Thursday, March 5, 2026

Photographer Zanele Muholi is named the 2026 Hasselblad Award laureate. https://ift.tt/CXR3eSx

Thabile, Parktown, 2015
Zanele Muholi
Yancey Richardson Gallery

The Hasselblad Foundation announced this morning that South African photographer Zanele Muholi has been chosen as the 2026 laureate of the foundation’s Hasselblad Award. The prize for the distinction, which is the world’s largest photography award, consists of SEK 2,000,000 ($216,3155), a gold medal, and a Hasselblad camera. As a result, Muholi will also be the subject of a major solo exhibition at the Hasselblad Center in Gothenburg, Sweden from October 10th, 2026 through April 4th, 2027. An award ceremony will take place on October 9th.

“Zanele Muholi stands as one of the most influential contemporary photographers, with an impact that reaches far beyond the art world,” said the Hasselblad Foundation in a press statement. “Muholi’s photographs are formally compelling, employing composition, colour, greyscale, and lighting to create an adept visual language that holds both strength and vulnerability. The portraits foreground individuals with a direct and dignified gaze, challenging prejudice and discrimination while creating alternative visual histories. Activism and community work is an integral part of their practice, which combines political urgency and formal mastery, making Muholi a central figure in global queer visual culture.”

Muholi, a visual activist, humanitarian, and artist, is considered one of the most prominent photographers working today. Through their two decades-plus photography practice, they have documented and celebrated the lives of Black members of the LGBTQIA+ community in South Africa and used their art as a vehicle for social change. “For years, my work has been about visibility and resistance,” said Muholi in a press statement. “It has been about creating an archive so that no one can say, ‘We did not know.’ When this honour comes, I receive it on behalf of my community; those who have been erased, those who are still here, and those who are yet to see themselves reflected with dignity.”

The artist was born in Durban, South Africa in 1972 during apartheid. They live and work between Johannesburg and Cape Town. Muholi studied advanced photography at the Market Photo Workshop in Johannesburg and received an MFA in documentary media from Ryerson University in Toronto in 2009. Their work has been shown at the Venice Biennale, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires. They also mounted solo shows at Fotografiska Stockholm in 2018, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 2022, and the Seattle Art Museum in 2019. They are represented by Yancey Richardson Gallery in New York and Southern Guild Gallery in Cape Town and New York.



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8 Standout Artists from the 2026 Whitney Biennial https://ift.tt/siRWuzn

Biennials tend to be heightened moments of reflection on the state of the art world today, recurring blockbuster exhibitions that can also catapult an artist’s career. This year, several coincide, including the Venice Biennale and MoMA PS1’s “Greater New York,” as well as the Whitney Biennial, the Whitney Museum of American Art’s group show that takes the pulse of American art today, which opens on March 8.

For some editions of the Whitney Biennial, the exhibition curators—which change each time—approach the show with themes in mind. However, this year’s team, consisting of Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer, opted to let the concerns of the artists guide them. Indeed, the curators took a particularly expansive approach to the task, traveling across the nation and to U.S. territories to visit artists on their list. Over the course of roughly a year, the curators estimate, they did more than 300 studio visits both in person and virtually, finally settling on the 56 artists, duos, and collectives in the show.

What emerges in the 2026 Whitney Biennial is a diverse, intergenerational group of artists who offer a broad view of art today. Although not all of the art is quite contemporary (many pieces are from decades ago), the artists are united not by common themes but by common conditions. These include the crumbling infrastructures (physical and metaphysical) of America, the kinship between humans and nature, and the shared urgency of self-determination. From an ode to man’s best friend to a glittery celebration of queer and trans bodies, here are eight standout artists from this year’s Whitney Biennial.


