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Fancy a European art break with fewer crowds? Try one of these five cities | Europe holidays

The article highlights five European cities—Zurich, Lille, Warsaw, and others—as alternatives to crowded art capitals like Paris and London for art-focused holidays. It details key museums and galleries in each city, such as Zurich's Kunsthaus Zürich and Löwenbräukunst-Areal, Lille's Palais des Beaux-Arts and LaM, and Warsaw's Museum of Modern Art (MSN Warsaw), along with day-trip suggestions like Baden's Museum Langmatt and Roubaix's La Piscine.

Ren Light Pan Dramatizes the Dilemma of the Trans Artist.

Ren Light Pan, a transgender artist working in a tiny New York studio, creates striking duotone images using a self-invented process involving ink, water, heat lamps, and transparent film. Her recent works center on the classical figure of Sleeping Hermaphroditus, a marble Roman copy of an ancient Greek bronze, which she reproduces from a photograph that includes spectators' legs. Pan's method, which she developed to circumvent perfectionist tendencies, involves suspending a primed canvas over a mixture of ink and water, then applying heat to transfer the image over one to two hours. She has also made works based on her own body, though she has abandoned the durational performance aspect since transitioning.

‘Writing is exactly like love – you need to do it in the dark’: novelist Leila Slimani on why literature is erotic

French-Moroccan novelist Leïla Slimani discusses her residency at Madrid's Museo del Prado, where she draws inspiration from Francisco Goya's Black Paintings for her writing. She reflects on her career, including winning the Prix Goncourt for her novel *Lullaby*, her appointment by French President Emmanuel Macron as a representative for Francophone culture, and the personal trauma of her father's imprisonment that fueled her early writing. The article explores her views on literature, painting, and the erotic nature of writing.

$102 Million Louvre Heist Is Getting the Film Treatment

A feature film is in development about the October 2025 Louvre heist, in which two thieves disguised themselves, smashed into the museum, and stole eight historic jewels worth an estimated €88 million ($102 million) in under eight minutes. Paris-based production company Iconoclast has acquired the rights to the book "A Grab at the Louvre" by journalists Jean-Michel Décugis, Jérémie Pham-Le, and Nicolas Torrent, and French director Romain Gavras is attached to helm the project, which could hit theaters in 2028. A separate documentary series by an anonymous British producer is also in the works.

How Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury cartoons captured America: ‘One of our nation’s greatest journalists’

A new biography titled "Trudeau & Doonesbury: The Cartoonist Who Turned the News into Art" by Joshua Kendall explores the life and career of Garry Trudeau, creator of the long-running comic strip Doonesbury. Published on Tuesday, the book is the first major biography of Trudeau, who won a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning and whose characters age and evolve over 56 years, unlike those in other iconic strips. Kendall, a Yale alumnus, conducted original interviews and examined thousands of archival documents, though Trudeau—known for his reclusive nature—only agreed to limited email exchanges and some interviews, making the book unauthorized.

Jackson Pollock Transformed American Art—and Was Destroyed by His Own Success

The article traces Jackson Pollock's transformative yet destructive rise to fame, focusing on his move to East Hampton with Lee Krasner, his development of drip painting in a small unheated barn, and the influence of predecessors like Janet Sobel and Max Ernst. It details his 1948 debut at the Betty Parsons Gallery, the mocking 1949 Life Magazine feature that ironically catapulted him to celebrity, and photographer Hans Namuth's documentation of his process, which revealed the deliberate nature of his technique.

Stripteases, ecstatic embraces and a dog in a dress: the full-on photos celebrating queer dancefloors worldwide

A new photo book titled *Sex, Clubs, Dissent: Visualising Queer Nightlife*, edited by writer Amelia Abraham, collects photographs from the 1960s to today that document queer nightlife around the world. The anthology features works by artists such as Wolfgang Tillmans, Sunil Gupta, Kia LaBeija, Phyllis Christopher, Roxy Lee, Ajamu X, and Del LaGrace Volcano, alongside images from trans community archives in Mexico City and Buenos Aires. The book is organized into sections on sex, clubs, and dissent, and includes a range of media from film stills to a Grindr screenshot, aiming to capture the messy, sexy, and politically charged atmosphere of queer social spaces.

