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In an ancient former orphanage in Bergamo, an innovative high-level training school for artists is about to open

In un antico ex asilo di Bergamo sta per aprire una innovativa scuola di alta formazione per artisti

Nicola Ricciardi, former director of OGR Torino and miart Milan, is launching Afterclass, a new postgraduate school for artists in Bergamo, Italy. Housed in the historic Ex Principe di Napoli complex—a 17th-century building abandoned for 30 years—the school will offer an intensive, in-person program from October to June with a small core faculty and numerous visiting professors, including artists, curators, gallerists, and collectors. Co-founded with Francesco Pedrini and Viviana Bertanzetti, Afterclass is inspired by Ricciardi's experience at Bard College in New York and aims to fill a gap in Italy's art education system by providing structured post-academic guidance and professional networking.

An Artist Duo’s Haven of Synthetic Hair

Artists Merryn Omotayo Alaka and Sam Frésquez have created an immersive exhibition titled "Your Birth is My Birth" at Jane Lombard Gallery in New York, featuring large biomorphic sculptures made entirely from Kanekalon synthetic hair. The artists steamed, cut, and sewed the hair by hand, clamping it to welded metal structures to form a fantastical "Kanekalon forest" that continues their ongoing Hairland series begun in 2017. The show includes works such as "Listening Roots" (2026), "Stacking Pearl (Adolescent)" (2026), and "Hearing Bells" (2026), which evoke communal hair care traditions and explore queer, gender, and racial identity.

Whitney Claflin at The Green Gallery

Whitney Claflin is the subject of an exhibition at The Green Gallery, documented on Contemporary Art Daily with 51 images. The article presents a visual record of the show, focusing on Claflin's work without accompanying text descriptions or critical analysis.

Anna-Sophie Berger “Ix” at Layr, Vienna

Anna-Sophie Berger presents her solo exhibition "Ix" at Layr gallery in Vienna. The show draws on theological and economic metaphors, exploring themes of visibility, distribution, and the hypostatic union through visual art.

Racheal Crowther: Smells Like Military-Industrial Complex

Racheal Crowther's exhibition 'Liquid Trust' at Chisenhale Gallery transforms the space into a multisensory critique of care systems entangled with military, corporate, and state control. The show features a repurposed British military mobile health unit, bubblegum-pink walls (a shade once used in US prisons to suppress aggression), and a synthetic scent that blends infant formula compounds with military-funded oxytocin research. Visitors encounter a 'Health Control Post' structure, clinical lighting, and hidden dispensers diffusing a custom fragrance coded as sweetened infant milk powder, all designed to expose how nurture and intimacy are co-opted as tools of behavioral manipulation.

Art, museum exhibits in Kenosha, Racine counties this week

This article lists art and museum exhibits currently on display in Kenosha and Racine counties in Wisconsin. It provides a weekly roundup of local exhibitions, including details about venues, dates, and featured artists, aimed at informing residents about cultural events in their area.

Arts Guild of Sonoma unveils series by celebrated artist Ruby Newman

The Arts Guild of Sonoma is presenting a new series by celebrated artist Ruby Newman, titled the Strata series, which explores stillness and contemplation in contrast to contemporary life's noise and speed. The exhibition runs concurrently with the "2026 8 x 8 Art Show" through June 29, 2026, and features over 24 large works and 20 smaller pieces, all created from direct experience and imagination rather than photographs.

National Galleries of Scotland announces £56m funding boost for V&A East Storehouse-like gallery in Edinburgh

The National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) has announced a £56 million funding commitment from the Scottish government to build The Art Works, a new free-to-visit gallery in Granton, north Edinburgh. Construction is set to begin this summer, and the gallery will house over 130,000 artworks, allowing visitors to interact with pieces by pulling out storage racks and using viewing rooms—a model director-general Anne Lyden compares to the V&A East Storehouse in London. The project is part of NGS's 2026-30 strategic plan to improve access to Scotland's national collection, as currently only 3% of the collection is on display.

Shimmering Light, Radical Joy: National Gallery of Canada unveils Qillaniq--The world's largest Indigenous circumpolar art exhibition

The National Gallery of Canada (NGC) will present Qillaniq from June 12 to September 20, 2026, the world's largest Indigenous circumpolar art exhibition. Featuring over 80 works by more than 70 artists from Alaska, Inuit Nunaat, Sápmi, and Denendeh, the show is curated by an all-Indigenous international team and takes an improvisational, multidisciplinary approach that rejects traditional museum conventions. The title, an Inuktitut word for light shimmering on water, symbolizes Indigenous resilience and joy.