Young Joon Kwak

B. 1984, Queens, New York. Lives and works in Los Angeles.

Like a physical embodiment of dopamine bursting through a body, Young Joon Kwak’s sculptural installation Divine Dance of Soft Revolt (Anna, Travis, Me) (2024) celebrates queer joy and resistance. The work consists of casts from the bodies of queer and trans people in Los Angeles, which the artist covered in glitter and mirrored glass. Each resembles the surface of a disco ball, the fragments suspended in the air in a swirling spiral. The reflected light shimmers along the yellow walls, giving the impression of entering a nightclub, a sense heightened by the electronic music Kwak created with collaborator Marvin Astorga. Kwak, whose work was featured in a 2025 solo exhibition “RESISTERHOOD” at New York’s Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art, sees their sculptural work as a kind of performance, imagining the viewer as a participant when they interact with the work.

The installation reflects one of the distinct “moods” the curators intended to create: called moments in which physical spaces can determine how people act or feel. As the only piece in a small room with yellow walls surrounding it, Kwak’s scintillating work marks a shift in energy, one that briefly transports the viewer to a place of queer exuberance.


Raven Halfmoon

B. 1991, Oklahoma City. Lives and works in Norman, Oklahoma.

Two large, ceramic sculptures by Indigenous artist Raven Halfmoon are included in this year’s Biennial. One, a black and white figure called Too Ancient to Care (2025–26) stands at nine feet tall in the plaza in front of the museum. But the larger-than-life, hand-built sculpture does more than greet visitors to the show; it claims space for Halfmoon’s Caddo Nation culture, in particular Caddo women, drawing inspiration from the artist’s lived experiences and stories shared across generations. Indeed, ancestral traditions are central to her work; Halfmoon learned how to make coil ceramics from a community elder, but she adds a contemporary twist, marking the surfaces as if adding graffiti as a nod to Caddo tattooing traditions.

Inside the museum, Halfmoon’s work appears again in Sun Twins (2023). Consisting of two figures whose bodies appear fused together—a dual form Halfmoon uses often—the twins illustrate the value of community for the artist. The work also asserts the importance of family and ancestors over an individual outlook. For the last three years, a standout solo show of Halfmoon’s work has been traveling across the country in “Flags of Our Mothers” with the next stop opening at Ballroom Marfa in May.


Emilie Louise Gossiaux

B. 1989, New Orleans. Lives and works in New York.

Nothing epitomizes the kinship between species more than the interdependent relationship between a person and their service animal. While love between man and pet is common, service animals become a vital part of how people with disabilities perceive the world, supporting them in ways that those who have not had this bond can never imagine. After losing their sight in an accident in 2010, interdisciplinary artist Emilie Louise Gossiaux began depicting their beloved service dog, a yellow Labrador named London. Gossiaux draws and sculpts portraits of themself and London, at times blurring the lines between the two bodies.

When London’s health began to decline in 2024, Gossiaux started hand-crafting one hundred sculptures of a Kong toy, the dog’s favorite. Filling a vast plinth in the Biennial, the artist imagines that these colorful, bulbous toys will bring eternal happiness to London, who passed away in September 2025. Drawings of the two fill the walls around the plinth, an homage to their relationship, which was so close Gossiaux considers London an equal collaborator in their artwork, according to the Whitney’s description. Gossiaux’s work has been exhibited widely, including in a 2023 solo show at the Queens Museum, and earned them the prestigious Joan Mitchell Fellowship in 2024.


Akira Ikezoe

B. 1979, Kochi, Japan. Lives and works in New York.

At first glance, Akira Ikezoe’s paintings appear to tell stories. However, in doing so, they suspend logic, depicting circular systems through a fantastical lens. Ikezoe often pairs images associated with energy infrastructure, like power plants and solar panels, with animals at work to imply a connection.

In Frog Stories Around Nuclear Power Plant (2025), for example, exhausted frogs are anthropomorphized, standing on their hind legs as they move through a series of tasks to facilitate the production of pearls. They are seen carrying clams as if part of an assembly line, bringing a mollusk from the water to a conveyor belt to a machine that rips out its valuable prize. Though chronology is implied through each series of tasks shown, the painting contains a circular narrative—the frogs repeating their motions senselessly. Indeed, at one point they are reduced to skeletons that continue their mission of opening the clam, getting electrocuted by a power line along the way. Inexplicably, a frog dressed as Santa Claus appears, a cheeky nod to consumerism.

