MIAMI, FLA.- Sculptor Carole Feuerman had a book signing during Art Basel Miami for her new book, I AM MINE. Focusing on her early works from the 1970s, the book offers a broader reflection on the art scene of that time, and includes essays by six leading female art critics and historians. "I Am Mine" showcases the work of sculptor Carole Feuerman, focusing on her artistic output from the 1970s. The book is enriched by the perspectives of six prominent art historians from various countries, each providing unique insights into Feuerman's innovative approach to hyperrealism. Through their commentary, the readers explore themes of identity, femininity, and the socio-political landscape of the time. The combination of Feuermans striking sculptures and the diverse critical analyses highlights her significant impact on contemporary art and the ways art continues to resonate in today's cultural discourse. ... More
BOULDER, COLO.-Artemis Fine Arts will launch its final major sale of the year on December 12, 2025, at 9:00 AM (GMT-6), presenting an exceptionally curated selection of Asian, Ancient, Ethnographic, and Fine Art sourced from respected private collections and cultural institutions. Known for its rigorous ethical acquisition standards and in-house international shipping, the top-rated auction house unveils several standout lots spanning Oceania, Southeast Asia, the Near East, Rome, and Egypt. The sale includes rare ceremonial jade, monumental architectural stonework, royal Assyrian bronzes, refined Roman marble sculpture, and a deeply devotional Egyptian block statuepieces that reflect the diverse and enduring legacy of world civilizations. Among the most striking works offered is an exquisitely ca ... More
USMC uniform of Maj. Gen. Smedley Darlington Butler (1881-1940), one of only two Marines to be awarded two Medals of Honor, and the only officer to claim the title. Estimate: $15,000-$25,000
DENVER, PA.- Morphys will make the holidays merry and bright for many firearms collectors who take part in their December 16-18 auction. The 1,343-lot selection includes expertly-vetted arms, armor, edged weapons and military artifacts, many with important provenance. The auction will be held at Morphys flagship gallery in Pennsylvania, with all forms of remote bidding welcome, including absentee, phone and live via the Internet through Morphy Live. Leading the auctions gilt-edged lineup is a fabulous pair of Rizzini R1 .410 (choked, modified and improved modified) and 28-gauge (choked improved cylinder and modified) side-by-side shotguns with 23-3/8-inch barrels. Both feature magnificent engraving performed by Angelo Galeazzi, including images of mourning doves and ducks, a rose-and-scroll motif, and more. Both guns were proofed in 1982. The .410 gun bears Italian superior proof marks with 3-inch chambers and the 28-bore gun displays Italian standard proof marks with 2¾-inch cham ... More
Martin Parr became a member of the Magnum Photo cooperative in 1988.
NEW YORK, NY.- With great sadness, Janet Borden, Inc. announces the death of our photographer Martin Parr on 6 December, in Bristol, UK. He was a great artist and collector, raconteur, and wit, whose five decades of photographs were profoundly influential. He will be missed as our longstanding artist and good friend. Below are some of our favorites. Martin Parr was born in Epson, Surrey, England, in 1952 and died in Bristol, England, in 2025. Parr's early work included The Last Resort, an astounding view of the then-decaying beach town of Brighton. Lurid cheerful color was in stark contrast to the blowing trash and squalid beaches. The casual decrepitude belied a strong formal approach. Subsequent projects included The Cost of Living, Small World, Luxury, Common Sense, Fashion Faux Parr. .He produced over one hundred photobooks throughout his career. In 2017, the Tate acquired his collection of over 12,000 photobooks. He continued to collect. Martin Parr became a member of the Magnum Photo coope ... More
Film installation depicts the dreams of the Cape Verdean communities in Rotterdam and Dakar (Senegal).
