Latest
From hard borders to soft power: how did the art world fare in 2025?
In a year of turbulence and uncertainty, new museums and dazzling shows were proof of art as a positive force
François-Xavier Lalanne hippo bar sells for record-breaking $31.4m at Sotheby’s
The price, three times its high estimate, smashed the auction records for Lalanne's work and any design object
Vancouver Art Gallery gifted 131-work private collection from Hong Kong
The gifted works, by 78 artists, date from the 1950s to today and will be featured in an exhibition in 2027
Romanian art heist film frames theft within political and migrant struggles
“Jaful Secolului” (Traffic) was inspired by a 2012 heist at Kunsthal Rotterdam and is Romania’s official selection for the 2026 Oscars
Bright sparks: humans made fire 350,000 years earlier than previously thought, research reveals
Archaeologists discovered Palaeolithic fire-making tools in a field in the east of England
Art market
In the bag: Sotheby’s inaugural Abu Dhabi Collectors' Week finds success with Birkins and bling
Netting a solid $133.4m total, Sotheby's first live sale in Abu Dhabi is described by the house as the largest debut for any new market in its history
Napoles Marty wins Frieze Los Angeles Impact Prize
The prize, presented in partnership with Nxthvn, includes a solo stand at Frieze Los Angeles and $25,000
Chinese artist to auction work for Hong Kong ambulance service after deadly Tai Po fire
The crypto mogul Justin Sun—who famously bought Maurizio Cattelan’s $6.2m banana work and ate it—has also donated $7.8m to the government relief fund
Hauser & Wirth will expand gallery empire to Italian city of Palermo
The blue-chip gallery has acquired a 19th-century palazzo in need of restoration in Sicily
‘The challenge will be to sustain it’: was the autumn art market boom more than just a blip?
Highly successful auctions and fairs do not solve the market’s deeper problems
Museums & Heritage
Comment | Why Frank Gehry was the ultimate artist’s architect
The radical builder emerged—and learned—from a scrappy group of Los Angeles artists
Admission to MoMA PS1 will be free for all starting next year
From 1 January 2026 onward, MoMA PS1 will be the largest admission-free museum in New York City, thanks to a gift by philanthropist Sonya Yu
Canadian Museum for Human Rights’ planned exhibition on displacement of Palestinians sparks outpouring of support and criticism
The museum's upcoming “Palestine Uprooted: Nakba, Past and Present” has the support of Canadian Palestinian organisations and some Jewish groups, but has been denounced by others who fear it “will ignore key issues”
From Koons's ‘Tulips’ to a Triceratops skull: new hotel-casino brings Wynn collection to UAE
Set to open in 2027, Wynn Al Marjan Island in Ras Al Khaimah is a $5.1bn project from the US hotel and casino group Wynn Resorts
Saudi art world questions widespread use of consultancies in shaping culture landscape
As the country's art scene continues to expand, the reliance on external companies such as McKinsey and Boston Consulting Group is raising eyebrows
Exhibitions
‘The Ballad of Sexual Dependency’: entire Nan Goldin series gets first-ever UK show
An exhibition at Gagosian brings all 126 images together, marking 40 years since Goldin published the seminal series
Sixth Kochi Biennale: what’s on show and who is funding it
The next edition of India's leading exhibition, curated by Nikhil Chopra and HH Art Spaces, features performances by Marina Abramovic and Tino Sehgal
Paris exhibition presents exceptional jewels—but Louvre heist treasures missing from line up
Three major pieces, stolen in the October robbery, are absent from the otherwise glittering presentation
Despite controversy, designs for Notre Dame’s new windows go on display in Paris
Stained-glass works by the French artist Claire Tabouret will replace the original windows, which suffered no damage in the fire that destroyed the cathedral’s spire
Venice Biennale 2026: all the national pavilions, artists and curators so far
The latest announcements of the key players representing their countries at the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia
Martin Parr, 1952-2025
The documentary photographer, famed for his astute studies of British life, has died aged 73
The art world pays tribute to Martin Parr, an ‘extraordinary photographer of people and life in the UK’
Tributes online have come from artists including Grayson Perry and the Pet Shop Boys
Martin Parr steps out from behind the camera lens in informal autobiography
An intimate and chatty biography gives the artist space to reflect on his career in photography and the practice’s evolution
From the archive | Martin Parr's Miami
With Art Basel week in full swing, we sent the Magnum photographer on a tour of the city’s fairs and museums to see what caught his eye
From the archive | Martin Parr on clichés, consumerism and common sense
In 1999, during a pause in the editing of his BBC TV film ‘Think of England’, the photographer sat down with The Art Newspaper
European Capital of Culture
Books
The best art books of 2025, as picked by The Art Newspaper’s editors
The publications that delighted our literary team this year, from important exhibition catalogues and overdue surveys to personal reflections and playful illustrations
