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Jill Newhouse Gallery organizes the third annual Upper East Side Art Walk to be held on May 7, 2025

Jill Newhouse Gallery will exhibit a collection of Edward Hopper drawings from a private collection, alongside watercolor views of Paris done in 1904 by Spanish artist Enrique Atalaya.

NEW YORK, NY.- Anchored by the Metropolitan Museum, the Upper East Side is home to many beautiful galleries tucked away in historic townhouses. Showing a broad selection of fine art in all media, including European, American, and Australian art by living artists as well as Old and Modern Masters, and coinciding with Frieze and TEFAF art fairs, the UES Art Walk adds an exciting event to the New York Spring calendar. At the northern end of the art walk, Hans P. Kraus will show 19th century French photographs made for painters. On 81st Street on the first floor Mireille Mosler will show a selection of works titled Random Girls + Flowers, and on the 2nd floor Jill Newhouse Gallery will exhibit a collection of Edward Hopper drawings from a private collection, alongside watercolor views of Paris done in 1904 by Spanish artist Enrique Atalaya. D’Lan Contemporary will mount a show of Australian art, also on view at their 73rd Street location. ... More


The Best Photos of the Day







Rare Robert Buecker harpsichords take center stage at Roland Auctions May 3rd   Richard Avedon's In the American West returns: Paris exhibition marks 40 years of a photographic landmark   El Greco and the legacy of the Veneto-Cretan School shine in landmark Venice exhibition


Robert Bobby Buecker, (aka. Bucker) Ebonized Wood Harpsicord, ebonized wood sculptural harpsicord, mid to late 20th century. Estimate $4,000-$6,000.

GLEN COVE, NY.- Roland Auctions NY will present an exciting collection of rarely seen Robert "Bobby" Buecker designed and built harpsichords, presenting the first two in the collection at their upcoming Multi-Estates auction on Saturday, May 3rd at 10am, Roland will introduce these first two in the unique collection of twelve rare harpsichords by legendary New York artist and art dealer Robert "Bobby" Buecker, with the others being presented over the next couple months. The auction also features an exquisite selection of bronze sculptures from the private collection of Neil Zukerman, who was owner of CMF Gallery in Chelsea until he passed away in 2021. Neil and his husband Tom Shivers were lifelong collectors, with the estate comprising works by well-known artists such as Frederick Hart, Leonor Fini, and Michael Parkes, in addition to antiques and decorative arts from around the world, including art glass from Lalique, Daum, and Saint Louis ... More
 

Boyd Fortin, thirteen year old rattlesnake skinner, Sweetwater, Texas, March 10, 1979. Photograph by Richard Avedon © The Richard Avedon Foundation.

PARIS.- To mark the 40th anniversary of Richard Avedon’s iconic work In the American West, the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson, in collaboration with the Richard Avedon Foundation, presents an exclusive exhibition focused on this emblematic series. Between 1979 and 1984, commissioned by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas, Richard Avedon traveled across the American West to photograph over 1,000 of its inhabitants. For five years, Avedon photographed miners, herdsmen, showmen, salesmen and transient people, amongst others with rich histories, alone or in small groups, before his camera, against a white background that enhanced their features, postures and expressions, for a striking portrait of the territory and its residents, in stark contrast to traditional depictions and glorifications of the legend of the American West. The force of the 103 works that compose the book makes In the American West a pivotal event in Avedon’s career, ... More
 

Michaél Damaskinós and workshop, Adoration of the Magi, Circa 1590. Tempera and gold on panel, 70 x 54.5 cm. Venice, Museo Correr. Inventory: Cl. I no. 0509.

VENICE.- A golden thread links the historical and artistic events, the diplomatic balances and the devotion in the Mediterranean area along the route between Venice and Crete, or Candia as it was known from the thirteenth century, when it became the pearl of the Serenissima’s Stato da Mar. Painted gold, which makes icons shine with spiritual light, is the protagonist of the exhibition at the Doge's Palace, curated by the Scientific Director of the Fondazione Musei Civici Chiara Squarcina, the manager of the Museo Correr Andrea Bellieni and the General Director of the Byzantine and Christian Museum of Athens Katerina Dellaporta; it provides the backdrop to a long history of intense pictorial relations between the two islands. After the fall of Constantinople in 1453, Candia became the most important artistic centre for the ancient Byzantine tradition, which saw the involvement of over a hundred workshops of ‘madoneri’, especially iconographers producing popular devotional images. ... More



Copenhagen Photo Festival headlines with Martin Parr   Gagosian to feature work by Jeff Koons at Frieze New York 2025   Barry McGee returns to Perrotin Paris with a vivid tapestry of street culture and social commentary


Benidorm, Spain, 1997 ® Martin Parr. Magnum Photos.