ROTTERDAM.- At the Nieuwe Instituut, the Netherlands national museum and institute for architecture, design and digital culture in Rotterdam, Another Island is now on show. This film installation by Rotterdam-based researcher and audio visual artist Janilda Bartolomeu, offers a personal and poetic reflection on the shared heritage and potential future of the Cape Verdean archipelago and its diaspora communities in Rotterdam and Dakar (Senegal). Janilda Bartolomeu was born in Cape Verde and has spent years researching the undocumented history of the Cape Verdean diaspora. Her work led to the 2020 film The Eleventh Island: Activating Silent Histories through Video. Since the 1960s, Rotterdam has been home to one of the largest Cape Verdean communities outside the Cape Verdean archipelago, earning the city the title of the eleventh island. For the next phase of her research project, the Nieuwe Instituut and local organisation RAW Material Company invited Bartolomeu to undertake a re ... More
Father invites us to reflect on the therapeutic power of art - on how creating can be a way of processing, understanding and ultimately accepting.
BERLIN.- Father is a deeply personal and autobiographical exhibition by artist Diana Markosian. It explores themes of absence, memory, and reconciliation, reflecting on how decisions shape who we become. Born in Moscow, at the age of seven Markosian left Russia with her mother and older brother, eventually relocating to California. This move across the world would solidify, and seemingly finalize, a fracturing of her family that had already taken place. Markosians parents had separated before she was born, and by the time they moved to America her father was, in many ways, already absent from her life. Once in California her mother sought to remove even the image of him from their lives by cutting his picture out of family photographs. For Markosians father, her and her brother became missing children whom he tried to find for years. His absence created a profound sense of mystery and confusion in Markosian as she looked for him, both literally and emotionally, in different men. Fif ... More
NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art announces a year of programs slated for 2026 in the Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Studio, a state-of-the-art space in the heart of the Museum dedicated to MoMAs ongoing presentation of live and experimental works. The dynamic lineup, featuring leading contemporary artists working in media and performance, includes Samora Pinderhughes: Call and Response (January 24 February 15, 2026); Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa: Lugar de Consuelo (Place of Solace) (March 28 July 5, 2026); Studio Residency: Pageant (August 830, 2026); and Na Mira: NO SMOKINTh (November 14, 2026February 15, 2027). How can theater, music, movement, and moving images expand how we come together to engage with complex historical narratives and to forge new spaces for culture? This years Kravis Studio program draws together a range of international artists whose bold work will transform the space through inspiring sound, action, and immersive media, said Stuart Co ... More
TOURCOING.- Le Fresnoy—Studio national des arts contemporains is pleased to announce the appointment of Isabelle Gaudefroy as its new director, to succeed Alain Fleischer. She will take up her post on February 2, 2026. An artistic director, curator and producer, Isabelle Gaudefroy began her career working alongside Georges Aperghis at the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre, where she produced contemporary opera and music theatre. From 1999 to 2010 she directed the Soirées Nomades programme at the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain while curating a number of exhibitions, including Rock’nRoll 39-59 (2007), and Beat Takeshi Kitano, Gosse de Peintre (2010). In this capacity she also initiated, conceived and produced the performing arts section of the Printemps de septembre à Toulouse, starting in 2001. In 2011, Isabelle Gaudefroy joined the board of the Fondation Cartier, first as director of programming and artistic projects, then ... More
Yeong Tong Lung, Porcelain Dog, 2020, oil on canvas, Collection of the Vancouver Art Gallery, From the Art Continuum Hong Kong Collection, Photo: Courtesy of the Artist and Blindspot Gallery.
VANCOUVER, BC.- The Vancouver Art Gallery announced the landmark donation of Art Continuum Hong Kong (ACHK), a significant collection comprising 131 artworks by 78 artists. Representing the largest contribution of Hong Kong art in the Gallerys history, this remarkable gift brings an unprecedented breadth of voices, practices and perspectives into the permanent collection, and marks a transformative expansion of the Gallerys Asian art holdings. The donation reflects a shared intent: to ensure that the art history of Hong Kong is preserved, studied and enjoyed by audiences worldwide. It also underpins the Gallerys commitment to cultivating major acquisitions that will support the Gallerys Centre for Global Asias, an initiative that amplifies modern and contemporary Asian art and thought. Furthermore, this major acquisition will help shape the institutions future Gallerywhere visitors will have more space and a bigger building to delve into its expanding collection. A ... More
View of Maja Malou Lyse: Antibodies, Museum of Contemporary Art, Roskilde, Denmark, 2025. Photo: David Stjernholm.
