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With Ruth Asawa, MoMA is set to open its biggest show ever by a woman artist

MoMA is opening "Ruth Asawa: Retrospective" on October 19, 2025, running through February 7, 2026, featuring 275 works by the artist, including over 60 looped-wire sculptures, bronze casts, paper folds, and drawings. The exhibition, which previously appeared at SFMoMA, occupies 16,000 square feet on MoMA's sixth floor and is the largest show ever devoted to a woman artist at either institution by checklist count, though neither museum has emphasized this superlative.

With Ruth Asawa, MoMA is set to open its biggest show ever by a woman artist

MoMA is opening "Ruth Asawa: Retrospective" (19 October 2025 – 7 February 2026), featuring 275 works by the artist, including over 60 looped-wire sculptures, bronze casts, paper folds, and drawings. The show, which originated at SFMoMA earlier this year, occupies 16,000 square feet on MoMA's sixth floor. By checklist count, it is the largest exhibition ever devoted to a woman artist at either MoMA or SFMoMA, though neither museum has prominently advertised this fact.

With Ruth Asawa, MoMA is set to open its biggest show ever by a woman artist

MoMA is opening 'Ruth Asawa: Retrospective' on October 19, 2025, running through February 7, 2026, featuring 275 works including her iconic looped-wire sculptures, bronze casts, paper folds, paintings, and drawings. The exhibition, co-organized with SFMoMA where it debuted earlier in 2025, occupies 16,000 square feet on MoMA's sixth floor and is the largest show ever devoted to a woman artist at either institution by checklist count. The show will travel to the Guggenheim Bilbao and Fondation Beyeler in 2026-27.

Elucidating the Esoteric with Hilma's Ghost

The feminist art collective Hilma’s Ghost, founded by artists Dannielle Tegeder and Sharmistha Ray, is reclaiming the role of alternative spiritualities and the occult within art history. Sparked by the 2018 Hilma af Klint retrospective at the Guggenheim, the collective emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic as a research-based project that bridges artmaking with esoteric practices like tarot, witchcraft, and neo-tantric cosmologies. Through workshops and collaborative paintings, the duo explores how women and queer artists have historically been erased from the canon due to their unconventional, mystical methods.

derrick greaves patrick caulfield james hyman gallery 2730661

James Hyman Gallery is presenting a dual-artist online exhibition titled “Signature Pots: Patrick Caulfield | Derrick Greaves,” which runs through December 25, 2025. The show brings together works by two major British artists—Derrick Greaves (1927–2022) and Patrick Caulfield (1936–2005)—exploring their shared focus on still life, color, and form. Greaves, who represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in the 1950s and was associated with the Kitchen Sink painters, later developed a graphic style linked to Pop art. Caulfield emerged in the 1960s as part of the New Generation alongside David Hockney and Bridget Riley. The exhibition highlights how both artists transformed everyday objects into iconic images, with works such as Greaves's "Still Life with White Lillies" (2021) and Caulfield's "Untitled (signature pots)" (ca.1975) demonstrating their mastery of line, shape, and color.

alfonso artiaco liam gillick alan charlton 2713185

Naples-based gallery Alfonso Artiaco has opened a dual exhibition pairing British artists Liam Gillick and Alan Charlton for the first time. Gillick, a former Young British Artist associated with relational aesthetics, presents three new aluminum and Plexiglas "elevation" sculptures plus a wall piece titled *Euphoric Production Cycle* (2025). Charlton, known for his lifelong dedication to grey monochrome painting, contributes three works—a circle, square, and triangle—that anchor the show. The exhibition runs through January 10, 2025.

‘Truly inspiring’: New Princeton University Art Museum opens its doors to all

The new Princeton University Art Museum opened its doors to the public on Oct. 31, 2025, with a 24-hour open house that drew 21,763 visitors. The event featured dancing, stargazing, artmaking, live performances, film screenings, and a trivia contest, with highlights including Claude Monet's "Water Lilies and Japanese Bridge" and Nick Cave's mosaic. Director James Steward welcomed the crowd, and the museum also hosted previews for students, faculty, staff, and tradespeople, attracting thousands more.

A ‘town square for the arts and humanities’: The new Princeton University Art Museum shares opening details

The new Princeton University Art Museum will open to the public with a 24-hour celebration from 5 p.m. on Oct. 31 to 5 p.m. on Nov. 1, 2025, featuring free activities for all ages including tours, artmaking, live performances, film screenings, poetry readings, and morning yoga. Planning began in 2012, and the museum, located at the heart of Princeton’s campus, roughly doubles the space for exhibition, conservation, and study. Princeton students will preview the museum on Oct. 25, followed by a members’ preview on Oct. 26 and faculty/staff previews earlier that week.

A ‘town square for the arts and humanities’: The new Princeton University Art Museum shares opening details

The Princeton University Art Museum will open its new building to the public with a 24-hour celebration from 5 p.m. on Oct. 31 to 5 p.m. on Nov. 1, 2025. The event includes tours, artmaking, live performances, film screenings, poetry readings, and yoga, all free of charge. Planning began in 2012, and the museum has also scheduled preview days for Princeton students, faculty, staff, and members before the public opening.

UM Museum Announces Fall 2025 Exhibitions

The University of Montana's Montana Museum of Art and Culture (MMAC) will present three solo exhibitions by Montana artists this fall. The season opens October 16 with Sara Mast's "Standing in the River," featuring abstract paintings and glass sculptures. Manette Rene Bradford's "Unsettled Lands" opens November 13 with collage drawings and sculptures blending landscape and human figures. The final exhibition, "Rand Robbin," opens December 4 and showcases the graphic and sculptural work of the recently deceased artist, a UM alumnus and former rancher whose modernist works are held by the Library of Congress and National Gallery of Art.

Free art party to launch winter exhibits at Surrey Art Gallery

Surrey Art Gallery in British Columbia will host a free art party on January 17, 2026, to launch its winter exhibition season. The event features the group exhibition "remember the earth, remember the sky," inspired by a Joy Harjo poem and focused on ancestral connections through land, air, and memory, with works by early-career artists and pieces from the gallery's permanent collection by Salish artists. Also opening are solo shows by Zachery Cameron Longboy ("HOST") and Atheana Picha, along with the exhibition "What Bodies Know" reflecting on lived experiences in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. The evening includes artist talks, a piñata breaking, and hands-on artmaking workshops.

Mainframe Studio exhibition features artists from Grinnell, Iowa

Mainframe Studio in Des Moines, Iowa, has partnered with the Grinnell Area Arts Council to host a special exhibition featuring 16 artists from Grinnell, a rural Iowa community. The show, which opened on October 3 with around 1,600 visitors, includes works across various mediums by artists who balance artmaking with full-time professions such as teaching and research. Featured artists include Professor of Spanish Mirzam Cristina Pérez, who displayed a sculpture titled "Queens," Professor of English Erik Simpson with his book art "Two Books," and Professor of Biology Pascal Lafontant with an acrylic painting titled "Primavera."