than 70% of the 76 galleries taking part this year are mounting solo artist presentations, so expect to add a few new names to your artist wishlist.


Brittany Mojo

The Sprawl, 2026

Presented by Mindy Solomon Gallery

Price: $8,000

The Sprawl, 2026
Brittany Mojo
Mindy Solomon Gallery

Brittany Mojo’s coil-constructed ceramic vessels display both keen technical ability and a defiance of formal tradition. Her matte, underglaze finishes unite colors that don’t typically go together. Her surfaces feature geometric patterns defined with wavering black outlines, which she then loosely adheres to.

In The Sprawl (2026), triangles of bright and muted hues ripple across a textured surface, a little purple spilling into the vivid orange section next to it, some blue infiltrating a mauve field. Though the work sold, other pots by the artist, adorned with ebullient floral forms, are still on offer at the gallery’s booth.

Mojo lives and works in Southern California, and the region’s fluidity and freedom infiltrate her work. “She’s not going for symmetry or perfection. She’s going for childlike wonder,” gallery assistant Mariana Mikaela said.

—Alina Cohen


Anton Stankowski

Ohne Titel (Spiegelung im Motorrad) (Untitled (Reflection in a motorcycle)), 1938

Presented by OSMOS

Price: $3,500

Ohne Titel (Spiegelung im Motorrad) (Untitled (Reflection in a motorcycle)), 1938
Anton Stankowski
OSMOS

A 1938 black-and-white photograph by Anton Stankowski at OSMOS’s booth caught me off guard before I realized what I was looking at. Ohne Titel (Spiegelung im Motorrad) (Untitled (Reflection in a Motorcycle)) frames a tight close-up of a motorcycle’s underside: dark coiled hoses, hex nuts, and oversized bolts curving across the picture, and at the center of it all a polished chrome disc, its convex surface acting like a fish-eye mirror.

Inside that mirror sits the small, slightly distorted figure of Stankowski himself with one hand raised toward us, his body wrapping around the curve of the chrome like it’s being poured into the metal.

Stankowski, who passed away in 1998, is better known as the graphic designer behind the Deutsche Bank logo. He came up through the Bauhaus-adjacent Neues Sehen (New Vision) movement, in which his peers like László Moholy-Nagy treated industrial machinery as raw material. This image sits squarely in that tradition. It’s half-mechanical study, half-hidden self-portrait, and entirely a useful reminder, too, of why Independent is a fair ripe for discovery.

—A.K.



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The 5 Best Booths at TEFAF New York
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An overcast day on the Upper East Side did little to dampen the spirits at the Park Avenue Armory, as a typically glamorous crowd convened for TEFAF New York 2026.

Marking its 12th edition in New York and its 10th in the May slot, the fair is an established fixture of New York Art Week, complementing the more contemporary-minded fairs taking place this week—such as Independent, NADA, and Frieze—with a more historically focused selection of exhibitors.

That has very much been TEFAF’s stock in trade since it was founded in 1988 in the Dutch city of Maastricht, where the fair claims to present some 7,000 years of art history (something it did with aplomb at its recent outing). There’s a similarly broad attitude at the fair’s stateside edition—ancient sculpture and jewelry can still be found—but with a greater focus on the 20th-century and contemporary art.

In fact, several galleries used the fair to debut new bodies of work altogether, such as Thaddaeus Ropac’s solo presentation of paintings by Eva Helene Pade. Others paired new works with historical counterparts, as in MASSIMODECARLO’s presentation of new paintings by Alvaro Barrington alongside embroideries by Alighiero Boetti. There were solid works from 20th-century favorites throughout: the likes of Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Andy Warhol were not in short supply. It’s no surprise, then, that TEFAF ranks among the most expensive fairs of the week—works under $20,000 are a rarity, and many push into the mid-eight figures.

Also not in short supply at the VIP opening day: floral decorations and wine. And cameras and appetites were indulging plentifully in each, respectively. Few art fair opening days are as glamorous.

Here, we present our five best booths from TEFAF New York.


Gagosian

Booth 350

With works by Kathleen Ryan

Cherries, melons, and oranges are among the glittering, rotting fruit sculptures that greet TEFAF visitors upon entry to the Park Avenue Armory’s main hall. Gagosian has given over its booth to Kathleen Ryan, showing new works from her ongoing “Bad Fruit” series. Here, the artist portrays oversized produce in slow decomposition, the mold rendered painstakingly in pearls, opals, agates, and semiprecious crystals, each one fixed in place with a single steel pin.

