Angela Fang Zirbes with her original works at the residency. Image courtesy of Alan Del Rio Ortiz.
NEW YORK, NY.-ART FOR CHANGE, a curated program of online sales and exhibitions at the intersection of contemporary art and philanthropy, is proud to announce the second ART FOR CHANGE Artist-in-Residence in Santa Monica, Angela Fang Zirbes. The residency will culminate with a reception with the artist from 4-6pm PST on November 9, 2025 in Santa Monica where Fang Zirbes will present five new paintings, which will be available for purchase. Additionally ART FOR CHANGE will present a limited 15 edition prints of hand embellished works, debuting online December 9, 2025 via artforchange.com. A portion of all proceeds go towards ART FOR CHANGEs ongoing mission to combat climate change, with ten trees planted for every artwork sold. Im inspired by being in Santa Monica, it is so special to be ... More
1970 Italian-made sterling silver and enamel fish designed vase, weighing 1.95 kilograms. Estimate: $12,000-$15,000.
BROOKLYN, NY.- The holidays are right around the corner, and what better way to get a head start on that gift-giving checklist than with a visit to SJ Auctioneers online-only Fine Collectibles, Jewelry, Silver & Toys auction set for Sunday, November 23rd, at 9pm Eastern time. The sale has 231 lots, all of which would make perfect gifts, with holiday delivery assured. Silver is hugely popular right now, and the November sale has a great selection of individual objects and flatware sets. A few of the better single items are as follows: A sterling silver 925 cabbage bowl with glass band insert made in Italy around 1960 by Mario Buccellati, weighing 3.8 kilograms, in excellent condition. Estimate: $12,000-$15,000 A 1970 Italian-made sterling silver and enamel ... More
Two Canadian 1930s single-sided porcelain Ford V8 Dealer signs mounted back-to-back, 79 inches by 76 inches, in the original frame, including brackets. Estimate: CA$20,000-$25,000.
NEW HAMBURG.- A two-session, online-only Gas, Oil & General Store Advertising auction featuring the outstanding Jason Patzer Collection is planned for Saturday, November 15th by Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd., with a morning session at 9am and an evening session 6pm (Eastern time). A total of 437 lots will come up for bid across the two sessions. As a successful home builder, its impressive Mr. Patzer found time to build such a collection, said Ethan Miller of Miller & Miller Auctions. Ltd. Much like his business, he took it seriously, sourcing the rare variations. Weve never handled a collection of Canadian petroliana quite this comprehensive. He held nothing back. Its stuff you simply cant find. Were ... More
Assaf Evron’s “A prolonged and heavy fall,” courtesy ro art services.
NEW YORK, NY.- ro art services opened a solo exhibition of Assaf Evron. Hosted by OSMOS, if a butterfly ever saw an owl features work from several interconnected series, including Evrons The Anonymous Shapes of Words, I Want to Believe Sea Cucumbers Are Happy, and Is the Eye I Am Seen As Is the Eye I See Myself Through. Each navigates the limits of photographic representation through formal experimentation in abstraction, objecthood, appearance, and symbolic systems. While being philosophical and literary inquiries, the works remain grounded in photographic materials and processes. Visit the exhibition page here, or you can email roartservices@gmail.com to request pdf preview. For more information on OSMOS, visit their website or follow them on ins ... More
Lisette Model, Coney Island Bather, New York, 1939-1941. 49.5 × 39.3 cm, Gelatin silver print. Estate of Gerd Sander, Julian Sander Gallery, Cologne.
