Galleries This New Gallery in San Francisco Wants to Cultivate the Next Generation of Tech Collectors Rebecca Camacho Presents, led by a 20-year veteran of Anthony Meier Fine Arts, will open May 16. By Taylor Dafoe, Apr 5, 2019
Galleries Hauser & Wirth Adds Art Star Glenn Ligon to Its Increasingly Gargantuan Roster The artist will leave his previous east coast gallery, Luhring Augustine. By Taylor Dafoe, Apr 4, 2019
Galleries Want Your Stingel With a Side of Pasta? Gagosian Expands in Beverly Hills by Going Halfsies With a New Italian Restaurant The mega-gallery will share a 9,500-square-foot space with the star pasta chef starting in 2020. By Tim Schneider, Apr 4, 2019
Galleries A Rash of Art Gallery Closures Has Plagued Berlin. But a New Crop of Dealers Think They Have the Solution Millennial gallerists and art-market veterans alike are finding fresh ways to do brick-and-mortar business. By Hili Perlson, Mar 21, 2019
Galleries No Lease? No Problem! This Company Wants to Bring Your Gallery to Cities Around the World The project is the brainchild of two auction-house veterans. By Eileen Kinsella, Mar 5, 2019
Galleries What Will the Art Gallery of the Future Do? Pace’s Marc Glimcher on the Coming Disruption and Why the ‘Art World Is Not Fair’ artnet News's Andrew Goldstein spoke to the international gallery's CEO about the growing importance of "experiences." By Andrew Goldstein, Mar 5, 2019
Galleries Two Former New York Art Dealers Are Doubling Down on Detroit, Massively Expanding Their Gallery in the City Terese Reyes and Bridget Finn's new gallery has also been renamed: Reyes Finn. By Taylor Dafoe, Feb 20, 2019
Galleries The Famed Paris Gallery Bernheim-Jeune, Which Held the First van Gogh Retrospective in 1901, Has Closed The gallery also held the first Futurist exhibition ever to come to Paris in 1912. By Kate Brown & Naomi Rea, Feb 14, 2019
Galleries Los Angeles Gallery Various Small Fires Expands to Seoul, Citing a Growing Appetite for Western Art in Korea The gallery will launch in April with a show of work by legendary Los Angeles artists Billy Al Bengston and Ed Ruscha. By Henri Neuendorf, Feb 14, 2019
Galleries Lisson Gallery Gains an Edge With a New Shanghai Gallery as Western Dealers Rush Into China The inaugural show, titled "Love is Metaphysical Gravity," opens March 22. By Eileen Kinsella, Feb 11, 2019
Galleries David Hammons Will Have His First LA Solo Show in More Than 45 Years at Hauser & Wirth Hammons, who lived in Los Angeles for more than a decade, will return with brand new work. By Eileen Kinsella, Jan 23, 2019
Galleries A Blazing Market Star, Chinese-French Painter Zao Wou-Ki Will Receive a Two-City Extravaganza at Kamel Mennour The show is the first gallery exhibition since the conclusion of a legal battle over his estate. By Henri Neuendorf, Jan 22, 2019
Galleries 5 Remarkable Facts About Pace Gallery’s New 8-Story Chelsea Headquarters As galleries race to expand, Pace is getting ready to open an impressive new building. By Henri Neuendorf, Jan 21, 2019
Galleries Chased Out of Chelsea? Try Tribeca! Why Midsize Art Dealers See a Better Future in Robert De Niro’s Backyard James Cohan, Andrew Kreps, the Journal Gallery, and CANADA are all relocating downtown. Why? By Eileen Kinsella, Dec 18, 2018
Galleries Which Is the Biggest Mega-Gallery? We Ranked the Total Footprints of 14 of the World’s Most Powerful Art Dealerships Achieving global relevance in today's art market demands a lot of real estate—but some galleries have a vastly bigger footprint than others. By Artnet News, Dec 5, 2018