COPENHAGEN.- Copenhagen Photo Festival presents world-renowned British Magnum photographer Martin Parr as one of the highlights of this year's festival, opening on June 12, 2025 at The Royal Theatre in the heart of Copenhagen. This is the photographer's first major exhibition in Denmark since 2003. With the exhibition by Martin Parr, and the relocation of the festival's center from Refshaleřen to the Royal Theatre in the center, Copenhagen Photo Festival steps onto a big stage this year. "We are entering a new era for the festival this year, and we are incredibly proud and happy that it will be at one of Copenhagen's most spectacular, historic cultural institutions in the company of one of the most influential and groundbreaking photographers in the world over the past 50 years", says Festival Director Maja Dyrehauge Gregersen. Copenhagen Photo Festival will present highlights from Martin Parr's extensive career with exhibitions exploring his work on leisure, tourism and beach life. ... More
 

Jeff Koons, Hulk (Tubas), 2004-2018. Polychromed bronze and brass, 97 1/4 x 82 3/4 x 48 1/8 inches. Edition of 3 + AP © Jeff Koons, Incredible Hulk ™, and © Marvel. All rights reserved. Photo: Ela Bialkowska, OKNOstudio. Courtesy Palazzo Strozzi and Gagosian.

NEW YORK, NY.- Gagosian announced a solo presentation of works by Jeff Koons at Frieze New York 2025, nearly twenty-five years since the first collaboration between the artist and the gallery. Three sculptures—Hulk (Organ) (2004–14), Hulk (Tubas) (2004–18), Hulk (Dragon and Turtle) (2004–21), all from the Hulk Elvis series—are on view produced immersive vinyl backdrop. All the sculptures are from Koons’s collection, and the artist participated in every stage of the exhibition process, from the initial selection to the design of the booth and the layout of the installation. Drawing on sources including figures from classical antiquity, everyday objects, and contemporary icons, Koons explores the conjunction of the readymade and the sublime in lavishly realized artifacts and tableaux. Identifying ... More
 

View of Barry McGee’s exhibition ‘I’m Listening’ at Perrotin Paris, 2025. Photo: Claire Dorn. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.

PARIS.- Perrotin Paris is presenting its second solo exhibition with Barry McGee, his sixth with the gallery. Emerging from the vibrant West Coast subculture of skaters, surfers, and graffiti writers that informs his art, San Francisco-based Barry McGee (b. 1966) is a leading figure of the influential Mission School, a 1990s San Francisco movement known for its handmade aesthetic and social activism. Operating under various aliases, most notably Twist, McGee integrates his early experiences as a graffiti writer and printmaker into a diverse multidisciplinary practice. His work encompasses meticulously painted caricatures of society’s outcasts, particularly the homeless population of San Francisco, dynamic panel assemblages, complex patterns reminiscent of op art, and immersive installations that explore the human condition. His exhibitions often foster a sense of community by including ... More



Neue Nationalgalerie acquires key works by female artists thanks to private donation   Ancient megafauna remains unearthed in Tamaulipas after citizen tip   Crossing generations: Lois Dodd and Anna Grath reframe the ordinary at Berlin Gallery Weekend


Cornelia Schleime: Self-Staging "Bondage", Hüpstedt 1982, Reprint 2016, Inkjet print on Hahnemühle paper, 42 x 29.7 cm, Edition of 6+2AP, Neue Nationalgalerie, Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, © The artist and Courtesy Galerie Judin, Berlin / Photo: Bernd Hiepe.