VIENNA.- Born into a Viennese family with Jewish roots, Lisette Model (1901-1983) is considered one of the most internationally influential female photographers. The exhibition at the ALBERTINA Museum is the most comprehensive presentation of the artist in Austria to date and brings together her most important groups of works from 1933 to 1959. In addition to iconic photographs such as Coney Island Bather and Singer at the Metropole Café, the exhibition also includes lesser-known works that have never been shown before. While Lisette Model initially pursued a musical education, it was only in France, where she lived from the mid-1920s, that she found her way to photography: in 1934, the self-taught photographer took her revealing series of portraits of rich idlers in Nice, which caused a sensation as a biting social critique in the heated political climate of the time. After Model emigrated to New York in 1938, she quickly made a name for herself in the ... More
NEW YORK, NY.- This monumental, theatrical masterpiece is unquestionably the most spectacular view of Venice painted by Canaletto in England (1746-1755). When the painting last appeared at auction at Christie's 20 years ago as part of the Champalimaud collection, it justifiably broke all previous auction records for the artist. Venice, the Bucintoro at the Molo on Ascension Day will lead the 4 February 2026 Old Master sales in New York, with a pre-auction view in New York 29 January-3 February 2026. Daring in composition and dazzling both in its brushwork and colourful palette, this magnificent painting was commissioned in around 1754 by the King family (later Earls of Lovelace), in whose possession it remained for almost 200 years. Other canvases from the same decorative scheme are in private collections and museums; including Washington (National Gallery of Art) and Boston (Museum of Fine Arts). ... More
PARIS.- Born in 1957 in Concord, New Hampshire, George Condo moved to New York in 1979. He quickly became part of the local art scene, working notably for Andy Warhols silkscreen studio. Subsequently, he went to Cologne and then Paris, his primary place of residence from 1985 to 1995. His broad knowledge of European art led him to develop a personal approach to figurative painting and a fierce take on his times. Following the museums two retrospectives devoted to Jean-Michel Basquiat in 2010 and Keith Haring in 2013, both artists with whom George Condo shared a true artistic friendship, this exhibition has been conceived as the last chapter of a New York trilogy, exploring the emergence of a new generation of painters in the 1980s. All of them, each in their own way, have contributed to reassessing the medium of painting, a direction which George Condo, the only one to have survived that decade, has been pursuing ever since. Organized in dialogue with the artist, the exhibition aim ... More
LONDON.- Historically mapping has offered governments and organisations the opportunity to define and control the world around them, as shown through confidential maps of the English south coast commissioned for the Tudor court, trading routes drawn up for the Dutch East India Company and classified military plans for the D-Day landings at Normandy. The exhibition also reflects on how mapping can comment upon the everyday role of secrecy in societies through the iconic Wheres Wally books in the 1990s and world-building games like Minecraft. Visitors will explore the idea of maps as complex objects that reveal as much about their makers and their purposes as they do about the physical spaces they seek to capture. The exhibition opens with Imperial Secrets, a section that explores how, from the 16th century onwards, maps and secrecy combined to enable colonising powers from western ... More
Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, 'View of the Dachstein from the Sophien-Doppelblick near Ischl', 1835. Belvedere, Vienna.
LONDON.- In summer 2026 the National Gallery will present the first ever UK exhibition of paintings by the Austrian 19th-century artist Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (17931865). Waldmüller: Landscapes (2 July 20 September 2026), additionally the first devoted solely to his work as a landscapist, is a collaboration between the National Gallery and the Belvedere Museum, Vienna, which is lending most of the works on display. Waldmüller is one of the most important figures in Austrian 19th-century art, significant for his work both as an artist and as an influential teacher. As well as landscapes, he painted portraits, genre pictures and still lifes (notably flowers and fruit), all characterised by his absolute commitment to truth. He was one of the leading artists of Austrias Biedermeier period, which roughly spanned the Congress of Vienna in 1815 (which aimed to reshape Europes borders following the ... More
Under the hammer of Arnaud Oliveux, the sale totaled 9,708,940 including fees, before a full audience.
PARIS.- During the Paris Art Week, Artcurial presented the second edition of the Selected 20/21 Auction. Dedicated to Modern and Contemporary Art, this session of 28 lots brought together collectors and enthusiasts around a group of masterpieces from the 20th and 21st centuries. Under the hammer of Arnaud Oliveux, the sale totaled 9,708,940 including fees, before a full audience. A highlight of the day, the set of two bronzes with a brown-green patina by Alberto Giacometti reached 2,189,600 including fees. The work, emblematic of Giacomettis unique style with its elongated silhouettes and slender forms, confirms the enduring interest in this master of the 20th century. Another major lot, Composition murale by Fernand Léger, signed and dated, was sold for 820,880 including fees. The bold use of geometric shapes and vibrant colors perfectly illustrates Légers innovative spirit, capable of transforming the simplicity of everyday objects into a true ... More
Karin Davie, Trespasser no. 1 (Small), 2025, Oil on linen over shaped stretcher, 40 x 32 inches, 101.6 x 81.3 cm.
