Sotheby’s presents Icons: Back to Madison from 13 to 21 December 2025, inaugurating its return to Madison Avenue in the Breuer Building with a museum-scale exhibition spanning five millennia, including works by Basquiat, Richter, Mondrian, and John Singer Sargent.
The Standard is not doing their ice rink this year in lieu of a sort of winter wonderland, but Bryant Park Winter Village is fully open, with rink, pop-ups, and the holiday market running through early January.
For a micro-escape, the Met Cloisters continues its Fall 2025 season at 99 Margaret Corbin Drive.
Sotheby’s presents Icons: Back to Madison from 13 to 21 December 2025, inaugurating its return to Madison Avenue in the Breuer Building with a museum-scale exhibition spanning five millennia, including works by Basquiat, Richter, Mondrian, and John Singer Sargent.
The Standard is not doing their ice rink this year in lieu of a sort of winter wonderland, but Bryant Park Winter Village is fully open, with rink, pop-ups, and the holiday market running through early January.
For a micro-escape, the Met Cloisters continues its Fall 2025 season at 99 Margaret Corbin Drive.
To hide away at the Opera, La Bohème runs from 21 Oct 2025 to 2 May 2026.
Jamie xx brings his In Waves live set to the Park Avenue Armory’s Wade Thompson Drill Hall from January 9 to 12, 2025, a four-night, four-hour, lights-and-haze winter residency.
Devon Turnbull’s HiFi Pursuit Listening Room Dream No. 3 runs from 12 December 2025 through 19 July 2026, a large-scale, handcrafted listening room installation activated with curated sonic sessions by New York–based musicians, archivists, and audiophiles.
The New Museum is expected to finally reopen early next year with a new group show focused on emerging sculptors experimenting with recycled materials.
Venere de Medici, 2022, pink onyx. Edition 1/1. Photo by Nicola Gnesi. Courtesy of Galerie Bayart, Paris.
What appear to be imperfections in the material are stimulating elements for me because they become a kind of challenge, in being able to transform them into virtues on the final work. Text by Madina Tulakova. Read More
Corita Kent, “Untitled, Red Shoes, Los Angeles” (1967), 35 mm slide, Corita Slide Collection (photo courtesy Corita Art Center) from Corita Kent: The Sorcery of Images in Los Angeles.
NEW YORK—To remember that photography was even once a fresher medium than it is today. I mean, jolting. In the last century, when photo stories... Text by Pina Lomb. Read More
Raphael, Self-portrait (1506–08). Florence, Uffizi Galleries, Gallery of Statues and Paintings. Photographic Cabinet of the Uffizi Galleries – Courtesy of the Ministry for Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism.
UPTOWN—In spring 2026, New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art will present the most extensive U.S. exhibition ever dedicated to Raphael, according to Artnet, offering a... Text by Marguerite de Ponty. Read More
Auguste Renoir, Study for The Great Bathers (1884 to 1887). Photo: The Morgan Library & Museum.
UPTOWN—A large show of works on paper by Pierre-Auguste Renoir is being organized for this October by Colin Bailey, the Morgan's new director, according to... Text by Dannik. Read More
DOWNTOWN—British artist Louise Giovanelli is now showing new work at Grimm 54. The exhibition, Still Moving, goes through 21 June 2025, and features a bunch... Text by Dalia Morgan. Read More
ROME—In 2022, the city of Rome hosted a comprehensive exhibition dedicated to Francesco Messina at Villa Torlonia. Titled Francesco Messina. Novecento Contemporaneo, the show brought... Text by Dannik. Read More
Slip House, the brand new gallery opened at the base of a 19th-century, three-story former carriage house at 246 East 5th Street.
DOWNTOWN—Every two decades is a response to the previous two. After decades of irony, the purposeful ugliness of the 80s and 90s (“Anything that’s beautiful... Text by Cici Thompson. Read More
Photograph by Erich Höhne. Courtesy of Deutsche Fotothek.
Wassily Kandinsky, a painter of color and form, once envisioned a future where dance would shed its ornamental constraints and move toward abstraction. In Concerning... Text by Marguerite de Ponty. Read More
BASEL—Going to Art Basel is always a unique experience. For the majority, the art on display is merely entertainment; after all, any work, whether mighty... Text by Madina Tulakova. Read More
Franco Maria Ricci in 1984, at the launch of FMR U.S.A. at the New York Public Library.
Caverns were probably the first labyrinthine structures human beings came into contact with, in a distant past. And I, too, rummaged through my own past, finding a version of myself as the guise of a young amateur speleologist, equipped with the right clothes, flashlights, ropes, and climbing-irons. I was a second-year student at the Faculty of Geology and, with some friends, I had founded a so-called Cavern Society. My weekdays moved along on the surface, in the sunlight, while my weekends were usually devoted to the dark bowels of the earth. Text by fmr. Read More