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Tag: art

  • 36 Hours in Mexico City: Things to Do and See

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    10 a.m. Navigate a dizzying market

    When Mexico City was still the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, the district of La Merced, in the southeastern edge of the Historic Center, served as a dock for goods from the mainland. There’s no water anymore, but with its thousands of informal vendors and 11 or so covered markets, La Merced still feels like a port: raucous, heady and overwhelming. To avoid getting lost, the best way to visit is over a roving breakfast with Eat Like a Local, a small tour operator that directs part of its proceeds toward educational programming for young women in the neighborhood. The company’s flagship, four-hour walk ($120 per person) covers both La Merced and the Mercado Jamaica flower market, but it can organize shorter, custom tours focused on this Mexico City landmark.

    1 p.m. Immerse yourself in art and craft in the Historic Center

    Walking from La Merced to the spectacular ceremonial plaza known as the Zócalo, stop at Cerería de Jesús for handmade beeswax candles (24 pesos) and the Ex-Teresa Arte Actual (free), a museum set in a precipitously tilting former convent. From there, traverse the sunken ruins of the Aztec Templo Mayor (100 pesos) en route to the new flagship shop for FONART, the National Fund for the Development of Crafts, and, around the corner, the moving works of José Clemente Orozco at the Colegio de San Ildefonso (50 pesos), widely considered the birthplace of Mexican muralism. Finally, take in Diego Rivera’s dynamic suite of paintings — ranging from romantic depictions of Mexican folkways to giddy gibes at capitalist excess — in the former Secretariat of Public Education, open since 2024 as the Museo Vivo del Muralismo (free).

    4:30 p.m. Sip a cocktail with a view

    Opened in April 2025, the restaurant Charco, on the roof of the new, kid-friendly Museo del Cacao & Chocolate, overlooks the domes and buttresses of the Metropolitan Cathedral. Charco’s kitchen, run by the Chilean chef Ricardo Verdejo, turns out an inventive, seafood-heavy menu with a strong program of cocktails, mezcals and natural wines (cocktails from 190 pesos, dinner for two about 1,500 pesos, without drinks). On a clear day — admittedly few and far between — the twin volcanic peaks of Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl might appear on the horizon, but sunsets are spectacular in any weather. For a low-key drink with a bit of history, try one of the neighborhood’s classic cantinas like El Gallo de Oro (beers from 65 pesos), open since 1874 with décor that’s practically unchanged since the 1970s.

    7 p.m. Enjoy rare mezcals

    In 2022, after almost six years of collecting rare agave distillates across Mexico, the food writer Natalia de la Rosa and photographer Jason Thomas Fritz opened one of the city’s best tasting rooms, Ahuehuete, in the Historic Center. Receiving six visitors at a time, the owners pour a diverse range of high-quality spirits purchased from producers in remote villages from the highlands of Sonora to the tropical hills of Guerrero and the volcanic valleys of Michoacán. Two-hour tastings, $90, include at least six pours of mezcal that paint an incomparable picture of Mexico’s cultural and ecological diversity. For a more self-guided experience, Bósforo, also in the Centro neighborhood, remains the city’s standard-bearer for agave spirits and experimental music — still sexy and surprising more than 15 years after opening (one-ounce pours from 80 pesos).

    10 p.m. Indulge in a late-night snack

    In Mexico City, where lunches stretch well into the evening, late-night provisions, often served under fluorescent lights and a halo of smoke, make a common replacement for dinner. Options abound. Café La Pagoda, one of the Historic Center’s venerable cafés de Chinos — coffee shops opened by Chinese immigrants beginning in the 1930s — turns out enchiladas (149 pesos) and chilaquiles (94 pesos) 24 hours a day, the same punishing schedule kept at Caldos de Gallina Luis in la Roma, known for its warming bowls of chicken soup (from 65 pesos). In the Narvarte neighborhood, Tacos Tony turns out fragrant tacos de suadero (32 pesos), a block from El Vilsito, a mechanic’s shop by day and taquería by night, serving marbled petals of pastor (27 pesos) until 5 a.m.

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    Michael Snyder and Jake Naughton

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  • Fisk to present new Opus at open shop event Saturday

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    GLOUCESTER — C.B. Fisk will unveil its Opus 166 at an open shop event Saturday when visitors can get an inside look at what goes into creating these enormous pipe organs.

    The Open Shop Celebration takes place from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Gloucester workshop at 21 Kondelin Road.