Peter Cain at American Art Catalogues

American Art Catalogues in Los Angeles is presenting an exhibition of works by the late painter Peter Cain, featuring a selection of his hyperrealistic and subtly distorted paintings from the 1990s. The show highlights Cain's meticulous technique and his exploration of consumer culture and suburban ennui, rendered through photorealistic yet slightly off-kilter compositions.

FEAST YOUR EYES – The debut Solo Art Exhibition by Sir Nicholas Lucius

Sir Nicholas Lucius, a Tampa-based mixed-media artist, will debut his first solo exhibition titled "FEAST YOUR EYES" at Gallery Anderson Smith in Atlanta on June 27, 2026. The immersive evening features one-of-a-kind works incorporating paint, collage, textiles, metallic leaf, pearls, diamond dust, rhinestones, and couture embellishments, alongside a VIP Collector Preview, live DJ, and opportunities to meet the artist.

The World Cup Is Turning New York Into an Open-Air Art Gallery

A new public art initiative called ARTS 14C has installed 23 artist-designed soccer ball sculptures across New York and New Jersey, turning the region into an open-air gallery in celebration of the FIFA World Cup 2026. The sculptures, including a work by Bony Ramirez at MetLife Stadium, blend contemporary art with the global sporting event, offering visitors a curated cultural experience alongside the matches.

A major exhibition at Magazzino Italian Art in New York retraces 30 years of research by Alighiero Boetti

A New York grande mostra da Magazzino Italian Art per ripercorrere 30 anni di ricerca di Alighiero Boetti

Magazzino Italian Art in New York has opened a major exhibition titled "Tutto Boetti 1966–1993," dedicated to the work of Alighiero Boetti (1940–1994), a key figure in the Arte Povera movement. The show brings together around thirty works from the museum's permanent collection, spanning nearly three decades of Boetti's career, from his early industrial and everyday-object pieces of 1966 to his later conceptual embroideries made with Afghan artisans. The exhibition includes iconic works such as "Triplo metro," "Asta di misurazione," "Da mille a mille" (1975), and a 1983 "Mappa," and is accompanied by a symposium organized with the Fondazione Alighiero e Boetti and a scholarly catalog edited by Francesco Guzzetti. It runs through April 26, 2028.

The Art World Has A Gatekeeping Problem… Facebook Marketplace Doesn’t

Arthur Michel transformed a Chinatown apartment suite into the Facebook Marketplace Gallery, a one-night-only exhibition where works by emerging artists are sold exclusively on Facebook Marketplace after the show ends. The fourth iteration of this event featured artists from RISD, The New School, MassArt, and Parsons, drawing over 120 guests to a space deliberately removed from the traditional Chelsea gallery scene.

Atlanta artist takes a jaundiced view of how the internet’s eye is on you

Atlanta artist Truett Dietz presents 'SlopWorld,' a solo exhibition at Wolfgang Gallery in Atlanta, featuring 75 drawings that capture the chaotic, anxiety-inducing experience of internet life. The works incorporate pop-up ads, corporate logos, pharmaceutical marketing, and AI-generated 'slop,' rendered in graphite, pen, acrylic, gouache, marker, and colored pencil. Dietz describes the internet as knowing 'all your deepest, darkest secrets,' and the exhibition reflects on how online platforms commodify personal data and attention.

Artist Sayanee Sarkar’s debut solo in Kolkata presents her unique style of soak-stained art

Artist Sayanee Sarkar presents her debut solo exhibition, "Alchemy of Absolute Intimacy," at Emami Art in Kolkata. The show features her distinctive soak-stained canvases, a technique inspired by American abstract expressionist Helen Frankenthaler, where diluted acrylic paints create translucent, muted hues that blend figures into the fabric. The exhibition includes preliminary sketches alongside finished works, offering insight into her creative process.