NEW YORK, NY.- Miles McEnery Gallery announces It Comes In Waves, an exhibition of new works by Karin Davie, on view 30 October through 20 December 2025 at 525 West 22nd Street. The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated publication featuring an essay by Jane Ursula Harris. When much of the 1990s art world declared painting passé (overshadowed by the rise of performance, installation, and new media), Karin Davie was among a new generation of artists that proved otherwise. Following her breakout emergence in the 90s New York art scene, Davie has returned again and again to the stripe motif to depict anthropomorphic contours grounded by uniquely shaped formats, to create evocative forms. Influenced by the legacy of Abstract Expressionism, Op Art, and Post-Minimalism, Davie equally channels the forces that shape our everyday lives, with references to feminism, pop culture, and astronomy. Here, the striped contours become an instrument to explore the intertwined nature of the body, ... More
NEW YORK, NY.- An exhibition of paintings by Jay DeFeo will open at Paula Cooper Gallery on October 30th, 2025. Dating from 19821989, the works mark DeFeos triumphant return to oil paint sixteen years after the completion of her masterpiece, The Rose, in 1966. Across large, abstract canvases and intimately scaled works on linen DeFeo reveled in the rediscovered tactility of the medium, producing sensuous paintings with increased fluidity of form and line. This will be the first exhibition in New York to focus solely on DeFeos painting, and the most significant gathering of DeFeos work in oil since her retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 20122013. An illustrated catalogue with a new essay by Jordan Stein will accompany the exhibition. The 1980s brought stability and some financial security to DeFeos life and career as she expanded her studio, became a tenured professor ... More
Rahul Kadakia, President of Christie's Asia Pacific and Chairman of the Global Luxury Group, selling A Family of Cheetahs in a Rocky Landscape, attributed to Basawan for £10.2 million, a world auction record for a Mughal painting.
LONDON.- Christie's auction of Exceptional Paintings from The Personal Collection of Prince & Princess Sadruddin Aga Khan totalled £45,760,485 / $60,952,966 / 52,212,713, 6 times the pre-sale auction estimate. The sale was 100% sold, attracting registrants from 20 countries, across 4 continents, with 19% of bidders new to Christie's. This result highlights the demand for museum quality works from this category. A Family of Cheetahs in a Rocky Landscape, attributed to Basawan, Mughal India, circa 1575-80 led the sale, setting a world auction record price for a Classical Indian or Islamic painting, realising £10,245,000 / $13,646,340 / 11,689,545 (estimate: £700,000 1,000,000, achieving 14 times over estimate). Further notable results include Maharao Umed Singh (R.1771-1819) and Zalim Singh Hunting Tigers, signed by Shaykh Taju, Kotah, Rajasthan, India, dated Samvat ... More
Quote You've got to be a fool to want to stop the march of time. Pierre-Auguste Renoir
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The Cherrett Collection of Alfa Romeo 6Cs to be offered from 60+ years of continuous ownership at Gooding Christie's PARIS.- Gooding Christie's, the official auction house of Rétromobile, has announced the consignment of The Cherrett Collection, consisting of four Alfa Romeo 6Cs lovingly cherished and maintained by the late Alfa Romeo historian Angela Cherrett and her husband Allan since the 1960s. Well regarded among the automotive community in the UK and Europe, the Cherretts were active participants in many events, tours, and rallies throughout the years. While Allan put his expertise to use in restoring and maintaining the 6Cs, Angela became quite known as emblematic and representative of the prewar Alfa Romeo spirit, frequently putting her cars to great use on dedicated occasions. This quartet of 6Cs from The Cherrett Collection will be offered ... More
Uman's first solo museum exhibition debuts a new body of work RIDGEFIELD, CONN.- The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum is presenting Umans first institutional solo exhibition, After all the things , where she debuts a new body of work that includes paintings, works on paper, video, and sculpture, all of which span the entirety of the Museums first floor galleries. Umans practice is interdisciplinary and ever-evolving. Comprising painting, drawing, murals, mosaic, sculpture, and glass, her work is rooted in the tangibility of color and the transportive power of images. Shaped by memories, dreams, and the constant flux of life around her, Umans visual language is intuitive and multilayered, adaptable and free; it is neither exclusively abstract nor metaphoricalit grows out of what is indeterminate and into the transcendent. Umans inspirations range from her childhood in East Africa and diasporic experiences in Europe and the US, ... More