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    By Gail McCarthy | Staff Writer

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  • Louvre Opening Delayed as Staff Meets to Decide Whether to Resume Strike

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    PARIS, Jan ‌5 (Reuters) – ​The ‌opening of France’s ​Louvre museum ‍in Paris ​was ​delayed ⁠until 0900 GMT on Monday as staff was ‌meeting to decide ​whether ‌to resume ‍a strike ⁠started in December over pay and working ​conditions, museum employees said.

    Staff on December 19 had voted to call off the strike until January 5.

    (Reporting ​by Sarah Meyssonnier, Dominique Vidalon; Editing ​by Benoit Van Overstraeten)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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    Reuters

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  • Kennedy Center cancels New Years Eve performances amid Trump name change

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    The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has canceled multiple New Year’s Eve performances, adding to a growing wave of artist withdrawals following the venue’s renaming to include President Donald Trump.

    Jazz ensemble the Cookers had two scheduled New Year’s Eve performances canceled, according to the Kennedy Center’s website on Monday, the New York Times reported. The cancellations follow Doug Varone and Dancers’ announcement that they are pulling out of their April performances in protest of the renaming.

    Newsweek reached out to the Kennedy Center via email on Monday for additional comment.

    Why It Matters

    The cancellations highlight deepening tensions between the arts community and the Trump administration’s control of one of America’s most prestigious cultural institutions.

    The Kennedy Center, traditionally viewed as a nonpartisan space for artistic excellence, has become a flashpoint in broader debates about political influence over cultural institutions.

    The financial and reputational consequences affect both the artists withdrawing—Varone told the Times he estimates a $40,000 loss—and the venue itself, which faces an increasingly fractured relationship with performers and potential legal challenges over the renaming’s legality.

    What To Know

    The wave of cancellations began in February when Trump removed board members and replaced them with supporters. High-profile artists, including Pulitzer winner Rhiannon Giddens, soprano Renée Fleming, and singer-songwriter Ben Folds, resigned advisory roles or canceled performances in protest.

    Jazz musician Chuck Redd canceled his annual free Christmas Eve concert after seeing the name change on the Kennedy Center’s website and building, prompting Kennedy Center President Richard Grenell to threaten a $1 million lawsuit. Redd has led the venue’s holiday “Jazz Jams” since 2006, taking over from bassist William “Keter” Betts. Folk singer Kristy Lee from Alabama withdrew from a January 14 free concert, citing integrity over financial concerns.

    Doug Varone and Dancers were scheduled to perform April 24-25 at the Eisenhower Theater, celebrating the company’s 40th anniversary and honoring two departing dance administrators, Jane Raleigh and Alicia Adams.

    The reason for the Cookers’ New Year’s Eve cancellations remains unclear. The performances had been promoted as featuring an “all-star jazz septet that will ignite the Terrace Theater stage with fire and soul,” according to the Times reporting.

    The renaming has sparked legal controversy. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, and Congress passed legislation in 1964 establishing the center as a living memorial to him. The law restricts the board of trustees from dedicating the building to anyone else or placing another individual’s name on its exterior. The White House has said the decision was approved by a board appointed by the president, though legal scholars and historians argue congressional approval would be required.

    What People Are Saying

    Roma Daravi, Vice President of PR for the Kennedy Center, shared in a statement to Newsweek last week: “Any artist cancelling their show at the Trump Kennedy Center over political differences isn’t courageous or principled—they are selfish, intolerant, and have failed to meet the basic duty of a public artist: to perform for all people. Art is a shared cultural experience meant to unite, not exclude. The Trump Kennedy Center is a true bipartisan institution that welcomes artists and patrons from all backgrounds—great art transcends politics, and America’s cultural center remains committed to presenting popular programming that inspires and resonates with all audiences.”

    Doug Varone, Doug Varone and Dancers told The New York Times: “It is financially devastating but morally exhilarating.

    “We can no longer permit ourselves nor ask our audiences to step inside this once great institution.”

    Folk singer Kristy Lee, according to the Times: “I won’t lie to you, canceling shows hurts. This is how I keep the lights on. But losing my integrity would cost me more than any paycheck.”

    Democratic Representative Steve Cohen said in a speech in Congress: “The idea that Donald Trump would want his name to go before Kennedy’s or even with Kennedy’s is a sacrilege. It should not be changed, ever.”

    What Happens Next

    Kerry Kennedy, Kennedy’s niece, has said she intends to remove Trump’s name once he leaves office.

    Whether additional artists will cancel upcoming performances or whether the center can rebuild trust with traditional performers remains to be seen.