The works are Ryan’s playful take on the American tradition of pushpin-beaded fruit. Bad Cherries (Princess) (2026) hangs a pair of monumental cherries from a long, conjoined wire stem, the rot scattered across each surface like couture sequins. Bad Lime (Treasure) (2026), meanwhile, leans tall against the wall, its decaying flesh crusted with shells, geodes, and milky cabochons that seem more like a coral reef than fruit at first glance.

Half the fun is in recognizing the rinds of these fruit sculptures, which are sourced from salvaged vehicles: the cool blue arc of Bad Melon (Fantasy) (2026) is a former Volkswagen Beetle, while Bad Melon (Little Chunk & Little Baby Chunk) (2020–24) carries the contour of an Airstream trailer.


Gana Art

Booth 372

With works by Choi Jong-Tae, Yoo Youngkuk, and Park Dae-Sung

Seoul-based Gana Art gathers standout works by three Korean masters: the abstract painter Yoo Youngkuk, the sculptor Choi Jong-Tae, and the ink painter Park Dae-Sung—three figures whose careers map the relationship between Western modernism and Korean tradition.

Yoo’s Mountain (1972) anchors one side of the booth: an immediately recognizable example of his bold, color-saturated, geometrically simplified abstractions. Choi’s sculptures, meanwhile, are spread throughout—fine bronze and painted-wood examples of his figures and “faces,” rendered almost in silhouette, with sharply angled jaws and features reduced to a few faint marks. Face (1997), a roughly 30-inch bronze, retains a curious flatness, even in three dimensions.

On the other side of the booth, Park’s Guryong Waterfall (2026), made for the fair, returns to one of his most enduring subjects: the Nine Dragons Falls of Mt. Geumgangsan, in North Korea. Park works in the centuries-old Korean sansuhwa (mountain-and-water) ink tradition; here, monumental cliffs are rendered in dense, forceful black ink, while a single thin ribbon of water descends through the center in delicately diluted, almost ghostly strokes. “Using sumi ink with the brushstroke requires such a high level of control,” said Jung Yeon Park, the artist’s daughter.

That technical control is all the more striking given Park’s extraordinary biography: He lost his parents and half of his left arm during the Korean War at the age of four and is largely self-taught. A recent traveling U.S. museum tour at stops including LACMA has positioned him as one of the most institutionally celebrated living Korean painters. Prices for Park’s works range from $50,000 to $100,000.


Galerie Patrick Seguin

Booth 331

With works by Jean Prouvé

Paris-based Galerie Patrick Seguin assembles one of the most museum-like booths of this year’s fair: a tightly organized survey of Jean Prouvé’s architecture, presented through 12 scale models, explanatory texts, and archival video. Prouvé was known for his prefabricated metal structures. The models aren’t for sale here—the buildings are, and the dealer’s staff will assemble them for the buyer. “The smallest can be built in [one day] by four people,” gallery founder Patrick Seguin told Artsy.

Works span 1940 to 1956 (Prouvé’s most fertile years), and two pieces stand out. The Villa Lopez (1953), which was nicknamed Ombres Bleues for its tinted blue aluminum panels, is being shown publicly for the first time and is the most architecturally ambitious of the lot. A one-off, free-form variation on the standardized system, it was designed for a single family rather than mass-produced. The Better Days (1956) house, designed for an emergency-housing campaign for the Paris homeless, gathers a circular concrete utility core with prefabricated panels radiating outward like petals, and is seen as Prouvé’s most idealistic, and most famously thwarted, social commission.

Around them, the other models prove the consistency of Prouvé’s “constructive system” across radically different functions and scales: the lightweight SCAL 8x8 pavilion (1940), made with Pierre Jeanneret, the 6x6 and 6x9 emergency housing units (1944), conceived for families displaced by the war, the 8x8 reconstruction unit (1945), and the Carnac vacation house (1946), among others.

“They are historical, inspiring, and a real manifestation of architecture,” Seguin enthused. Prices range from $1.8 million to $12 million.


Yares Art

Booth 338

With works by Anthony Caro, Helen Frankenthaler, Robert Motherwell, and David Smith

In its TEFAF booth, local stalwart Yares Art presents a selection of works by Anthony Caro, Helen Frankenthaler, Robert Motherwell, and David Smith: a quartet of painter-and-sculptor friends whose transatlantic exchanges helped shape American post-war abstraction.

