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How Light Becomes Visible

Wie Licht sichtbar wird

A group exhibition titled 'Aether Commons. Refracted Cosmologies' at the Stefan Gierowski Foundation in Warsaw explores manifestations of light, placing works by Polish painter Stefan Gierowski (1925–2020) in dialogue with contemporary art. Curated by Berlin-based Azu Nwagbogu, the show features eleven artists including El Anatsui, Andile Dyalvane, Mona Hatoum, Esther Mahlangu, and Julian Kyusang Lee, whose works investigate light's behavior on surfaces, human perception, and how materials emit or absorb light.

The Most Important Exhibitions at Zurich Art Weekend

Die wichtigsten Ausstellungen beim Zurich Art Weekend

The article previews the Zurich Art Weekend, taking place from June 12 to 14, highlighting the best exhibitions across galleries and museums in the city. It specifically spotlights Karen Kilimnik, a key figure in the 1990s revival of figurative painting, whose work blends romantic excursions into dandyism, the Ballets Russes, teen dreams, legendary TV series, drag, and pop culture.

Elfie Semotan mit 84 Jahren gestorben

Elfie Semotan, the Austrian photographer known for her incisive portraits and fashion photography, died on Saturday at age 84 after suffering a suspected cardiac arrest while swimming in the Freibad Jennersdorf pool. Born in Wels in 1941, Semotan began her career as a model in Paris before turning to photography, becoming a defining voice in international fashion and portrait photography. She shot for magazines such as Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and the New Yorker, capturing figures from Naomi Campbell to Brad Pitt, and created iconic campaigns for Palmers and Römerquelle in Austria.

He Had Swag

"Er hatte Swag"

Henry Taylor, one of today's most sought-after contemporary artists, pays tribute to his former teacher James Jarvaise in a new exhibition in Zurich. The show honors Jarvaise, who Taylor credits with changing his life and teaching him the most important lessons of his career. In an interview, Taylor reflects on their relationship and the rare gesture of a successful artist publicly acknowledging a mentor.

Sammlung Horn bleibt dauerhaft auf Schloss Gottorf

Bettina Horn, the Berlin-based art collector and philanthropist, has announced her intention to donate the Horn Collection—over 500 works of German Expressionist art—to the state of Schleswig-Holstein, ensuring its permanent home at Schloss Gottorf in Schleswig. The collection includes major pieces by Emil Nolde, Ernst Barlach, Christian Rohlfs, and members of the Brücke group such as Kirchner, Schmidt-Rottluff, Heckel, and Pechstein, as well as contemporary sculptures. Parts of the collection have been exhibited at Schloss Gottorf since 1988, and a dedicated gallery was established in 1995. After a two-year international tour, the works will return to the newly renovated Galerie der Moderne in July.

Precht und der Tod der avancierten Kunst

In a recent episode of the German podcast "Lanz + Precht," philosopher Richard David Precht discussed whether AI kills art. Precht argued that AI is merely the final nail in the coffin for an art form that has long lost its social relevance. The conversation, which included AI expert and entrepreneur Andreas O. Loff, explored the democratizing potential of AI in creative fields, but Precht doubled down on a reactionary stance: modern art, from Expressionism to Fluxus, once claimed a vital social role, but by the end of the 20th century, it had become meaningless—and AI only completes that decline.

Now Art Speaks

Jetzt spricht die Kunst

The June issue of Monopol magazine covers the 61st Venice Biennale, which opened amid global political protests and strikes. The issue features a report from the Biennale, including the main exhibition 'In Minor Keys' curated by the late Koyo Kouoh, the German pavilion resembling a Berlin refugee shelter, and Florentina Holzinger's provocative performances in the Austrian pavilion. It also includes an interview with artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset, who have installed unusual guests at the Städel Museum in Frankfurt, and a conversation with African American painter Henry Taylor about his influences.

Marlene A. Schenk wird neue Direktorin von Rebecca Horns Stiftung

Marlene A. Schenk has been appointed as the new director of the Moontower Foundation, the organization managing the estate of the late German artist Rebecca Horn (1944–2024). She will take up the position on June 1, 2026, overseeing the strategic and programmatic development of the foundation, which is based in Bad König, Hesse. Schenk previously served as artistic director of the Kunstverein Friedrichshafen, where she curated programs at the intersection of place, collectivity, and institutional practice, and led the digital processing of the archive. She is also a co-founder of the independent exhibition space FKA Six in Berlin and has worked at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt.