ROSKILDE.- Maja Malou Lyse has hosted her own TV program on the Danish television and will represent Denmark at the Venice Biennale in 2026. As part of a new initiative presenting works from the collection Museum of Contemporary Art Roskilde presents Antibodies by Danish artist Maja Malou Lyse in a vacant space at the train station in Roskilde. ”I could not help but wonder: does the era define the pleasures we feel? Or do the pleasures we feel define our era?” So speculates the Danish contemporary artist Maja Malou Lyse in her video installation Antibodies (2022), presented by the Museum of Contemporary Art Roskilde at Roskilde Station. In the midst of departures, rush, and waiting, the work turns its gaze toward questions of body, identity, and desire; and their intricate entanglements with politics, pop culture, and society. The work explores how our understandings of the body, sexuality, and pleasure are deeply intertwined with the cultural and political realities of our time. Through layered ... More
Gwen John, Study of a Girl. By Permission of Amgueddfa Cymru - Museum Wales
CARDIFF.- A landmark exhibition of Gwen John, one of Waless greatest modern artists, will go on show at National Museum Cardiff from 7 February 2026, before touring internationally. Tickets are now available to book for Gwen John: Strange Beautieswhich is the most comprehensive retrospective of the artists work in 40 years. Amgueddfa Cymru purchased its first work by Gwen John, Girl in a Blue Dress, for £20 in 1935, just four years before the artists death. It now holds the largest public collection of her artworks in the world. The exhibition brings together oil paintings from public and private collections across the UK and USA with rarely seen works on paper from the artists studio collection. Ranging from delicate landscape sketches to impromptu figure studies and vibrantly coloured still lifes, these lesser-known drawings and watercolours reveal the full scope of Johns artistic ambition. More than 200 paintings, dra ... More
Portrait of Zineb Sedira. Photo: Adrian Flower.
LONDON.- Zineb Sedira (b.1963, France) will be the next artist to undertake the Tate Britain Commission. Unveiled for the first time on 13 May 2026, Sedira’s major new work will be the latest response to the unique context of the neo-classical Duveen Galleries at the heart of Tate Britain. On view until 17 January 2027, this will be the artist’s largest commission in the UK to date. Over the past three decades, Zineb Sedira has developed a powerful and multifaceted artistic practice spanning photography, performance, video, and installation. Sedira's work draws on personal encounters within the Algerian diaspora of Africa. Taking inspiration from family archives and the history of cinema, she bridges the political and the poetic, thoughtfully exploring themes of memory, migration and trauma. Her installations invite audiences to consider the emotional and geographical dimensions of displacement, while critically examining dominant historical narratives. By keeping histories alive, her storytell ... More
Nora Schultz, 2025. Courtesy of the artist.