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  • Sacramento region celebrates Kwanzaa with unity and cultural festivities

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    BY MOSCOW AND KYIV. WELL, TODAY MARKS THE FIRST DAY OF KWANZAA. IT’S A CELEBRATION THAT HONORS AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE. THE ANNUAL CELEBRATION HAS DEEP ROOTS HERE IN CALIFORNIA. KCRA 3’S CECIL HANNIBAL IS LIVE IN RANCHO CORDOVA, WHERE THE COMMUNITY IS GATHERED TONIGHT. DEEP ROOTS IS FOR SURE. THIS IS THE FIRST DAY OF KWANZAA, OF COURSE, AND IF YOU DIDN’T KNOW, IT WAS ACTUALLY CREATED IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA NEARLY 60 YEARS AGO. NOW, THIS SEVEN DAY CELEBRATION, THIS HOLIDAY IS CELEBRATED BY PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD OF AFRICAN DESCENT. THIS EVENT IS STILL GOING ON RIGHT NOW. FOR A CLOSER LOOK INSIDE, I WANT TO SHOW YOU THIS VIDEO. IF YOU CAN TAKE A LOOK AT YOUR SCREEN FOR ME REAL QUICK. EVERYONE IS WELCOME TO THIS EVENT, REGARDLESS OF RACE OR CULTURAL BACKGROUND. IT’S A CHANCE TO, OF COURSE, COME LEARN, BUT ALSO TO BUY THINGS FROM HANDMADE NECKLACES TO CLOTHING AND EVEN BOOKS THAT TEACH ABOUT BLACK HISTORY IN THE PAN-AFRICAN MOVEMENT. THERE’S A NUMBER OF SPEAKERS TONIGHT FROM THE MAYOR OF RANCHO CORDOVA. RIGHT NOW, A PASTOR IS SPEAKING. WE ALSO HEARD FROM THE ORGANIZER, MICHAEL HARRIS, WHO SAYS HE STUDIED UNDER THE ORIGINAL CREATOR OF KWANZAA, DOCTOR MAULANA KARENGA, AND EXPLAINED WHY THIS HOLIDAY IS SIGNIFICANT TO THE BLACK COMMUNITY AND HIS NOTION OF A HOLIDAY THAT CELEBRATED AFRICAN CULTURE IN A TIME WHERE BLACK FOLKS DIDN’T HAVE NO CLUE WHO THEY WERE. WITH NO BLACK STUDIES PROGRAM, AND FOR PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT TO DO A DEEP DIVE AND ASK THOSE QUESTIONS. WHO ARE YOU? WHO ARE YOU REALLY? ARE YOU? WHAT IS AFRICA TO YOU? WHAT IS AMERICA TO YOU? SO BACK OUT HERE LIVE. THEY ARE ALSO HAVING LIVE CULTURAL PERFORMANCES, REFRESHMENTS AND ARTS AND CRAFTS FOR KIDS. NOW THERE ARE SEVEN DAYS OF KWANZAA. TODAY IS UMOJA, WHICH STANDS FOR UNITY. SO THE HOPE OF THIS EVENT IS TO REALLY BRING PEOPLE TOGETHER ALL IN ONE ROOM AND TO CELEBRATE THIS HOLIDAY TOGETHER. RANC

    Sacramento region celebrates Kwanzaa with unity and cultural festivities

    Sacramento region celebrates Kwanzaa with unity and cultural festivities

    Updated: 12:20 AM PST Dec 27, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    The city of Rancho Cordova celebrated the first day of Kwanzaa with a cultural event inviting people from across Sacramento County to city hall on Friday.It’s part of the 27th Annual California State Capitol Kwanzaa celebration, organized by Michael Harris, president and CEO of the California Black Agriculture Working Group.Harris, who studied under Kwanzaa’s original creator, Dr. Maulana Karenga, emphasized the holiday’s significance to the Black community. “We carry the oldest, largest, most accurate notion of authentic California Pan African Ancestry,” Harris said. The event, which began on the first day of Kwanzaa, Dec. 26, features a variety of activities, including live cultural performances, arts and crafts for children, and a “Farm to Fork Friday” event offering samples of Pan African cuisine. The celebration includes speeches from notable figures such as Pastor Carl Dee Amattoe and Rancho Cordova Mayor Garrett Gatewood, along with other regional community leaders.Guests can also purchase handmade items like necklaces and Afrocentric clothing. The event aims to bring people together from diverse backgrounds to honor African culture and the seven principles of Kwanzaa, starting with Umoja, which means unity. The celebration continues throughout the week, offering a chance for reflection, dialogue, and shared creativity in the spirit of unity.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    The city of Rancho Cordova celebrated the first day of Kwanzaa with a cultural event inviting people from across Sacramento County to city hall on Friday.