In quirky and absurd imagery, Ikezoe points to the unseen connections between nature and man and likens the frogs to humans, as if we are also embroiled in a self-damaging, Sisyphean existence. Countless species and resources are needed for our energy and enjoyment, from the grids that power our lives to the gifts exchanged at Christmas. In addition to the Biennial, Ikezoe’s work will be featured in MoMA PS1’s “Greater New York” exhibition opening in April.


Kelly Akashi

B. 1983, Los Angeles. Lives and works in Altadena, California.

A resident of Altadena, Kelly Akashi is one of thousands of people who were displaced by the devastating 2025 wildfires in Los Angeles. Her home and studio were destroyed, except for a singular brick fireplace and chimney that remained standing even as the rubble surrounding it was cleared. In a meditative reflection on loss, survival, and rebuilding, Akashi used this chimney as inspiration for Monument (Altadena) (2026), a site-specific ghost-like glass installation that stands on the museum’s fifth-floor terrace.

To create the work, Akashi worked with a mason to replicate her chimney and fireplace, along with a pathway that mirrors her home’s own walkway. Nearby, a cut-steel sculpture hangs on a wall, the design inspired by doilies the artist’s grandmother used to own, a memorial to the objects and inheritance small and large that were lost in the fire. Shortly after the fire, Akashi had a solo show at Lisson Gallery in Los Angeles that consisted of pieces that were salvaged, safe off-site, or reworked quickly before the exhibition. Working steadily to rebuild her home and studio, Akashi’s participation in the Biennial is a marker of resilience and a reminder of the forces that unite us—from the power of community to the realities of natural disasters.


Aziz Hazara

B. 1992, Wardak, Afghanistan. Lives and works in Berlin.

In another example of the curators creating a “mood” for the show, Aziz Hazara’s otherworldly green and purple, ethereal archival pigment prints are set against a wall covered in dark NATO thermal blankets. The dark setting is a poignant backdrop for Hazara’s powerful work. Hazara was born in Wardak, a highly contested area in the U.S. war in Afghanistan that held American military bases and saw intense fighting. In his work, Hazara considers power relations and the physical, unintended repercussions of geopolitical actions. When forces withdrew from Afghanistan, they left behind many discarded objects, like night-vision goggles, which often retained the information captured by soldiers. This data and the items themselves were each sold in Afghanistan, creating a market for surveillance equipment as well as information. Using this biometric data and retinal scans, Hazara creates images that, as their title Moon Sightings (2024) suggests, resemble otherworldly spaces.

At times, Hazara’s compositions appear haunted, evoking the energy of war-torn places after troops leave. In the context of the Biennial, Hazara’s work expands the notion of American art to include occupied territories and underscores the influence the U.S. has globally, in particular as a military force, as well as what is left behind in the wake of war. Hazara’s work has been exhibited widely, including in the 2025 Sharjah Biennial and the 2026 Diriyah Biennale.


Nour Mobarak

B. 1985, Cairo. Lives and works in Athens, Greece; and Bainbridge Island, Washington.

Nour Mobarak’s wall pieces use by far the most unconventional materials in the Biennial: breast milk, dehydrated blood, semen, and mycelium, for example. These casts of the artist’s own body resemble colorful, abstract compositions, the contours of her buttocks, breasts, and pregnant belly protruding playfully from the surfaces. Their shiny surfaces reflect the room and visitors in a distorted way, a dizzying perspective that reminds us how little control we have over biological processes.

An audio piece accompanying her resin works—entitled Broad’s Cast (Montage) (2024–26)—also pushes conventions. The work was produced by inserting a microphone into her vaginal canal before, during, and following her pregnancy. Recording the outside world from within, the strange sounds appear supernatural despite their very human nature. Yet, while revealing the awkwardness and messiness inherent in the human experience, Mobarak’s works remain enticing, even beautiful. New Yorkers may be familiar with Mobarak’s work following her first solo show in the city at MoMA in 2024–25.