BERLIN.- The Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin has significantly expanded its collection with the acquisition of pivotal works by three prominent female artists—Maria Lassnig, Ewa Partum, and Cornelia Schleime—made possible through a generous private donation from Birgit and Thomas Rabe. The couple’s commitment includes an annual contribution of €1 million for three years, aimed primarily at acquiring works by women artists to enrich the museum’s 20th-century art collection. These newly acquired pieces are currently on display at the Neue Nationalgalerie. The museum, part of the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, has long faced constraints due to a limited acquisition budget. The Rabes’ support provides much-needed financial stability, allowing the institution to strategically address gaps in its holdings. This year, the donation facilitated the purchase of ten artworks through the ... More
 

Bones of an equid, a camelid, and a proboscidean were identified following a citizen report. Photo: Esteban Avalos / INAH.

TULA.- In a remarkable example of community collaboration and scientific discovery, paleontological remains believed to be more than 10,000 years old have been recovered in the municipality of Tula, Tamaulipas. The find includes bones from large prehistoric mammals—possibly a mastodon or mammoth, along with a camelid and a prehistoric horse. The discovery was set in motion by a local resident, who noticed what looked like a bone protruding from a stream bank and promptly alerted local authorities. That tip led to a formal report filed with the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), which dispatched a team to investigate on April 17. Within hours, experts from the INAH Tamaulipas Center, including director Tonantzin Silva Cárdenas, biologist Ángel Banda Ortiz, and archaeologists Esteban Ávalos Beltrán and Hugo Fernández Ramírez, were on-site documenting and carefully recovering the remains to prevent looting or damage. “The first visible bone ... More
 

Lois Dodd, Sunroom Door in Rain, Spring, 2021, oil on Masonite, 12 1/8 x 9 7/8 in © Lois Dodd, Courtesy of Alexandre Gallery, New York.

BERLIN.- For this year’s Berlin Gallery Weekend, Haverkampf Leistenschneider presents works by painter Lois Dodd (b. 1927, Montclair, NJ) along with new works by Hamburg based artist Anna Grath (b. 1983, Immenstadt, Germany) in a cross-generational exhibition in Berlin. A brittle leaf, a curving stem, a sunless hillside beyond blanketing snow – the power of Lois Dodd’s images is their stark, arresting simplicity. For over seventy years, Dodd has painted her immediate surroundings at the places she has chosen to live and work – the woodlands, architectures and interiors of Lower East Side, rural Mid-Coast Maine, and the Delaware Water Gap. Her work expresses a desire for capture – as simple or as charged as that can be – a desire to look, and to hold by looking. In a 2007 conversation with Bill Maynes, Dodd described her experience employing this strategy, “Not everybody seems to see the world that they’re living in… and it’s such a kick, really ... More


$100,000 Ramsay Art Prize finalists announced for 2025   Hessen gifts Berlin's Münzkabinett historic coin forgery tools, shining light on numismatic dark side   Heritage's American Art Auction celebrates the imagination and storytelling of a nation


Bridie Gillman, born Brisbane 1990, Pink room, pink womb, 2024, oil on canvas, timber, tufted wool, soundscape: 23:45 min, 202.0 x 190.0 x 162.0 cm (overall); Courtesy of the artist and Hugo Michell Gallery.

ADELAIDE.- The Art Gallery of South Australia today announced the twenty-two finalists for the Ramsay Art Prize 2025 – a $100,000 acquisitive prize for contemporary Australian artists under the age of forty, supported in perpetuity by the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation. A record number of entries were received for this year’s prize, with more than 500 artists from around the country submitting their best work created over the past year. In 2025, the expert judging panel was comprised of leading Australian artist Michael Zavros; Associate Professor and Program Director of Visual Art at the Queensland College of Art and Design and recipient of the inaugural Ramsay Art Prize’s People’s Choice Prize, Julie Fragar; and Emma Fey, Deputy Director of the Art Gallery of South Australia. AGSA Director, Jason Smith, says, ‘In its fifth iteration, the Ramsay Art Prize has cemented ... More
 

Carl Wilhelm Becker: Silver coin from Elis, 18309587. Photo: Münzkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Bernhard Weisser.