GRAZ.- “Now, having mostly air left, they thought of making kites.” Now, is not only a measure of time. It is the hinge of an argument. It holds the present open and lets a sequence tip forward. Each utterance lodges something in the moment and, at the same time, releases it onward. It is both pause and propulsion—an interval that leans into consequence. Now, arrives as an announcement. Not as a call for attention, but as the quiet signal that something is about to begin, that the next gesture is already forming. It is spoken again and again, each time marking another turn—another fold, another added weight, another surface brought into question. We build from these small declarations. Each decision enters the room with the force of a beat. That beat is not metaphorical. It is a drum: skin pulled, metal set trembling, sticks conducting pressure from one point to another. Now, becomes audible in the tension between materials, in their minute ... More
Quote I try to make concrete that which is abstract. Juan Gris
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Colnaghi Brussels opens Northern Lights, a landmark exhibition on Flemish Caravaggism BRUSSELS.- Colnaghi Brussels announces its upcoming exhibition, Northern Lights: Masterpieces of Flemish Caravaggism, opening on December 10, 2025 and running through January 30, 2026. This landmark presentation celebrates the gallery’s first year in its new Brussels premices with a museum-quality exhibition dedicated to one of the most compelling yet often neglected chapters in European art history, the encounter between Flemish painting and Caravaggio’s radical naturalism. The exhibition explores how a generation of Flemish artists drawn to Italy by the light and psychological intensity of Caravaggio reinterpreted his vision through their own northern sensibility and the enduring influence of Peter Paul Rubens. While some painters, such as Hendrick de Somer and Matthias Stom, chose to remain in Italy, others returned to Flanders to develop a distinctly local version of Caravaggism, among them Abraham Janssens, and Jan van Dalem. Their works, included in the exhibition, reflect a dynamic exchang ... More
Para Site unveils a multidisciplinary exhibition exploring inner worlds and interconnected selves HONG KONG.- Para Site will present Muted Hums, a group exhibition curated by Celia Ho. The exhibition features nine international and Asian artists, including new commissions and recent works by Catalina Africa, Özlem Altın, Lêna Bùi, Oscar Chan Yik Long, Saodat Ismailova, Ling Pui Sze, Man Mei To, Christina Quarles, and Aycoobo-Wilson Rodríguez. Muted Hums explores the interplay between our inner selves and the broader worlds around us. The exhibition invites the audience to engage with the multiplicity and fluidity of existence, attuning to a deeper awareness of the multifaceted dimensions of being. The exhibition title prompts our attention to the subtle, often overlooked pulses of intimate emotions. By looking beyond immediate perceptions, we can connect with the silent gestures of consciousness, revealing the fragmented truths we carry within our bodies, inherited from those who came before us. The exhibition revolves around the concept of mapping ourselves and observing what our bodies ... More
National Portrait Gallery to stage the UK's first major museum exhibition showcasing the work of Catherine Opie LONDON.- This exhibition of photographic portraits by American artist Catherine Opie will be the first major museum exhibition of her work to be shown in the UK. Exploring themes of social, political and individual identity, through studio portraiture, environmental studies and documentary images, Catherine Opie: To Be Seen will bring together over 80 photographs spanning 30 years of Opie’s groundbreaking career, including her first major work, Being and Having (1991), ennobling portraits of LGBTQ+ friends inspired by court painter Hans Holbein and Baroque-like portraits of artists. One of the most influential artists of our time, Opie’s work is driven by the urgency to chronicle the ebb and flow of human culture. Her wide-ranging oeuvre features projects ranging from documenting Queer communities in Los Angeles, to analyses of the Catholic Church, to abstract landscapes. At the basis of her practice is her ongoing questioning of evolving ideas of community, identity and belonging. For Opie, po ... More
Fenix - The Art Museum on Migration announces exhibition programme 2026/27 ROTTERDAM.- The exhibition programme of Fenix is twofold: artistic takeovers, supported by newly commissioned works from contemporary artists, and Fenix in Focus, a series of mid-scale presentations that delve into migration themes found in the Fenix collection. With its mix of artworks and cultural activities, Fenix in Focus regularly sheds light on current issues linked to migration. The Family of Migrants brings together 136 photographers from around the world, presenting both iconic and lesser-known images that illustrate migration as a timeless phenomenon and, above all, a deeply human story. From iconic images by Dorothea Lange and Alfred Stieglitz to anonymous family pictures. An international selection collection of childrens books illustrating migration told to and read by children through the years. The selection takes you on a journey through time, illustrating how weve told the stories of migration to children through the years. ... More