Art at the beach

This article is a curated calendar of visual art exhibitions and events in the South Bay region of Los Angeles County, California, spanning May through August 2025. Listings include solo and group shows at venues such as the Gallery of Hermosa, Manhattan Beach Arts Center, Bluerider Art, Diversions Fine Art Gallery, Cherry Co, Easy Reader Art Show, Palos Verdes Art Center, Torrance Art Museum, VEFA Gallery, and ESMoA. Featured artists include Drica Lobo, Fumie Coello, Jove Wang, Karena Massengil, and many others, with highlights such as the group exhibition "Ripples" by Drica Lobo, "Champions! Sports in Contemporary Art" at Torrance Art Museum, and the "EXPERIENCE 69: PEACE" show curated by Dr. Bernhard Zuenkeler at ESMoA. Community events like the Cypress Block Party mural unveiling and the Hermosa Fine Art Festival are also listed.

How do I begin to collect Modern art?

The article, titled 'How do I begin to collect Modern art?', is a brief piece published by UBS on Google News. It appears to be a short guide or introductory advice aimed at individuals interested in starting a collection of Modern art, likely targeting new or aspiring collectors.

At Mason Fine Art, artists from disparate generations confront an ongoing struggle for Civil Rights in America

Mason Fine Art in Atlanta is presenting "It Started in the 60s," an exhibition centered on the photography and collages of legendary multidisciplinary artist John Simmons. The show, which runs through an unspecified date, also features works by Robert 'Bobby' Sengstacke and Vivian Maier. Simmons, born in 1950 in segregated Chicago, began his career as a teenager with photographs published in The Chicago Defender. His iconic images, such as "Girl Eating Ice Cream, Chicago (1967)" and "Two Shoes (1969)," capture everyday Black life during the Civil Rights era without overt protest, instead revealing subtle narratives of racial inequality and human dignity. The exhibition includes both his black-and-white photography and colorful collages he began creating in 2020, which he describes as a way to merge different moments in history.

David Hockney, iconic British artist known for his colorful landscapes and pool scenes, dies at 88 - KWKT

David Hockney, the iconic British artist celebrated for his vibrant landscapes, pool scenes, and pioneering work in painting, drawing, and digital art, has died at the age of 88. The news was reported by KWKT - FOX 44, marking the end of a career that spanned more than six decades and made him one of the most recognizable and influential figures in contemporary art.

Impressionist art collection comes to Myrtle Beach's Art Museum, June 13

The Myrtle Beach Art Museum will host a new exhibition of Impressionist art opening June 13. The collection, drawn from private and institutional lenders, features works by renowned Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painters, bringing a major art historical movement to the South Carolina coastal city.

Steve Martin, Ann Philbin to curate new Santa Barbara Museum of Art exhibit of 'peculiar' paintings

The Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA) will host "Martin Mull: The Joys of Indoor/Outdoor Living," a major museum exhibition of the late actor-comedian's paintings, co-curated by comedian Steve Martin and former Hammer Museum Director Ann Philbin. Opening in June 2025 and running through October, the show features over 50 works from Mull's estate and private collections of entertainment figures including Steve Martin, Jennifer Tilly, and Ted and Nicole Sarandos. It is the first museum survey of Mull's art in 20 years and the second curatorial collaboration between Martin and Philbin, following their 2015 exhibition on Lawren Harris at the Hammer Museum.

Cleveland Museum of Art Plans $600 M. Fundraising Campaign to Sustain Museum’s Long-Term Health

The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) has announced a $600 million fundraising campaign, titled "For the Benefit of All the People," to support its long-term financial health. The campaign, the largest in the museum's history and the largest by a cultural organization in Ohio, is nearly 80% complete, with $351.5 million raised in cash and over $128.5 million in art gifts. It aims to endow staff positions, fund exhibitions, educational programs, conservation, digital innovation, and acquisitions, while helping sustain the museum's free admission policy.

Victoria and Albert Museum to bring Istanbul to London in upcoming exhibition

The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has announced a major upcoming exhibition titled "Constantinople to Istanbul: One City, Two Empires" (7 November 2026–9 May 2027), which will explore the 1,600-year history of Istanbul as the capital of both the Byzantine and Ottoman empires. The show will feature over 200 objects, including ceramics, mosaics, metalwork, and jewellery, on loan from Turkish institutions such as the Topkapi Palace Museum. The exhibition is sponsored by Koç Group, Turkey's largest industrial conglomerate, whose family foundation also backs Arter, a leading contemporary art non-profit in Istanbul.