BERLIN.- In a significant boost to the study of numismatic history, the German state of Hessen has donated a remarkable collection of 592 coin-forging tools, once used by the notorious 19th-century forger Carl Wilhelm Becker, to the Münzkabinett of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. The transfer, formalized during a ceremony on April 9, 2025, attended by Hessian Minister of Art and Culture Timon Gremmels, marks a new chapter for these artifacts, which offer a rare glimpse into the shadowy world of historical coin counterfeiting. These tools, a highlight of the ongoing exhibition Lange Finger – Falsche Münzen: Die dunkle Seite der Numismatik (Sticky Fingers – Fake Coins: The Dark Side of Numismatics) at the Bode-Museum, will remain with the Münzkabinett even after the show closes on September 21, 2025. Originally held by the Römerkastell Saalburg museum in Bad Homburg, the collection includes 302 upper dies, 284 lower dies, eight punches, and one ... More
 

Norman Rockwell (American, 1894-1978), Marionettes, The Saturday Evening Post cover, October 22, 1932. Oil on canvas, 34 x 28 in. Estimate: $800,000 - $1,200,000.

DALLAS, TX.- One of the hallmarks of Heritage’s approach to and definition of American Art, which anchors its abundant relationship with all Art and Design, is that American Art for Heritage is the work that has illustrated not only our nation’s history, but also its character – its hopes, fears, strengths, flaws and evolution. The disposition of the United States, still a young country after all, is defined by its stories and storytelling about who we are and how we’ve arrived here, and its May 16 American Art Auction is nothing if not packed with works that tell stories and paint a picture, as it were, of a people’s shared disposition defined by optimism, ambition, community and imagination. The tightly curated auction is shaped by a full suite of works by the inimitable Ernie Barnes along with a trove of significant Golden Age and Modern Illustration by Norman Rockwell, J.C. Leyendecker and Maurice Sendak, a stunning landscape by Frederic Church and a venture into the Am ... More



Quote
The pieces I make must have musical qualities, changes in rhythm, a series of climaxes, andan overall harmony. Shono Shounsai

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Kristen Lorello opens a solo exhibition of artist Jeremy Stenger
NEW YORK, NY.- Kristen Lorello is presenting the gallery’s second solo exhibition of artist Jeremy Stenger. The exhibition will include five paintings in acrylic on canvas and six related works on paper. Stenger’s paintings feature layered outlines of botanical forms that unfold across the surface from edge to edge. His works are a celebration of nature and human beings’ intrinsic connection to it. They also preserve natural elements as fragile and ephemeral artifacts. Stenger draws influence from a variety of art historical sources as well as personal experiences, situating his renderings of the forest floor, root systems, and botany within a lineage of art, craft, and family. Seventeenth Century Sottobosco paintings that figure untouched tangles of budding petals, stems, insects, and birds are as much an influence to the artist as Man Ray’s double-exposed photographs and photograms of the early ... More

Kamasi Washington to bring 100-plus-member ensemble to The New David Geffen Galleries
LOS ANGELES, CA.- Acclaimed composer, bandleader, and saxophonist Kamasi Washington will bring unprecedented performances to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s (LACMA) new David Geffen Galleries on June 26, 27, and 28. With an ensemble of more than 100 musicians, Washington will perform his celebrated work Harmony of Difference in the museum's striking new building designed by Pritzker Prize–winning architect Peter Zumthor. The massive ensemble, many of whom are Los Angeles musicians Washington has played with across his storied career, will be dispersed over approximately 110,000 square feet of gallery space, making the building itself an acoustic instrument and integral part of the piece. Washington will lead the musicians in a series of performances that will never be repeated as the first public program in the new space. Harmony of Difference ... More

Spectacular dance to takeover the Southbank Centre's iconic site
LONDON.- On International Dance Day, the Southbank Centre unveils a programme that promises unforgettable experiences for everyone. An engine of creativity, the Southbank Centre's programme brings together different artforms across the Summer, taking over the 11-acre site by the River Thames with Dance Your Way Home, followed by the UK Premiere of We Should Have Never Walked On The Moon. • Fusing together dance, gigs, visual arts and poetry, Dance Your Way Home, co-curated by Emma Warren takes over the site with a seismic programme celebrating all the ways that dance connects us all (23 Jul - 25 Aug). • Ensuring the Southbank Centre is a home for everyone, the programme includes dozens of free events on a brand new dancefloor on the Riverside Terrace including Grief Rave (3 Aug) and Heart n Soul’s Make Yourself! Be Yourself! ... More

nGbK presents Dissident Paths: Walking Together as a Method
BERLIN.- When does walking become a refusal, a reclaiming, a reimagining? What stories does the city whisper when you move through it at different paces? What forms of knowledge emerge when we walk together, rather than alone? Dissident Paths: Walking Together as a Method is a curatorial project unfolding over a year, by means of collective movement along traced, imagined, and yet-to-be-discovered paths across Berlin. Walking can be both a necessity and a gesture of dissidence, a refusal to accept the given infrastructures of a world increasingly defined by polarization and devastation. Walking through the city can change perceptions and awareness, at once exposing barriers and impossibilities, whilst also opening up new routes. Movement, in both its bodily and political forms, holds the potential to reshape our sense of belonging and collective agency. This in-motion program ... More