Olivia Reavey's black and white photos meet Hannah Beerman's high-color, sculptural paintings NEW YORK, NY.- Thomas Erben presents an exhibition of photographs by Olivia Reavey in juxtaposition with paintings by Hannah Beerman. Both artists Reavey in her mostly black and white and Beerman in her exuberantly colored works display the formal hallmarks of their respective craft: an attention to composition, texture, line, light as well as volume, and to paintings additional qualities of mark making, surface, and the hands expressive abilities. In both works however, the body is central though in divergent ways. In her self portraits, Olivia Reavey often contrasts her body in an assertive juxtaposition with industrial artifacts whereas in other works, she appears in scenes or performances birthed from moments of spontaneity. In these, friends or models, mostly male and often in the nude, participate in an awkward dance in which neither photographer ... More
New paintings by Bea Scaccia explore the unpredictable female figure at Maruani Mercier BRUSSELS.- Maruani Mercier presents Bea Scaccia: Mood Swings, the exhibition of new paintings by the artist, opening at the Brussels gallery on 30 October 2025. In Mood Swings, meticulously rendered objects of adornment interweave, ripple and twist, enshrouding the female figure in the composition. Illuminated by the soft glow of twinkle lights, layers of shoes, jewels and beads appear both desirable and strange, humorous and uncanny, as if animated by a mysterious force in a fairy-tale realm. Sweeping across each painting, Scaccias complex arrangements interrogate the notion of beauty and the tropes of female representation, at once questioning the human longing for objects as signifiers of identity and social roles. Portraying moments of powerful motion and stillness, the works in the exhibition allude to shifting states of the human body, as well as the perpetual ... More
Philipp Demandt extends his tenure as director of the Städel Museum FRANKFURT.- Philipp Demandt will remain at the helm of the Städel Museum and the Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung for a further six years. This decision was made unanimously by the Städel Museums administration at its last meeting. The decision to extend his contract reaffirms Demandts commitment to one of Europes most renowned art museums. Philipp Demandt has been director of the Städel Museum and the Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung since 2016; until 2022, he also headed the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt. He came to Frankfurt from the Nationalgalerie in Berlin in 2016. The Städel Museum, financed by the Stiftung Städelsches Kunstinstitut, is the oldest civic museum foundation in Germany. The museum is significantly supported in its operations by companies, foundations, private sponsors, the City of Frankfurt and the State of Hesse. Since ... More
Art Institute of Chicago announces Critical Fabulation CHICAGO, IL.- The Art Institute of Chicago announced Critical Fabulation, on view now through January 4, 2026. This special collection rotation is organized by Chicago-born, internationally renowned contemporary artist Simone Leigh, in collaboration with Art Institute curators. Bringing together diverse works from the museums collections of African, American, and European art, Critical Fabulation explores the unexpected relationships these objects may have with one another. The Art Institute typically displays its collections in galleries organized according to chronology, geography, and media. While this organization helps visitors navigate the movements and moments of global art history, it makes less apparent some of the overlapping and interconnected stories of objects in different areas of the museum. This special installation provides the opportunity to create new moments ... More