Jasmin Sian

B. 1969, the Philippines. Lives and works in New York.

Small and delicate, Jasmin Sian’s lace-like paper artworks resemble doilies darkened over time, yet the wall text reveals that they are made of found materials. Specifically, she uses trash like fast-food bags and the wrapper from a biscuit, painting over them with minute, dense details. These plants and animals, painted in small scale, demand a closer look. (In the Biennial, the curators paired Sian’s work with monumental, mixed-media paintings by Teresa Baker that capture the way each plays with scale.)

Surrounding these intricate scenes are the lace-like borders that Sian has painstakingly cut with an X-Acto knife. Turning trash into meticulously crafted objects, Sian’s works serve as intimate odes to the natural world. The artist has been creating similar works for decades, earning a Joan Mitchell grant in 1998. In recent years, her work has gained commercial traction with successful art fair presentations, including a solo booth with Anthony Meier Gallery at the Art Dealers Association of America’s 2023 Art Show.



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White Cube to co-represent Indigenous painter Emmi Whitehorse. https://ift.tt/TuFRyOx

International powerhouse White Cube will represent Indigenous artist Emmi Whitehorse alongside New York’s Garth Greenan Gallery.

White Cube mounted its first solo exhibition of the artist at its Paris gallery in fall 2025 and will show her painting, Father Sky meets Mother Earth (2025), at its Art Basel Hong Kong booth later this month.

Whitehorse is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation, the largest Indigenous American reservation in the U.S. Her Indigenous heritage and rural upbringing in New Mexico greatly inform her meditative landscape paintings, which employ acrylics, pastels, graphite, chalk, and charcoal that she often smears by hand to create layered, ethereal compositions. She has developed her own visual language of iconography inspired by Native symbols resembling botanical and vegetable forms, which she embeds into the works. She is guided by the Navajo philosophy of Hózhó, or balance, and strives to find the equilibrium between nature and humanity.

“My paintings tell the story of knowing land over time—of being completely, microcosmically within a place,” Whitehorse told the Observer in 2024. Born in New Mexico in 1957, the artist spent her early years surrounded by sacred Navajo and archaeological sites. These Ancestral Puebloan ruins and the vast landscapes of nearby Chaco Canyon would leave a lasting impact. She experimented with clay, metal, and wood as a student before receiving her B.A. in painting (1980) and her M.A. in printmaking (1982), both from the University of New Mexico. During her university years, she co-founded the Grey Canyon Group, a collective of Native American artists, alongside the late Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith. Active for four years, the group’s aim was to carve out a space for Native art that defied stereotypes and existed beyond the bounds of traditional craft practices. They made and exhibited art across New Mexico, New York, and the American West in the late 1970s.

Moss Bedding, 2025
Emmi Whitehorse
Garth Greenan Gallery

Whitehorse has participated in prestigious group shows, including the 2024 Venice Biennale, and has shown at institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

In addition to solo shows at White Cube and Garth Greenan Gallery, she has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art, and the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. Her work is held in collections at institutions including the Brooklyn Museum, the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and the Denver Art Museum.

This summer, works by Whitehorse will also be included in a group exhibition, “Earth: Works by Contemporary Indigenous North American Artists from Tia Collection,” at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park in the U.K., which opens June 13th and runs through April 18, 2027.



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Why Ceramics Deserve Their Own Art Fairs https://ift.tt/lFhPScC

In recent years, the market for contemporary ceramics has heated up, and the infrastructure around it has followed suit. A wave of dedicated fairs—from Ceramic Brussels and cerArtmic Madrid, which launched in 2024, to Ceramic Art Fair Paris in 2025 and this month’s inaugural NADA Ceramics in New York—show that clay is no longer operating at the margins of the contemporary art world.

The medium itself is ancient. From Paleolithic models to the pottery of the Arts and Crafts movement, the ancient “fire art” of clay is one of the most enduring forms of human expression. Still, in the contemporary art world, ceramics have long occupied an uneasy space between craft, design, and fine art. The medium has often been dismissed as “functional” or “decorative” and rarely afforded the same commercial platforms as painting or sculpture. That imbalance is now being corrected.