Manar Zuabi's new exhibition exposes the fragile threshold between resistance and erasure TEL AVIV.- “Moderate Physical Pressure,” a solo exhibition by Manar Zuabi (b. 1964, lives and works in Nazareth) at the Center for Contemporary Art Tel Aviv-Yafo, displays the artist’s distinctive visual language – one that relies on a limited range of materials and on repetitive, accumulative gestures that gradually transform the space. Since the early 2000s, Zuabi has been creating site-specific installations and spatial interventions using simple materials such as wool yarn, nylon stockings, hairpins, pencils, and shoelaces. Alongside these works, she developed a body of performance-based works, sometimes with co-collaborators, in front of an audience or a camera. While Zuabi’s artistic practice is often discussed separately in the contexts of installation and performance, this exhibition emphasizes the open and flexible structure shared by her entire oeuvre, and the ways in which it is grounded in the presence of – or in reference to – the body. The term “Moderate Physical Pressure” entered I ... More
Olafur Eliasson brings immersive light, nature, and sensory art to Jakarta JAKARTA.- Museum of Modern & Contemporary Art in Nusantara (MACAN) presents Olafur Eliasson: Your curious journey, a traveling exhibition by the Icelandic-Danish artist. This marks the Indonesian stop of the renowned artist’s traveling exhibition and his first major solo presentation in the country. The exhibition arrived in Jakarta as part of the Asia Pacific tour that has included exhibitions at Singapore Art Museum, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Taipei Fine Arts Museum, and will conclude at the Museum of Contemporary Art and Design in Manila in 2026. Olafur Eliasson is celebrated for his works that explore the way we perceive our environments. He has been exhibiting in major museums and public spaces worldwide since 1997. His installations transform the intangible into sensory experiences, heightening awareness of space, light, and movement. Beyond its captivating aesthetics, his practice engages deeply with contemporary audiences through a sustained commitment to social and environ ... More
PICA unveils 2026 artistic program charting connection, culture and contemporary practice PERTH.- The Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts unveiled its 2026 artistic program, showcasing more than 200 artists in a bold and expansive four-season calendar of exhibitions, performances, screenings and studio residencies that reflect the pulse of contemporary practice in Western Australia and beyond. Setting the tone for the year, Season 1 (6 February - 29 March 2026) opens with three major Perth Festival exhibitions, connecting local stories with global conversations while tracing histories of water and cultural exchange across the Global South. Awakening Histories premieres in WA with more than 20 artists illuminating long-standing connections between northern Australias First Nations peoples and Makassan seafarers. Curated by an AustralianIndonesian curatorium, the exhibition spans new commissions, UNESCO-listed works and an expanded film program, featuring artists including Abdul-Rahman Abdullah (WA), Aziziah Diah Aprilya (Indonesia), Cian Dayrit (Philippines), Guan Wei ... More
Scotland's largest awards for portraiture welcomes new headline sponsor EDINBURGH.- The Scottish Arts Trust announced John Clark Motor Group as headline sponsor of the Scottish Portrait Awards in Fine Art 2026. The new sponsorship coincides with a landmark move that will see the awards hosted at the National Galleries Scotland: Portrait, Edinburgh for the first time from 28 November 2026 – 11 April 2027. Entries are now open for the award – the winner will take home £5,000 plus a National Galleries of Scotland portrait commission. As well as supporting the Scottish Portrait Awards in Fine Art, John Clark Motor Group’s new multi-year partnership with the Scottish Arts Trust will include a series of bespoke spotlight exhibitions in several of their showrooms across Scotland, giving potential car buyers an opportunity to browse and also buy work by some of Scotland’s most exciting artists. Of the sponsorship, Sara Lagerman, Divisional Marketing Consultant says, “John Clark Motor Group has a long and proud history of working with the communities that we operate in and we ... More
The Art That Made Me: Jeffrey Gibson
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On a day like today, French sculptorCamille Claudel was born
December 08, 1864. Camille Rosalie Claudel (8 December 1864 - 19 October 1943) was a French sculptor known for her figurative works in bronze and marble. She died in relative obscurity, but later gained recognition for the originality and quality of her work. The subject of several biographies and films, Claudel is well known for her sculptures including The Waltz and The Mature Age. In this image: Camille Claudel (1864–1943), The Age of Maturity, or Youth and the Age of Maturity. Model created in 1898. Bronze with richly nuanced brown patina. Estimate: €1,500,000 - 2,000,000.
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