The Crazy Game with Dimensions

"Das verrückte Spiel mit den Dimensionen"

The Helmut Newton Foundation in Berlin has opened a new exhibition titled "Rooms / Stages," curated by Matthias Harder. The show explores the late photographer Helmut Newton's use of space as a stage for his fashion and theatrical photography, featuring his iconic images of models in hotels, restaurants, and theaters, as well as his work with Pina Bausch's Tanztheater Wuppertal and the Monte Carlo Ballet. The exhibition pairs Newton's photographs with works by twelve contemporary artists, including Paolo Ventura, creating a dialogue across generations that examines empty rooms, pictorial space, and theatrical settings.

Finally cut those damned two minutes out of your film!

"Schneide endlich diese verdammten zwei Minuten raus aus deinem Film!"

Wim Wenders is temporarily withdrawing his 1975 film "Falsche Bewegung" ("Wrong Move") from all current distribution formats following a dispute over a nude scene featuring actress Nastassja Kinski, who was 13 at the time of filming. The decision was announced by the Wim Wenders Foundation after critic Daniel Kothenschulte proposed the solution in Monopol and feminist activist Alice Schwarzer publicly urged Wenders to cut the scene. Separately, JR's "Caverne du Pont-Neuf" installation in Paris was partially damaged by wind and rain just before its planned June 6 opening, and artist Robert Wyland has filed a $25 million lawsuit against FIFA for painting over his whale mural in Dallas during World Cup 2026 preparations.

Baselitz, le monde à l’envers

German painter and sculptor Georg Baselitz, a major figure in contemporary art, died on April 30, 2026, at age 88. Born Hans-Georg Kern in 1938 near Dresden, he created a singular body of work over six decades, marked by violent, provocative painting and his radical 1969 inversion of motifs, which upended representational conventions.

Ernest Pignon-Ernest: A Reference Collection

Ernest Pignon-Ernest : un fonds de référence

Ernest Pignon-Ernest, a pioneering French visual artist known for his in situ public interventions, has announced a major donation to the Inguimbertine museum in Carpentras, France. The donation comprises several hundred works—including drawings, sketches, photographs, prints, and paintings—spanning over sixty years of his career. This gift precedes the exhibition "Ombres de Naples" (Shadows of Naples), which will be held at the Inguimbertine through November 1, 2026, and will showcase the breadth of his socially engaged practice rooted in public space.

Antonello da Messina's Ecce Homo Honors the Museo Nazionale d'Abruzzo

L’Ecce Homo d’Antonello de Messine honore le Musée National des Abruzzes

The Italian government's acquisition of Antonello da Messina's "Ecce Homo" (c. 1470) for $14.9 million in February 2026 has culminated in its arrival at the Museo Nazionale d'Abruzzo (MuNDA) in L'Aquila. A ceremony on June 8, 2026, attended by Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli and L'Aquila's mayor Pierluigi Biondi, marked the painting's transfer from Rome's Palazzo Madama to its new home. The acquisition, which occurred just before the work was to be auctioned at Sotheby's New York, sparked debate over where the masterpiece should be housed, with Sicily arguing it should return to the painter's native island.

At the Bourse de Commerce, Fujiko Nakaya Sculpts Fog

À la Bourse de Commerce, Fujiko Nakaya sculpte le brouillard

Japanese artist Fujiko Nakaya, now 93, has installed a fog sculpture titled "Cloud #07156" in the rotunda of the Bourse de Commerce in Paris for summer 2026. The work, which uses hidden pumps and nozzles to create a dense cloud of micro-droplets, is presented in dialogue with the exhibition "Clair-obscur" running until August 24, which revisits chiaroscuro in contemporary art through works by Yves Tanguy, Bill Viola, Victor Man, and Germaine Richier. A second Nakaya installation, "Fog Tree #07031," is also on view in Honfleur as part of the Normandie Impressionniste festival.

Blessing of the Tower, Light Show... The Nearly Completed Sagrada Família Will Receive the Pope During a Grand Special Evening This Wednesday

Bénédiction de la tour, spectacle lumineux… La Sagrada Família presque achevée recevra le pape lors d’une grande soirée spéciale ce mercredi

On Wednesday, June 10, exactly one hundred years after the death of Antoni Gaudí, Pope Leo XIV will inaugurate the Christ Tower of the Sagrada Família in Barcelona. At 172.5 meters, it becomes the tallest church in the world, completing the silhouette of Gaudí's visionary design. The pope will preside over a solemn mass, bless the tower, and a light show will mark the occasion. The event is the highlight of a two-day papal visit to Catalonia, which also includes a youth vigil with a drone display.