The anchor is a Frankenthaler-Caro pairing. In Frankenthaler’s Gliding Figure (1961), a long, mustard-yellow brushstroke loops across the upper half of the canvas, while a soft, burnt-orange shape sits inside, its edges bleeding into the cloth: A sterling example of her “soak-stain” technique, in which thinned paint is poured directly onto canvas and allowed to seep. Across from it, Caro’s Silver Piece XXVIII (1984–85) is a low-slung assemblage of polished, curved, welded steel components from his “Silver” series.

“Frankenthaler and Caro were friends from 1959 until she passed away in 2011,” gallery founder Dennis Yares told Artsy. “Though Helen was a painter, she learned sculpting from Caro. And though Caro was a sculptor, he learned painting from Helen. So it’s a 50-plus-year friendship.”

The conversation widens around them. Two Motherwell “Open” paintings—Open #184 (1969) and Scarlet Open (1972)—date almost exactly to the years he was married to Frankenthaler and trades her stained forms for a few charcoal lines sketching a doorway across a flat field of color. Smith’s Voltron XXIV (1963), a nearly eight-foot column of welded steel made two years before his death, supplies the heavy sculptural counterweight that had such an influence on Caro. Prices range from $250,000 to $3.2 million, with the Smith price undisclosed.


Friedman Benda

Booth 325

With works by Wendell Castle, John Chamberlain, Nicole Cherubini, Frida Escobedo, Shiro Kuramata, Joris Laarman, nendo, Gerrit Rietveld, Samuel Ross, Osamu Suzuki, and Faye Toogood

Red Blue Chair, first half of the 1920s 
Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
Friedman Benda

Stool Sculpture, 1959
Wendell Castle
Friedman Benda

Design heavyweight Friedman Benda frames its stylish booth around “revisiting modernism,” according to gallery co-founder Marc Benda.

“We have this very one-dimensional idea of modernism that it’s all very rational and straight lines and glass and steel,” he told Artsy. “But in reality, modernism, as it developed over time, is a license for creatives to really expand and experiment.”

A standout is an early example of Gerrit Thomas Rietveld’s Red Blue Chair (1920s). It’s an icon of Dutch De Stijl (the style) design—a chair built from intersecting wooden slats and two flat planks, the back painted red, the seat blue, the structural frame black pocked with bright yellow—and it looks like a three-dimensional Piet Mondrian painting. An early Wendell Castle work of stack-laminated, hand-carved walnut showcases the American artist’s organic approach.

Two slender posts rise into forked Y-shaped tops, with a small scooped seat hovering near the floor: It looks half furniture, half creature. Nearby, a small, dark bronze by John Chamberlain, made before he switched to his signature technique with crushed auto-body parts, welds thin vertical rods and horizontal bars into a compact, near-architectural diagram.

Red Blue Chair, first half of the 1920s 
Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
Friedman Benda

Stool Sculpture, 1959
Wendell Castle
Friedman Benda

Roly-Poly Chair / Water, 2016
Faye Toogood
Friedman Benda

Optimistic uncertainties solicit integration (Material Articulation), 2021
Samuel Ross
Friedman Benda

Ply Loop Console, 2026
Joris Laarman
Friedman Benda

Untitled, 1954
John Chamberlain
Friedman Benda

Creek Bench, 2022
Frida Escobedo
Friedman Benda

Dogū, 1960
Osamu Suzuki
Friedman Benda

hyouri R (Pendant), 2024
nendo
Friedman Benda

hyouri S (Pendant), 2024
nendo
Friedman Benda

Love seat, left, 2026
Nicole Cherubini
Friedman Benda

Love seat, right, 2026
Nicole Cherubini
Friedman Benda

Chair from the Soseikan Yamaguchi House (1974-75), Takarazuka, Hyogo, Japan, 1975-1976
Shiro Kuramata
Friedman Benda

On the more contemporary side, Joris Laarman’s console Ply Loop shield (wall) (2025) picks up the modernist preoccupation with technology and craft. Intricately curved plywood produced through digital fabrication appears to emerge through the wall. Elsewhere, a tall hanging sculpture by the Japanese studio nendo, composed of finely milled ivory laths stacked into tiered hexagonal volumes, adds a spectral note to a corner of the booth. Prices range from $22,000 to $500,000.