Studios and galleries right up to blue-chip names, including Perrotin—which represents artists including Johan Creten, Otani Workshop and Klara Kristalova—and Gagosian, home to Edmund de Waal and Setsuko, have steadily expanded their ceramics rosters. Collector demand has been rising, too.

L’Hippocampe - Library version, 2024
Johan Creten
Perrotin

Le serpent et la vigne, 2024
Setsuko
Gagosian

Work by leading 20th-century ceramists such as Dame Lucie Rie, Hans Coper, and Bernard Leach, as well as a second generation of living studio potters including Jennifer Lee and Elizabeth Fritsch, has consistently smashed estimates at major auction houses. Sotheby’s, Phillips, and Bonhams have all helped amplify the secondary market for these artists, with the latter selling Rie’s Footed Bowl (ca. 1952) in 2023 for a record €406,800 ($472,468), nearly 10 times its low estimate.

Until recently, however, the medium was lacking a dedicated structure capable of consolidating this momentum, which is where the idea for the first fair came in.

“We decided to develop an international event in the unique form of an art fair committed to promoting and defending ceramics,” Gilles Parmentier, co-director of Ceramic Brussels, told Artsy. Indeed, while the medium’s expressive range has expanded dramatically, its institutional recognition has lagged.

Today’s ceramics-based fairs aim to remove these hierarchies. Works on view span traditional techniques and 3D printing to murals and mixed-media installations. Gallerists report that sculptural, abstract, and narrative-driven ceramics are increasingly commanding attention and demand among collectors.

Rome dealer Anna Marra, who participated in Ceramic Brussels in January, observed a “deep hunger for newness” and for works that challenge the limits of clay. “Andrés Anza’s organic textures and Dana Zvulun’s delicate research on surfaces both received immense interest,” she said. “It confirmed that when technical mastery meets a strong poetic vision, the response from the international market is immediate.”

Lise Coirier, director of Brussels-based Spazio Nobile, singled out the Portuguese artist Bela Silva as another innovator who is “dripping on the stoneware like Jackson Pollock so that the clay becomes something of a canvas”.

Such experimentation, noted Parisian dealer Antonine Catzéflis, is increasingly attracting seasoned contemporary art collectors who are purchasing ceramics alongside painting and sculpture—a shift reflected in rising prices across the market.

De la serie “Memorias” II, 2025
Andrés Anza Cortés
Galleria Anna Marra

La vie en vacances #8, 2025
Bela Silva
Spazio Nobile

Such experimentation, noted Parisian dealer Antonine Catzéflis, is increasingly attracting seasoned contemporary art collectors who are purchasing ceramics alongside painting and sculpture—a shift reflected in rising prices across the market.

“Works by emerging and mid-career artists that were once considered ‘entry-level’ are now seeing significant appreciation,” said Marra. “Collectors are realizing that the complexity of firing and glazing processes justifies higher price points, comparable to other sculptural media.”

At Ceramic Brussels, prices begin at around €5,000 ($5,807), but several works sell for up to €200,000 ($232,285) each year. This broad range has made the medium accessible for younger collectors, who have become a major driving force in the market.

“This generation often finds ceramics more approachable and ‘human,’ yet intellectually stimulating,” noted Marra, who believes a “tactile revolution” has fueled broader interest in the medium: “In an increasingly digital world, both artists and collectors are drawn back to the physical, primordial nature of clay.”

Chandeliers Prairie, 2025
Clémentine de Chabaneix
Antonine Catzéflis

Pien Rademakers, founder of Amsterdam’s Rademakers Gallery, sees this shift as part of a wider recalibration within the art world. “Ceramic art speaks directly to this moment,” she said. “We see a strong return to craftsmanship—to works made by hand, with patience, attention to detail, and a deep respect for tradition. Especially, younger collectors are drawn to that authenticity. They follow trends, yes, but ceramics is more than a trend; it reflects a broader desire for tactility and meaning.”

