Market Seeking to Cultivate Young Collectors, Art Intelligence Global Is Teaming Up With a Japanese Streetwear Brand to Stage Roving Shows Amy Cappellazzo and Yuki Terase's firm is teaming up with Onitsuka Tiger to launch the roving art initiative. By Taylor Dafoe, Jul 25, 2022
Artnet News Pro New Models: How Guatemala City’s Proyectos Ultravioleta Proved You Can Scale Up a Young Gallery Without Selling Your Soul In our latest spotlight on gallery business models, we learn how Proyectos Ultravioleta evolved from an artist-run kunsthalle into a humming commercial gallery. By Kate Brown, Jul 25, 2022
The Art Detective Forget the Hamptons. Artists, Dealers, and Advisors Are Congregating in a New Bucolic Contemporary Art Hub: Maine The state has always been a haven for artists. Now, the rest of the art world is starting to catch up. By Katya Kazakina, Jul 22, 2022
The Back Room The Back Room: Brave New World This week: the covert business of A.I. art generators, the verdict on a new art-world nightlife hub, the uncertainty in June’s auction results, and much more. By Tim Schneider & Julia Halperin, Jul 22, 2022
Wet Paint Wet Paint in the Wild: Nina Johnson, One of Miami’s Top Art Dealers, Brings Us on a Road Trip to Marfa Johnson takes us to see Donald Judd sculptures and a Terry Allen concert out in the deserts of Texas. By Annie Armstrong, Jul 21, 2022
Auctions Sotheby’s Will Host an Auction in Singapore for the First Time in 15 Years as the Art Business Seeks to Cultivate New Asian Clientele The global art market is hustling to diversify its activities in Asia. By Vivienne Chow, Jul 21, 2022
Auctions One of the First of Its Kind, Phillips’s Generative Art Sale Fails to, Ahem, Generate Strong Sales, Dampened in Part by June’s Crypto Crash The art historical, highly curated sale failed to soar, and many works did not find buyers. By Anna Sansom, Jul 21, 2022
Artnet News Pro Zero Bond Has Become the New York Art World’s Favorite Private Club. That Doesn’t Make It Cool The club is an unholy marriage of kitsch aesthetics and the moneyed elite. By Annie Armstrong, Jul 21, 2022
The Gray Market DALL-E’s Astonishing Images Mask That Art Is Just Another Pawn in Silicon Valley’s Endgame (and Other Insights) Our columnist unravels how DALL-E and other A.I.-driven content generators fit into Big Tech’s grand business plan. By Tim Schneider, Jul 20, 2022
Auctions Sotheby’s Will Shoot for the Moon with a Multimillion-Dollar Sale of Buzz Aldrin’s Personal Belongings Later This Month Included in the sale is the broken circuit breaker that almost doomed Apollo 11—and the pen Aldrin used to fix it. By Artnet News, Jul 19, 2022
Art Fairs ‘Our Idea Here in Ibiza Is to Mix Business and Pleasure’: A New Island Art Fair Woos Visitors With Evening Hours and a Resident D.J. The Ibiza art fair CAN welcomed 36 galleries from 13 countries. By Dorian Batycka, Jul 19, 2022
Galleries Silverlens Gallery, a Heavyweight in the Southeast Asian Art Scene, Is Flipping the Script by Expanding Westward With a New York Outpost "Maybe there's a space for us. We didn't feel so invisible anymore," said gallery founder Isa Lorenzo. By Vivienne Chow, Jul 19, 2022
Artnet News Pro The Quiet Connoisseurs: Meet 5 Powerful Under-the-Radar Art Collectors in France, From a Rosé Magnate to a Young Fashion Mogul France’s flourishing art scene is enticing top collectors to open their doors. By Maïa Morgensztern, Jul 19, 2022
The Hammer Simon de Pury on Why He Remains Optimistic About the Art Market Despite Red Flag-Waving Economists The current economic downturn isn’t the industry veteran’s first rodeo. By Simon de Pury, Jul 18, 2022
Auctions A Vampire-Hunting Kit Purportedly From the 19th Century Sells for $20,000 in the U.K., Exploding Its Meager $2,400 Estimate The hunting kit went to a collector in the U.K. By Sarah Cascone, Jul 15, 2022