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The Metropolitan Museum of Art will merge with the Neue Galerie.
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New York’s the Neue Galerie has announced it will merge with The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2028. The institution will be renamed to the Met Ronald S. Lauder Neue Galerie, known as the Met Neue Galerie. The merger, announced Thursday, was arranged to ensure that the museum and its collection remain intact when its founder, cosmetics heir Ronald Lauder, will no longer be around.

“This represents an enormous opportunity,” said the Met’s director Max Hollein, who has also served on the board of the Neue for 20 years, in an interview with the New York Times. “It allows us to be the custodian, not only of an enormous amount of very important works of art, but also of a place with profound integrity and beauty and vision.”

The Neue Galerie was established in 2001 and is devoted to early 20th-century Austrian and German art and design. The collection is made up of works belonging to Lauder, the estate of Serge Sabarsky, and the museum itself. Highlights include Gustav Klimt’s masterpiece Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I (1903–07), otherwise known as the Woman in Gold; as well Egon Schiele’s Town among the Greenery (1917); and Max Beckmann’s Self-Portrait with Horn (1938). Works by Oskar Kokoschka, Josef Hoffmann, and Otto Wagner are also included, as are many figures associated with the Bauhaus including László Moholy-Nagy, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and Oskar Schlemmer.

An endowment, estimated around $200 million, has been established to preserve and care for the Neue Galerie by Lauder and his daughter, Aerin Lauder Zinterhofer. They have also donated 13 paintings from their personal collection to the combined museums, including Die Tänzerin (The Dancer) (1016–18) by Gustav Klimt, Die Russiche Tänzerin Mela (The Russian Dancer Mela) (1911) by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, and Galleria Umberto (1925) by Max Beckmann.

Stipulations surrounding the merger indicate that while the Met may borrow artworks from the Neue to display in their flagship Fifth Avenue location, Klimt’s Woman in Gold must remain where it is. Lauder refers to the piece as his museum’s Mona Lisa.

The Neue will close on May 27th as planned to undergo infrastructure renovations, and will reopen this fall with an exhibition celebrating its 25th anniversary.



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Thursday, May 14, 2026

$2.2 million El Anatsui work leads Frieze New York 2026 sales.
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Frieze New York 2026 kicked off its 15th edition at The Shed in Manhattan on Wednesday, May 13th with a VIP preview that drew a smart mix of collectors, museum heads, artists, and other cultural figures. 68 galleries from 25 countries are participating in this year’s fair, which runs through May 17th.

Among those in attendance on Wednesday were boldface names including Leonardo DiCaprio, Julia Fox, and Sharon Stone, in addition to major collectors and patrons including Don and Mera Rubell, Beth Rudin DeWoody, and Glenn Fuhrman. Museum directors and institutional leaders came out in droves, among them the Serpentine Galleries’s artistic director Hans Ulrich Obrist and Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak. Artists Dustin Yellin, Emma Webster, and Jungjin Lee attended as well.

The fair’s preview day saw strong sales across blue chip and emerging artists alike. A few galleries reported sales that surpassed seven figures, led by White Cube, who sold two major pieces by El Anatsui: LuwVor I (2025) for $2.2 million and MivEvi III (2025) for $1.9 million. At Thaddaeus Ropac, Georg Baselitz’s oil painting Stunde der Nachtigall (2012) sold for €1.4 million ($1.63 million), while Almine Rech offloaded a light work by James Turrell that is valued between $900,000 and $1,000,000.

While Public Gallery, with a presentation of works by Reika Takebayashi, was the only booth reported to have sold out thus far, a few other galleries including Mendes Wood DM, Ortuzar Projects, and Marc Selwyn Fine Art finished the day with only one or two remaining works available.

And as part of the inaugural year of the Sherman Family Foundation Acquisition Fund, the Brooklyn Museum of Art and the Baltimore Museum of Art acquired a handful of works by artists including Bettina, Reika Takebayashi, Joanne Burke, and Seba Calfuqueo, whose solo booth with W-Galería won the gallery the 2026 Focus Stand Prize. As part of the Sherman Family Foundation Acquisition Fund, each artist will receive an unrestricted award of $5,000.

Below, Artsy rounds up a selection of leading sales reports by galleries at Frieze New York 2026. Check back on Monday for our full sales report.

Leading sales from Frieze New York 2026:

Mendes Wood DM finished the day with only one work remaining. Strong sales across the day include pieces from Sonia Gomes, Mimi Lauter, Paulo Nimer Pjota, and Pol Taburet.



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