Three Men Convicted in High-Profile Dutch Museum Heist of Ancient Romanian Gold

Three men have been sentenced to 47 months in prison for stealing ancient Romanian gold artifacts from the Drents Museum in Assen, Netherlands, in January 2025. The thieves blasted open windows and stole Iron Age treasures including the golden helmet of Cotofenesti and Dacian gold spiral bracelets from the exhibition “Dacia—Empire of Gold and Silver.” The artifacts were partially recovered in April when two suspects surrendered the helmet and two bracelets as part of a plea deal, while the third suspect rejected the agreement. The heist triggered a diplomatic dispute between Romania and the Netherlands, with Romanian Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu accusing the museum of security failures and the director of the Romanian National History Museum being ousted after a review of the loan agreement.

“Unearthing Futures” Explores Southwestern Adobe Art through Cross-Border Exhibition

History Colorado's Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Center and the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, New Mexico, have opened a cross-border exhibition titled "Unearthing Futures / Desenterrando Futuros." The show explores adobe as a living practice connecting art, architecture, and ancestral knowledge across the southwestern United States. Artists Ronald Rael, Santino Gonzales, Joanna Keane Lopez, Gabriel Chaile, Rafa Esparza, and Christine Howard Sandoval present installations that examine how earth, water, and fiber, shaped by hand and sustained through communal care, embody both tradition and transformation. Highlights include Rael's Casa Desenterrada/Exhuming Home, Gonzales's Skyharp and The Disc at Fort Garland (for Nana), and Keane Lopez's film A Raven Croaked like a Witch from a Dead Pine. The exhibition also features a road trip experience guided by a website and phone app developed with the University of Colorado Boulder.

Whitney Biennial 2026 Review: Dolls, Billboards, and Sanhattan

The 82nd Whitney Biennial has opened at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, featuring 56 artists, duos, and collectives across floors 1, 5, 6, and 8. Co-organized by curators Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer, the exhibition resists a strong editorial point of view, instead inviting viewers to 'tune in to the moods' of contemporary American art. Notable works include Taína H. Cruz's billboard and wall paintings, Ignacio Gatica's exploration of 'Sanhattan' and the city's Latin American layers, and a piece by Precious Okoyomon. The review notes that while the show is thoughtful and well-intentioned, it often lacks memorable moments, though a few works create unexpected conversations.

Art museum to celebrate nation's 250th

The Owensboro Museum of Fine Art in Kentucky is celebrating the nation's 250th anniversary with a special exhibition titled "Kentucky 250," sponsored by Owensboro Health. The show will feature newly unveiled portraits of Col. Abraham Owen and his wife Martha Dupuy Owen, on loan from the Stacy family of Charleston, South Carolina, alongside a portrait of Joseph Hamilton Daveiss from the museum's collection. The exhibition opens June 27 with a reception featuring historical reenactors of Crispus Attucks, a 9th Virginia regiment member, and Captain John Parker. It also includes artworks exploring Kentucky history, such as a colonial dress, a frontier bag, a forged knife, miniature ship replicas, a teaching wall hanging, and loans from the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and the Hancock County Museum and Historical Society.

‘Huge movement’ to connect North reflected in Ottawa exhibition

The National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa has opened 'Qillaniq,' the largest circumpolar Indigenous art exhibition ever staged, featuring over 80 works by nearly 70 artists from Alaska, Inuit Nunangat, Greenland, and Sápmi. Curated entirely by an Indigenous team from the North, the show includes a woven grass basket qaggiq (igloo) by Inuk artist asinnajaq and Métis architect Tiffany Shaw, contemporary jewellery, a recreation of a 19th-century amauti, and a papier-mâché sculpture. Planning began in 2024 with a weeklong brainstorming session in Iqaluit.

Dates & Events: June 2026

Architectural Digest's June 2026 calendar lists ongoing and upcoming exhibitions worldwide. Ongoing shows include Liz Glynn's concrete sculpture 'Open House' at Storm King Art Center (through November 9), 'Vitalità dell’architettura italiana 1946–2026' at MAXXI in Rome (through November 15), 'The Century of Gehry' at Serralves Foundation in Porto (through December 2026), and 'Aalto Design—Shapes of Wellbeing' at the Architecture & Design Museum in Helsinki (through January 2027). Upcoming exhibitions include 'Design Across Time' at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York (starting June 26, 2026) and 'The Playground' at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. (July 3–August 30, 2026).