What Happened to NFTs, Kevin McCoy?

Kevin McCoy, widely regarded as the inventor of NFTs, reflects on the NFT boom and bust in an interview with Anika Meier for SLEEK. He discusses how his 2014 creation "Quantum"—a monetized graphics concept—unexpectedly sparked a speculative market frenzy, leading to a bubble that eventually burst. McCoy recounts his early efforts building a platform at NEW INC, which went out of business, and notes that while the market side of NFTs surprised him, the core blockchain technology for digital ownership has been validated.

From an Artist to His Dealer

D’un artiste à son marchand

A new book titled "Miró-Loeb. Correspondance. 1926-1936" has been published by Éditions Norma, presenting the previously unpublished correspondence between Spanish painter Joan Miró and his Parisian dealer Pierre Loeb from 1926 to 1936. The volume includes photographs, reproductions of artworks, an illustrated record of Miró's exhibitions at Galerie Pierre, a prologue by art historian Joan Punyet Miró (the artist's grandson), and contributions from Albert Loeb (Pierre's son) and Sonia Loeb (his granddaughter), contextualizing a decade of exchanges amid cultural ferment and rising tensions. The book also features sparser letters from 1945 until Loeb's death in 1963, tracing the evolution of their relationship.

Books received from November 7, 2025 to May 27, 2026

Ouvrages reçus du 7 novembre 2025 au 27 mai 2026

La Tribune de l'Art has published a roundup of art books received between November 7, 2025, and May 27, 2026, covering medieval to 17th-century art. Highlights include exhibition catalogues for Martin Schongauer at the Musée du Louvre, a unicorn-themed show at the Musée de Cluny, and a display of Renaissance Limoges enamels at Galerie Kugel. Scholarly works on Michelangelo's sculptures, Caravaggio's early career, and Georges de La Tour are also featured, alongside a volume on Romanesque and Gothic architecture in the Creuse region.

The New Generation of Berlin Curators: Independent Laboratory or New Establishment

La nuova generazione dei curatori di Berlino: laboratorio indipendente o nuovo establishment

The article examines the shift in Berlin's contemporary art curation landscape, focusing on a new generation of curators who are more pragmatic and operational than their predecessors. Figures like Anna Gritz at Haus am Waldsee, Lisa Long at Julia Stoschek Foundation, and Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung—who moved from independent space Savvy Contemporary to lead Haus der Kulturen der Welt—exemplify this change. The piece argues that Berlin's art ecosystem has evolved from a low-pressure experimental zone into a competitive, almost corporate environment where curators must act as project managers, fundraisers, and cultural mediators.

A Bigflo et Oli video shot in front of a giant Picasso at the Abattoirs in Toulouse

Un clip de Bigflo et Oli tourné devant un immense Picasso aux Abattoirs de Toulouse

French rap duo Bigflo et Oli filmed a live session of their song "Picasso" in front of Pablo Picasso's monumental stage curtain "La Dépouille du Minotaure en costume d'Arlequin" (1936) at the Abattoirs museum in Toulouse. The video, directed by Antoine Zago-Honnorat, features nine musicians and draws on Latin and Spanish pop influences, with the duo citing inspiration from Spanish artist Rusowsky. The choice of venue is personal: the brothers grew up visiting the museum, and Oli co-curated an exhibition there in 2024–2025 titled "Le Musée imaginaire d'Oli," which attracted over 100,000 visitors.