That engagement, she added, is tangible. “At art fairs and in the gallery, we experience this growing interest firsthand. It’s not just statistics—it’s real engagement.” Part of ceramics’ strength lies in its material accessibility. “As a material, it doesn’t carry the same barrier of luxury as bronze or glass. It feels approachable, yet it holds enormous artistic depth. That combination—intimacy, material intelligence, and conceptual strength—is why ceramic art is so important today.”

The medium’s appeal extends beyond the traditional art market. Victoria Denis, co-founder of Ceramic Art Fair Paris, observed that visitors to Design Miami.Paris, held concurrently in October, frequently cross the Boulevard Saint-Germain to attend both events. “This cross-disciplinary appeal is likely to sustain the market’s growth and increase visibility for artists working in ceramics,” Coirier said.

Dit is mijn Lijf, 2023
Chris Rijk
Rademakers Gallery

Disneyland Zaandam, 2022
Chris Rijk
Rademakers Gallery

Attendance figures reflect this growing confidence. Ceramic Brussels has grown from 17,840 visitors in 2025 to 19,232 this year, bringing together almost 200 artists and a selection of 65 international galleries from 15 countries.

Nor is the trend confined to Europe. “The enthusiasm is increasingly global, with buyers from North America, Asia, and the Middle East actively participating,” Coirier noted.

Keen to capitalize on this momentum, fairs are investing in talks programs that situate ceramics within broader art market dialogues, as well as investment in emerging talent.

“There’s real momentum,” said Catzéflis. “People are increasingly recognizing that ceramics has a full place in contemporary art—it’s no longer seen merely as decorative. The field is expanding quickly, both artistically and in terms of visibility.”

Marra expects further integration of ceramics into “generalist” museum programs and more large-scale installations. But she believes the role of fairs as a space to bring galleries and collectors together is still crucial. “Behind every ceramic work, there is a risky and fascinating process involving fire and earth,” she said. “Sharing this story is what truly connects the collector to the piece.”



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Wednesday, March 4, 2026

At 91, Rose Wylie Is Still Breaking the Rules with Her Joyful Paintings https://ift.tt/Fz7Awg0

In Rose Wylie’s 2017 painting Park Dogs and Air Raid, warplanes hover over the Serpentine Galleries while dogs frolic in the brushy black foreground. With a graphic, childlike style, the artist deploys a limited palette of blue, black, white, and brown. A splash of yellow depicts a duck. Past and present merge in the work: The artist drew on her childhood memories of World War II bombing raids in London and took inspiration from an invitation to exhibit at the gallery. The work’s unexpected juxtapositions of past and present, light and dark, are emblematic of her extraordinary, utterly unique oeuvre.

Wylie, 91, is the archetypal late bloomer. Feminist scholar Germaine Greer dubbed her “Britain’s hottest new artist” in 2010 when Wylie was a mere 76 years old. She has since become a bona fide art world star. “Rose Wylie: The Picture Comes First” at London’s Royal Academy, on view through April 19th, is her biggest show to date. It also makes her the first British woman artist to enjoy a solo exhibition in the historic institution’s main galleries.

Themes in Rose Wylie’s paintings

Wylie’s bold, colorful paintings reference everything from art history, cinema, and celebrities to the flowers in her garden and what she had for breakfast. The subject matter is always of secondary concern to the visual details that initially captured Wylie’s vivid imagination.

Black Strap (Red Fly) (2012) is a prime example. It’s one of a series of paintings inspired by an image of Nicole Kidman on the red carpet in a backless dress, but it’s resolutely not a portrait. “She didn’t wake up and think ‘I want to paint Nicole Kidman,’” curator Katharine Stout told Artsy. “She happened across an image of a woman standing on the red carpet in a backless dress that was particularly striking who happened to be Nicole Kidman.”

As if to emphasize the point, Kidman is flanked by two large flies that hover on either side of her. Wylie often unites elements from different times and places simply because “they feel to her like they might sit well together,” Stout said. “She likes not being obvious.”