Jared Buckhiester maps the 'Continent of Misbelief' in new solo show at David Kordansky Gallery NEW YORK, NY.- David Kordansky Gallery presents Continent of Misbelief, its second solo exhibition of sculptures, paintings, and works on paper by Jared Buckhiester. The exhibition is on view in New York at 520 W. 20th St. from October 30 through December 13, 2025, with an opening reception on Thursday, October 30 from 6 to 8 PM. In an introduction to the exhibition, Buckhiester writes: I found a precedent for my aspirations in the poems of Marianne Moore. You might say that Moore is the patron saint of this exhibition. I did not discover this until most of the work was already made, but that order falls in line with a belief of mine that time is not linear, but cyclical. Her poems have clarity and precision within a structure and cadence that can masquerade as opacity. When reading Moores poems, comprehension arises through avenues indirect, but once illuminated, understanding ... More
Paulette Tavormina's 'Portraits in Bloom' captures the transience of flora NEW YORK, NY.- Winston Wächter Fine Art, New York presents Portraits in Bloom, a new series of photographs by Paulette Tavormina. In her second solo exhibition with the gallery, Tavormina takes inspiration from 17th-century Old Master still life paintings, transforming their rich symbolism into contemporary photographic portraits of flowers. Tavormina races against time to stage and curate each portrait in her studio after hand picking various fresh florals. Thus, rather than presenting flowers in traditional vases, she captures peonies, lilacs, dahlias, roses, tulips, foxglove, and more, in various stages of life, from tightly furled buds to petals in decline. Butterflies and insects often appear within her compositions, reinforcing the interconnectedness of the natural world while echoing the allegorical depth of Old Master paintings. For Tavormina, flowers are not only symbolic ... More
Lucy Skaer's sculptures and drawings embody time and value at Peter Freeman, Inc. NEW YORK, NY.- Peter Freeman, Inc. presents Stacks and Ledgers, Lucy Skaers fourth solo exhibition with the gallery and her first in New York since 2018. Stacks and Ledgers features new sculptures, drawings, and photographs that expand on Skaers interest in expressing abstraction through material as a challenge to representation rather than as a thing at rest or resolved. Among these works are three-dimensional depictions of things that are normally flat, and vice versa, as well as physical manifestations of time, of the present moving into the past. Open glass boxes representing the cells of a ledgera heavy tome of recorded transactions that often remains tied to a spaceexplore the relationship between annotation and materiality, a means of conveying the intangible idea of value and currency through physical presence. While the cells imply a set of rules ... More
Photo Elysée to participate in Paris Photo presenting the work of Iranian artist Hannah Darabi LAUSANNE.- Winner of the 2025 Prix Elysée, selected last June by a jury of international experts, Hannah Darabi will unveil her ongoing project Why Don't You Dance? at the Photo Elysée booth. The artist explores dance as a cultural element whose meaning can evolve according to social and political circumstances. Once completed, this original project will be exhibited at Photo Elysée in June 2026 and will be the subject of a publication by Kodoji Press. The Prix Elysée is the result of an exclusive partnership between Photo Elysée and Parmigiani Fleurier. Why Dont You Dance? is an artistic research project exploring Iranian popular dance through three key figures: Mahvash, Jamileh, and Mohammad Khordadjan. Combining photographs, videos and archival material, the project examines how dance, in certain social and political contexts, can become a tool for identity expression and eman ... More
Exhibition at The Scottish Gallery connects Lachlan Goudie to the artistic tradition of Turner and Spencer EDINBURGH.- For over 15 years Lachlan Goudie has been drawing and painting in extraordinary industrial locations across the United Kingdom. From shipyards on the River Clyde, to blast furnaces in Wales and high-tech Satellite manufacturing laboratories in Portsmouth, he has found creative inspiration in the unlikeliest of studios. Over the years these visits to engineering sites, factories, harboursides and mines have enabled him to produce hundreds of drawings, paintings and prints. When viewed together these images constitute an unusual archive; a picture history of modern British industry. A story of national achievement, pride and technological innovation. Lachlan Goudie said: Ive always been fascinated by industry as a painting subject. Growing up in Glasgow in the 1980s, my father described the days when the River Clyde bustled with ships and shipbuilding. ... More
Generative Art & Alchemy: Leo Villareal and Marc Glimcher in Conversation
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