Pilule miracle, sang-dragon, amulettes magiques… À Saint-Denis, une expo ausculte nos croyances pour guérir

The Musée d'Art et d'Histoire Paul-Éluard in Saint-Denis presents "Croire et guérir – Et délivrez-nous du mal," an exhibition exploring the intersection of healing, knowledge, and belief from the Middle Ages to the present. Drawing on 285 pharmaceutical objects from the former Hôtel-Dieu of Saint-Denis, the show features apothecary ceramics, alchemical texts, anatomical waxes, and contemporary artworks by Christian Fogarolli and Sophie Zénon, tracing how scientific revolutions have continually spawned new forms of magical thinking.

Méconnu en France, Kazuo Kitai, l’œil humaniste du Japon des années 60

Kazuo Kitai, a major figure in Japanese photography, is finally receiving his first retrospective in France at the Maison de la culture du Japon in Paris, running until July 25. The exhibition features around 130 images spanning his career, from his early documentation of student protests in the 1960s to his later, more serene portraits of rural and suburban life. Kitai, now in his 80s, continues to create, recently reworking his original prints by tearing and repainting them with red or yellow, a radical gesture that echoes his early rebellious spirit.

McCormick Gallery Presents Mary Abbott

McCormick Gallery is presenting an exhibition dedicated to Mary Abbott (1921-2019), an Abstract Expressionist painter from New York. The show runs from June 4 to July 17, 2026, highlighting Abbott's connection to the sea, inherited from her father, a decorated submarine commander and Naval advisor to FDR. Abbott came of age as an artist in the late 1940s, aligning with figures such as David Hare, Barnett Newman, and Willem de Kooning within the Abstract Expressionist movement.

KAWS designs limited-edition Sacher-Torte cake box for charity.

American artist KAWS has designed a limited-edition Sacher-Torte cake box for the Sacher Artists’ Collection, an annual charity initiative. The collectible release is limited to 1,000 boxes, priced at €80 ($93), and available at Sacher hotel locations in Vienna and Salzburg, as well as online. KAWS reimagined his 2021 artwork for the wooden box packaging.

Artist Kara Walker stars in Loewe anniversary campaign.

Artist Kara Walker has appeared in Loewe's 180th anniversary campaign, photographed by Talia Chetrit. She joins a cast that includes actresses Sissy Spacek, Julia Garner, Kara Wai, and Salma Abu Deif, as well as K-pop star Giselle from aespa. The campaign celebrates the Spanish fashion house's founding in 1846.

Works by Marina Abramović and Shirin Neshat featured in traveling Monaco superyacht exhibition.

The Floating Art Hotel, a private superyacht billed as "the world's first traveling art hotel," will debut during the Monaco Grand Prix from June 4th to June 8th. Anchored in Monaco Bay, the vessel will feature works by artists including Marina Abramović, Shirin Neshat, and Tomás Saraceno. Organizers plan to bring the concept to other international destinations such as Miami, Hong Kong, and Abu Dhabi.

Recasting Turandot: Daughters of a Disputed Land

The exhibition "TURANDOT: To the Daughters of the East" at ACP–Palazzo Franchetti in Venice (May 9–Oct 31, 2026) explores the cultural and political history of the Turan region—encompassing parts of modern-day Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—through the lens of the fictional heroine Turandot. Curated by Ziba Ardalan, the show features 11 female artists including Mona Hatoum, Nazira Karimi, Huma Bhabha, and Afruz Amighi, whose works address themes of nomadic identity, shifting empires, dowry practices, and the opium trade, using the character's transformation from Persian poetry to Puccini's opera as a starting point.

TalaAnyo Opens Exhibition "Orion in Sight: A View of Collective Work" at Ateneo Art Gallery

TalaAnyo, a collective of seven Philippine artist-led initiatives formalized in 2025, opens its first museum exhibition titled "Orion in Sight: A View of Collective Work" at the Ateneo Art Gallery on 28 June 2026. The show features a monumental painting by founding artists, collaborative and community-engaged works, and materials from earlier collectives such as Kaisahan and Tambisan sa Sining, curated by Lisa Ito-Tapang.