Rose Wylie’s artistic process

Although celebrities themselves hold little interest for Wylie, movies are a great passion. Her “Film Notes” series, in which she reimagines specific shots, are undoubted highlights of the exhibition. Their compositions often mirror the action of a camera, zooming in for a close-up or capturing the same scene from different perspectives, as in Kill Bill (Film Notes) (2007).

Wylie often repeats subject matter across multiple canvases. In HAND, Drawing as Central (2022), a series of three hands and accompanying text reveal how the artist transforms initial sketches into paintings; daily drawing is key to her iterative practice. “It’s a way of capturing things that visually intrigue her, whether that’s from film or something that she’s seen in a newspaper, and that becomes a mining ground for the paintings,” Stout said. “In the process of looking at a drawing and turning it into a painting, she will adapt it. The paintings are often distilling its essential qualities.”

Wylie’s pared-back approach to imagery shares an affinity with that of Philip Guston. Just as the mid-century painter has occasionally been labelled “crude,” Wylie’s work has been designated “naïve.” For Stout, this description misses the point, as Wylie’s approach “comes from a very knowing place in the sense that she’s very well versed in different art styles.”

Early career

Wylie had a traditional art school education at the Folkestone and Dover School of Art in the 1950s. Yet she found artists such as Fernand Léger, Giorgio de Chirico, and Henri Matisse more enticing than the post-war British romantic artists that her tutors revered. Wylie then trained to be a teacher at Goldsmiths and met artist Roy Oxlade, who she married in 1957. Her creative practice took a back seat while she concentrated on raising their three children. Even then, she visited exhibitions, read widely, and built up the vast stack of memories and inspirations which later fueled her work.

When Wylie’s children left home, she converted a room in her Kent, England, house into a studio, where she still works today. She also became an art student once more, enrolling in an MA degree program at the Royal College of Art in 1979 and doing a dissertation on drawing. Then, just like all recent graduates, she plugged away until she got her big break.

In Wylie’s case, this was her “Room Project” series (2003–04), four large-scale works that Stout compares to an installation. “I liken it to medieval tapestry, creating its own world,” she said. And it’s a delightfully playful world, featuring cats, paper dolls, Olympic swimmers, and even the artist herself wearing a favorite checked skirt. The paintings were selected for East International at Norwich Gallery, where they gained significant art world attention and dramatically boosted her career.

Wylie’s later career

Over the next few years, Wylie mounted solo shows at galleries in New York and London. In 2014, she was elected a Royal Academician and won the John Moores Painting Prize, after years of trying, for PV Windows and Floorboards (2014). The work was inspired by gallerist Jake Miller’s description of the Victorian floorboards and windows in his London gallery.

Wylie’s fluid practice still leaves room to explore the sheer joy of creation. In 2015 and 2016, she created a series of animal paintings derived simply from imagination. She showed some of them in her first solo exhibition with David Zwirner in 2016, and the gallery announced their representation of the artist the next year. “There’s always that sense of the process of painting and what happens in the painting determines when it’s finished,” said Stout. “With those works it is quite different, because she abandoned the paintbrush and used her hands, and you can feel that energy and tactile quality in the paintings themselves.”

The Royal Academy show makes clear that Wylie shows no signs of stopping such explorations. The works on view confirm her as one of Britain’s most uncompromising talents.



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Pace Gallery announces representation of Korean conceptual artist Anicka Yi. https://ift.tt/uUj9YCZ

Anicka Yi, the Korean-born New York-based conceptual artist known for her multisensory works, has joined Pace Gallery’s roster of artists. She will also continue to be represented by Gladstone Gallery, 47 Canal, and Esther Schipper. Her first solo exhibition with the gallery will take place in New York in 2027. In the meantime, she will debut a new painting in Pace’s booth at Art Basel Hong Kong later this month.

Yi has many projects currently on view or in the pipeline. This spring, her work will be included in the New Museum’s forthcoming group show, “New Humans: Memories of the Future,” which opens on March 21st and will christen the museum’s newly-expanded space. She will also unveil her first large-scale outdoor work on May 17th at Storm King Art Center in New York, which will create a microbiological portrait using water and soil samples sourced from the sculpture park’s pond.