Fondation Cartier announces opening date for new Jean Nouvel-designed home in Paris
PARIS.- On October 25, 2025, the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain will open its new premises to the public at 2 Place du Palais-Royal, in the heart of Paris, with an inaugural exhibition drawn from its Collection, entitled Exposition Générale. On October 25, the Fondation Cartier will open its new premises to the public at 2 Place du Palais-Royal. Located in the historic centre of Paris, the Fondation Cartier’s new space is situated within a Haussmannian building that once housed the Grands Magasins du Louvre. Designed by Jean Nouvel, the architectural project opens generously to the city through its vast bay windows. Comprising of five mobile platforms, its dynamic architecture reimagines the possibilities of exhibition-making. In this striking meeting place where past and future converge, the architecture of the new Fondation Cartier becomes an extension of both ... More

GRAY presents Real Monsters in Bold Colors: Bob Thompson and Candida Alvarez
NEW YORK, NY.- This exhibition highlights the two artists’ use of color and form as vehicles for storytelling, while underscoring their distinct approaches to rebuffing and reimagining the painting traditions that preceded them. Real Monsters in Bold Colors offers a view into the working practice of contemporary artist, Candida Alvarez, by way of the work of Bob Thompson. The exhibition reveals how artists find inspiration in their surroundings, often borrowing, expanding, and riffing off of historical sources as well as other artists, poets, and musicians to make their work. The exhibition title is derived from an essay on Bob Thompson written by the late poet Hettie Jones (1934-2024) whose close ties with the artist reflects a deep understanding of his vision and conveys the multifarious energy of the creative landscape in 1960s New York. Jones’s language conveys the anxiety of representing ... More

Youth-led art show at CAMH unpacks waste, greed, and identity in the age of excess
HOUSTON, TX.- Contemporary Arts Museum Houston announced the exhibition OUT OF STOCfl. Organized and curated by CAMH’s Teen Council, the group show features works by 32 Houston-area teen artists responding to questions surrounding consumer culture, accumulative waste, digitization dystopias, and exploitation. OUT OF STOCfl reflects on the compulsion to fulfill endless desires. From material greed to tech-enabled obsession, the artworks in the exhibition represent a generation born into the contradiction between surplus and increasingly exhausted resources. Today, as teens mature in a world dominated by sales and social media, the hunger for more material goods and virtual social validation creeps closer to a climax. With CAMH’s Teen Council program celebrating its 25th anniversary, this year’s cohort of teens aimed to make this year’s biennial ... More

Meadows Museum announces Dallas-based artist Erica Felicella as 2025 Moss/Chumley award winner
DALLAS, TX.- The Meadows Museum, SMU, announces that Erica Felicella has won the 2025 Moss/Chumley North Texas Artist Award. The award is given annually to an outstanding North Texas artist who has exhibited professionally for at least 10 years and has a proven track record as a community advocate for the visual arts. The award brings a $3,000 cash prize. Felicella is a multidisciplinary artist and arts professional with roots in New England who has called Dallas home for over 20 years. Originally trained in photography, she works as an artist, curator, producer, organizer, and program developer for fellow artists. Over the past decade, her practice has expanded beyond photography to include performance, endurance art, site-specific installations, and new media. Across these varied forms, Felicella explores collective human experiences through ... More



In conversation: Jose Davila and Alison Moss




 



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Flashback
On a day like today, French painter Édouard Manet died
April 30, 1883. Édouard Manet (23 January 1832 - 30 April 1883) was a French painter. He was one of the first 19th-century artists to paint modern life, and a pivotal figure in the transition from Realism to Impressionism. In this image: Ms Vicky Hirsh, Mara Talbot and Dr Christopher Brown standing in front of Portrait of Mlle Claus by Manet.



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