THE LATEST ARTICLES
NEWSLETTERS
Larry Gagosian
Marion Maneker April 20, 2025
To mark the end of an uptown era and the revitalization of his downtown flagship, Larry Gagosian has launched exhibitions of Pablo Picasso and Willem de Kooning, two artists he has shown many times before.
Roy Lichtenstein
Marion Maneker April 18, 2025
Roy Lichtenstein, who died in 1997, is going to have a banner couple of years, with a Sotheby’s auction in May, a Whitney retrospective next year, and tailwinds from an art market that tends to retreat to known quantities and beloved artists when surrounded by uncertainty everywhere else.
Clare McAndrew
In her required-reading annual report on the art market, Clare McAndrew gathered responses from 1,600 galleries in 58 countries to convey what it’s like to be an art dealer these days. The short answer: It’s hard.
Marcia Marcus
Marion Maneker April 15, 2025
On opening night of The Human Situation, the well-heeled collectors at Lévy Gorvy Dayan were helping to drive the market’s historical turn. But works by Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, and Sylvia Sleigh told a bigger story.


Paris Auction
Marion Maneker April 13, 2025
The Paris sales totaled about $100 million, with each house selling a single-owner collection, and solid bidding for a range of artists. Maybe it’s easier for Europeans to spend money on art as the existing world order fades, but what does that signal for next month’s all-important May sales?
David Hockney
Marion Maneker April 11, 2025
At 87 years old, David Hockney has the popularity and longevity to have earned another retrospective, this one at the Fondation Louis Vuitton. His market is finally catching up to his wide appeal, with volume and valuations that beg comparisons with even Picasso.
A revealing conversation with two essential gallerists about the generational shift toward integrating design and art, and why serious collectors are moving beyond just paintings on the wall.
Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker April 8, 2025
Clare McAndrew’s benchmark report on the health of the art market confirms that the value of transactions fell again in 2024 to $57.5 billion, the lowest level in four years. The number of transactions rose, though, and market activity at lower levels remains robust. This, in all its messiness, is what the democratization of the art market looks like.


Matt Digiacomo Matty Boy
Marion Maneker April 4, 2025
Matt DiGiacomo, the former creative director behind Chrome Hearts, hosted a wild gallery show in Chelsea this week that doubled as a streetwear drop for his new line, Anti-Promo, and highlighted his sculptures that were going for $60,000 a pop. Was this fashion, art, or something else?
Picasso Art Hong Kong
The results of the first-of-its-kind concurrent Hong Kong sales at Phillips, Sotheby’s, and Christie’s offer a few signs of life—particularly at the top of the market.
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