“Anicka is one of the most innovative artists of our time,” said Samanthe Rubell, Pace’s president, in a press statement. “Combining materials from the natural world with cutting-edge processes and technologies, her works are extraordinary, uncanny worlds unto themselves. Grappling with relevant political and ecological questions of the present moment, her experimental practice is part of a long lineage of artists—including Robert Irwin and James Turrell—who expanded the phenomenological possibilities of art making.”

Yi is known for her biologically-forward, technologically-curious works of art that fuse rigorous research and unconventional methods and materials, including snail slime, hair gel, and potato chips. She has deep-fried flowers, created fragrances from human sweat, and shaped kelp into lighting sculptures that resemble internal organs or insect cocoons.

Born in Seoul, South Korea in 1971, Yi moved with her family to the United States when she was two years old and grew up in Southern California. She studied at the University of California in Los Angeles and Hunter College in New York before beginning her career in the fashion industry. She turned towards art in her thirties without any formal training, and made her first artwork in 2008 with a collective called Circular File.

Her first major institutional solo presentation was held at the Cleveland Museum of Art in 2014, followed by solo shows at The Kitchen in New York and the Kunsthalle Basel. In 2016 she was awarded the Guggenheim Museum’s Hugo Boss Prize, which was accompanied by a solo show with the museum in 2017. And in 2021, she was chosen for the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall Hyundai Commission, in which she transformed the gargantuan space into an ecosystem of alien-looking sculptures powered by drones and algorithms that emitted scents.

She has also participated in the 2019 Venice Biennale and the 2017 Whitney Biennial, among other prestigious group shows, and her work is held in major collections including The Museum of Modern Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Pinault Collection in Paris and Venice, and the Rubell Museum in Miami and Washington, D.C..



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Tuesday, March 3, 2026

National Portrait Gallery unveils new Catherine Opie portrait of Elton John and his family. https://ift.tt/gPHi7TN

A new portrait of Sir Elton John and his family captured by American photographer Catherine Opie has gone on view at the National Portrait Gallery in London. The work now hangs in room 30, the Mary Weston Gallery, as part of the gallery’s contemporary collection display. It marks the first time that a portrait of Elton John with his husband David Furnish, and his two teenage sons has been exhibited in public. The photograph, taken in 2025, will also be the first portrait of the family to enter a national collection.

The portrait is reminiscent of Opie’s major “Domestic” series (1995–98), in which she tenderly captured lesbian couples and families in their home environments to give visibility to underrepresented family units. Her photograph of the Furnish-John family sees the musician and his husband, David Furnish, along with their sons, Zachary and Elijah, at home in their library in Windsor. They are surrounded by their pet labradors and a wall of filled bookshelves, as well as a selection of antique objects and a sculpture.

“To have our family photographed by Catherine Opie and on display at the National Portrait Gallery is a huge honor. We are huge admirers of her work and proud to have her beautiful and poignant images in our collection,” shared Sir Elton and Furnish in a press statement.

“I arrived at Elton and David’s house three days before Christmas. I met the boys and the dogs and after a great lunch together I made this family portrait of them in their library…For me it represents the humanity of what family can be,” said Catherine Opie.

The unveiling of the work coincides with the opening of “Catherine Opie: To Be Seen,” also at the National Portrait Gallery. The show, which will run from March 5th through May 31st, will feature a survey of the artist’s photographic portraits from the past 30 years. It will be the first major exhibition of her work at an institution in the U.K..

“The National Portrait Gallery’s Collection exists to share portraits of the people who have shaped the history and culture of the UK, from the Tudor times to today,” shared the museum’s director, Victoria Siddall, in a press statement. “The people on our walls, and the stories we tell about them, are a source of inspiration for the millions of people who come through our doors, and particularly the many young people who visit every year.”



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/agRmqX3

Photographer Zanele Muholi is named the 2026 Hasselblad Award laureate. https://ift.tt/CXR3eSx

Thabile, Parktown, 2015 Zanele Muholi Yancey Richardson Gallery The Hasselblad Foundation announced this morning that South African phot...

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