When Masha met Ragnar: Pussy Riot member’s life-changing encounter
In this extract from her new book, Maria "Masha" Alyokhina Alyokhina recalls her first meeting with the Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson
An expert’s guide to late Pablo Picasso: five must-read books on the second half of the Spanish artist’s career
The best publications about Picasso's later years, from an esteemed biography to a book about his animal drawings—selected by the curators Dieter Buchhart and Anna Karina Hofbauer
December Book Bag: from a photographic record of a lost nightclub to the tale of an accidental art heist
Our round-up of the latest art publications
The Rembrandt robber: five takeaways from an insider’s book on a notorious art thief
The security expert Anthony Amore provides insights into the curious case of Myles Connor, who stole Rembrandt’s Portrait of Elsbeth van Rijn
Obituaries
Remembering Frank Gehry, legendary architect of Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
The Toronto-born architect, who reshaped global skylines with his sweeping, seemingly unfinished creations, has died, aged 96
Llyn Foulkes, art world iconoclast, has died, aged 91
An anti-establishment fixture of the Los Angeles scene, Foulkes leaves behind a long legacy of furious expression spanning painting, sculpture, animation, music and more
Remembering John Morgan, radical typographer and designer who transformed the Church of England's books
From the signage of HMS Victory and Tate Britain, to the graphic identities of galleries and biennials, his designs can be found across contemporary British culture
Carla Stellweg, influential critic, gallerist and scholar of Latin American art, has died, aged 83
The founding editor-in-chief of the bilingual Artes Visuales magazine, Stellweg ran galleries in new York and was also a prolific critic, scholar and curator
Tony Fitzpatrick, indefatigable artistic polymath from Chicago, has died, aged 66
A beloved figure in the Windy City art scene, Fitzpatrick was an artist, author, actor, curator and more
A brush with... podcast
A podcast that asks artists the questions you've always wanted to
A brush with… Luc Tuymans—podcast
Luc Tuymans talks to Ben Luke about his influences—from writers to musicians, film-makers and, of course, other artists—and the cultural experiences that have shaped his life and work
The Week in Art
A podcast bringing you the latest news from the art world, every week
Art Basel Miami Beach, Louvre crisis deepens, Helene Schjerfbeck—podcast
The Art Newspaper’s editor-in-chief, Americas and art market editor discuss the top sales and the wider mood in Miami, Ben Luke gets the latest on the ground in Paris and hears from curator Dita Amory on Scherfbeck’s ‘The Tapestry’
Adventures with Van Gogh
Adventures with Van Gogh is a weekly blog by Martin Bailey, our long-standing correspondent and expert on the artist. Published every Friday, his stories range from newsy items about this most intriguing artist to scholarly pieces based on his own meticulous investigations and discoveries.
Driving in Van Gogh’s footsteps: the 1907 book that imagined a dream art pilgrimage
Writer Octave Mirbeau, an early owner of a Sunflowers painting, titled his fictional travelogue "628-E8"—after his car’s own licence plate
Opinion
Comment | Fine balance: fairs up the exclusivity while appealing to younger clients
The idea of making luxury more democratic seems both noble and impossible
Comment | Turner gets all the kudos, but it was Constable who was the truly radical painter
John-Paul Stonard argues the case for honouring Constable at London's soon-to-be expanded National Gallery
Comment | Want to truly read a painting? Forget the present, and focus on the past
To read a painting is to understand the context in which it was made, not the context in which we see it, writes Bendor Grosvenor
Comment | Fifty years on, John Berger’s writing is still relevant—and troublingly prescient
The writer went beyond the noble occupation of the art critic, smuggling hope into our lives
Comment | Exhibitions comparing artists can be problematic, but the Barbican brings Giacometti, Bhabha and Hatoum together with perfect judgement
Affinities and distinctions are equally welcomed in a pair of exhibitions at the London venue
Diary
No such thing as bad press: makers of lift used in Louvre theft launch ad campaign
Social media users have been left—largely—amused by the German company's tongue-in-cheek approach
Francis Bacon’s Paris pad honoured with plaque
The artist had “a very full existence” in the French capital during the 1970s
Look what she made them do: Taylor Swift fans descend on German museum
Swifties have been arriving in droves to catch a glimpse of Friedrich Heyser's Ophelia, which appears in a recent music video by the showgirl superstar
Talking point: visitors to Versailles can now meet the AI Apollo
An new app allows visitors to ‘speak’ with 20 statues in three languages
Despite past legal drama, Madonna still seems hung up on the V&A
The Queen of Pop’s 2003 visit sparked a lawsuit—but she was spotted there again just last month














