Book reveals how Chintz—India’s precious textile pattern—became a precolonial global export

A new book titled *Chintz: Indian Cotton Textiles from the Karun Thakar Collection* explores the history of chintz, a block-printed Indian textile pattern that was traded globally for over a thousand years before European colonialism. Based on one of the world's largest textile collections, the volume features essays by 12 scholars and traces how these intricately designed cloths traveled to Japan, Indonesia, France, and Britain, influencing local fashions and sparking cross-cultural exchange. The book highlights the challenges of studying textiles from oral societies, where makers remain unnamed and many pieces have not survived.

Tourism and Accessibility: Travel is for Everyone. A New Issue of the Pax Newsletter is Coming, Subscribe for Free

Turismo e accessibilità: il viaggio è per tutti. È in arrivo un nuovo numero della newsletter Pax, abbonarsi è gratis

The article announces an upcoming issue of Pax, a newsletter by Artribune focused on cultural tourism. The new issue, arriving Friday, May 29, explores accessibility in travel and cultural tourism, featuring an interview with Anna Rizzo, author of "I paesi invisibili" (2022), and highlighting organizations like Traveleyes and NoisyVision, the latter founded in 2011 by Dario Sorgato to make nature exploration accessible to people with sensory disabilities. It also includes a map for outdoor leisure combining art, recreation, and nature at Italian villa parks, museums, and art centers, along with curated itineraries, trekking updates, cultural initiatives, and hospitality projects—including one by Michelangelo Pistoletto.

Two Venezuelan boys in a forest full of vultures: Silvana Trevale’s best photograph

Silvana Trevale recounts the story behind her photograph of two Venezuelan brothers on a beach in Playa Medina, taken in 2018. The image, captured on a Mamiya camera during a goodbye trip with friends who were about to leave the country, shows the boys returning from a fishing trip with their father. Trevale, who left Venezuela in the mid-2010s to study at Huddersfield University, describes the surreal setting of a beach with Japanese forest grass and vultures, and how the photograph became the starting point for her decade-long project "Venezuelan Youth."

The mural project honouring the Black cultural heritage of Rio de Janeiro – photo essay

Two Black men, Pedro Rajão and Fernando Sawaya, created the NegroMuro (BlackWall) mural project in Rio de Janeiro in 2018 to address the severe underrepresentation of Black figures in the city's public monuments. Of Rio's roughly 360 statues and busts, fewer than 10% depict Black people. The project now comprises 80 murals across the city, portraying about 120 Black individuals—including writer Machado de Assis, activist Lélia Gonzalez, and musician Luiz Melodia—on walls of schools, museums, train stations, and private homes. The murals are concentrated in the less touristy north zone, deliberately focusing on underserved neighborhoods. The project was recently recognized by law as part of Rio's intangible cultural heritage.

Director’s Notes with Andrea Yu-Chieh Chung | “José de Jesús Rodríguez’s Back & Forth”

Director Andrea Yu-Chieh Chung reflects on filming artist José de Jesús Rodríguez during a period of transition following his first solo show in New York. The film, titled "José de Jesús Rodríguez’s Back & Forth," was shot over four seasons and captures the artist experimenting with new materials and grappling with themes of oscillation between family responsibility, community connection, and artistic defiance.

Provincial Cosmos. Interview with Serena Fineschi, the artist who turned off all the lights of Siena

Provincia Cosmica. Intervista a Serena Fineschi, l’artista che ha spento tutte le luci di Siena

Serena Fineschi, an artist from Siena, Italy, discusses her return to her hometown after twelve years abroad, primarily in Brussels. She reflects on her public art projects, including one where she turned off all the city's lights for three minutes without warning, and another titled "Assistere il buio." The interview explores how her time in Belgium reshaped her artistic vision, shifting her perspective from the golden light of Siena to the sharp contrasts of northern light.

Co-Curated Biennials Are Rarely Harmonious. Why Not Embrace This?

The article explores the inherent tensions and conflicts that arise in biennials curated by multiple individuals, arguing that such friction is often seen as a flaw but could instead be embraced as a creative strength. It examines how co-curation can lead to disjointed or contradictory exhibitions, yet suggests that these very qualities reflect the complexity of contemporary art and society.