The Laziness Canon: Helen Molesworth on Artists Who Made Great Work by Doing Nothing

In this essay for Cultured's "Indulgence" issue, curator and critic Helen Molesworth reflects on the sin of sloth, exploring how laziness has inspired significant works of art. She cites artists like Lee Lozano (General Strike Piece, 1969), Robert Barry (Closed Gallery, 1969), Tom Marioni (The Act of Drinking Beer with Friends is the Highest Form of Art, 1970), and Marcel Duchamp (Étant Donnés, 1946–66), who embraced idleness or redefined labor as art. Molesworth also discusses Mierle Laderman Ukeles's "maintenance art" (1970–73), which elevated domestic work to art, and references Paul Lafargue's 1883 tract The Right to Be Lazy.

How the Louis Vuitton Monogram Predicted Logomania

The article traces the 130-year history of the Louis Vuitton monogram, designed in 1896 by Georges Vuitton as a tribute to his father Louis. It details how the interlocking L and V, combined with floral motifs inspired by Neo-Gothic cathedrals and Japanese mon crests, became a pioneering logo that set the standard for luxury branding. The piece covers the monogram's evolution from embroidered linen to hand-painted stencils, its role in cementing Louis Vuitton as a leader in modern travel, and its transformation into a cultural canvas through collaborations with artists like Takashi Murakami, Stephen Sprouse, and Rei Kawakubo. The article concludes with the brand's 130th-anniversary tribute campaign, including the new Monogram Anniversary Collection.

BUENOS AIRES DRESSES UP FOR NODO CIRCUITOS FIVE ART GALLERIES TO VISIT

Buenos Aires hosts NODO Circuitos, a Meridiano program running June 4–6, 2025, that promotes Argentine galleries. Arte al Día highlights five galleries: W Galería presents the Colección Helft, featuring works by Ana Mendieta, Marcel Duchamp, and others; CRUDO opens a new space with the exhibition 'Quiero estar aquí'; Constitución shows Alfredo Dufour's 'Liquidación'; and Pabellón Cuatro presents 'Kokamama' exploring Incan traditions. The event invites audiences to engage with the city's art scene and identity.

Art Notes, June 3

Ann Coen has opened a new gallery called North in Barnegat Light, New Jersey, featuring works by local artists Chris Pfeil, Julie Goldstein, Elizabeth Sabine, and Dianne Rinaldi. The article also highlights a variety of community art events on Long Beach Island, including a kid-friendly workshop at the Ocean County Library, painting sessions at Wildflowers in the Woods, a night market at Firefly Gallery, and several gallery openings and exhibitions. Notable exhibitions include the 28th annual "Works on Paper" at the Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts and Sciences, juried by Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Joanna Sheers Seidenstein, and Alexander Taylor's "Washed Upon the Shore" at the Ocean County Library.

India Surges Ahead as Asia’s Art Market Splinters

Asia's fine art auction market generated $2.2 billion in total sales in 2025, a sharp decline from its $5.4 billion peak in 2021, while lot volume remained steady at roughly 61,000 works sold per year. The average hammer price has more than halved to $36,000, and the five major regions—China, India, Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia—have diverged into distinct market trajectories. India has emerged as the standout performer with a median hammer price of $10,864 and a sell-through rate of 89 percent, while Mumbai-based auction house AstaGuru grew revenue by 138 percent and opened a London outpost. Christie's New York set records with a $13.4 million sale of a work by modernist M.F. Husain and will hold its first London sale of South Asian modern and contemporary art in seven years.

Artists are making ‘anti-slop’ to rebel against AI: ‘It’s been rammed down our throats’

A group of filmmakers, commercial directors, and AI industry influencers gathered at the Runway AI Summit in New York City, where Rob Wrubel of ad firm Silverside promoted Coca-Cola's AI-generated 2025 Holiday Caravan ad, which was widely criticized for its poor quality. In response to the backlash against AI-generated content, many artists and creatives are embracing an aesthetic called 'anti-slop,' which celebrates handmade, janky, and primitive design as a rejection of AI's slick, uncanny output. Examples include Michael Schmelling's scribbly book covers for Roberto Bolaño reissues and Stoopid Buddy Stoodios' stop-motion Green Bay Packers ad.

Stoke-on-Trent—the UK's home of ceramics—seeks emergency funds for crumbling heritage

Stoke-on-Trent city council has issued an urgent appeal to save dozens of historic industrial buildings tied to the UK's ceramics heritage, warning that without immediate intervention, these structures could be lost forever. The council declared a "heritage emergency" in a recently published prospectus, noting that at least 16 major sites are formally designated "at risk" and many more are in advanced decay. An estimated £325 million is needed over the next decade to stabilize and restore key sites, including up to £150 million for the Chatterley Whitfield colliery complex. The appeal targets central government, national funding bodies, and private investors.