    It’s part of the 27th Annual California State Capitol Kwanzaa celebration, organized by Michael Harris, president and CEO of the California Black Agriculture Working Group.

    Harris, who studied under Kwanzaa’s original creator, Dr. Maulana Karenga, emphasized the holiday’s significance to the Black community.

    “We carry the oldest, largest, most accurate notion of authentic California Pan African Ancestry,” Harris said.

    The event, which began on the first day of Kwanzaa, Dec. 26, features a variety of activities, including live cultural performances, arts and crafts for children, and a “Farm to Fork Friday” event offering samples of Pan African cuisine.

    The celebration includes speeches from notable figures such as Pastor Carl Dee Amattoe and Rancho Cordova Mayor Garrett Gatewood, along with other regional community leaders.

    Guests can also purchase handmade items like necklaces and Afrocentric clothing.

    The event aims to bring people together from diverse backgrounds to honor African culture and the seven principles of Kwanzaa, starting with Umoja, which means unity.

    The celebration continues throughout the week, offering a chance for reflection, dialogue, and shared creativity in the spirit of unity.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Scientists Make Material That Can Morph Into Anything With the Pull of a String

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    There’s a very thin line between math and art. As it turns out, the same can be said about material science and paper art.

    At first glance, the flat, tiled pattern developed by researchers doesn’t look too special. But once you pull the little string sticking out from the side, the grid quickly transforms into, well, any 3D structure it’s meant to be. The new material, inspired by the Japanese paper art technique known as kirigami, could have an impressive range of applications, from transportable medical devices and foldable robots to modular space habitats on Mars.

    The researchers, led by MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, describe the new material in a recent ACM Transactions on Graphics paper.

    Art-inspired algorithm

    For the new material, the researchers developed an algorithm that translates the 3D structure provided by users into a flat grid of quadrilateral tiles. This mimics how artists that practice kirigami (literally Japanese for “cutting paper”) cut material in certain ways to “encode it with unique properties,” the researchers explained to MIT News.

    The specific mechanism applied here is known as an auxetic mechanism, which refers to a structure that grows thicker when stretched out but thinner when compressed.

    The algorithm then calculates the “optimal string path” to minimize friction and connect the lift points along the surface, so the grids become the intended 3D structure with one smooth pull of a string.

    An animation showing the structure unfolding with one string pull. Credit: MIT

    “The simplicity of the whole actuation mechanism is a real benefit of our approach,” Akib Zaman, the study’s lead author and a graduate student at MIT, told MIT News. “All they have to do is input their design, and our algorithm automatically takes care of the rest.”

    The chair that held

    After multiple simulations, the team finally used their method to design several real-life objects. These included medical tools such as splints or posture correctors and igloo-like structures.

    Chair Mit One String 02 Press
    Researchers created a human-scale chair, pictured above. Credit: MIT

    What’s more, the algorithm is “agnostic to the fabrication method,” so the researchers used laser-cut plywood boxes to create a fully deployable, human-sized chair—and it held when used as an actual chair, according to the paper.

    That said, there will likely be “scale-specific engineering challenges” for larger architectural structures, the researchers noted in the paper. But the novel method is easy to use and relatively accessible, so the team is now enthusiastically exploring ways to tackle these challenges, in addition to building tinier structures with this technique.

    “I hope people will be able to use this method to create a wide variety of different, deployable structures,” Zaman said.

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    Gayoung Lee

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  • Here’s the Album Cover Tim Burton Made for A$AP Rocky

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    A$AP Rocky has launched his latest campaign to convince fans that the much-delayed Don’t Be Dumb will actually be released soon, this time by sharing cover art designed by none other than Tim Burton. The artwork arrived on Instagram with a message referring to Don’t Be Dumb as a movie: “SORRY 4 THE WAIT DON’T BE DUMB FINALLY HERE! THANKS TIM BURTON FOR HELPING ME MAKE THIS MOVIE! COMING SOON.” Check it out below.

    Rocky has been teasing the Testing follow-up for years, first sharing the current title in late 2022. Since then, he has shared new music for Highest 2 Lowest—the recent Spike Lee movie in which he stars alongside Denzel Washington—and, before that, a single called “Taylor Swif,” which came with a quirky video shot in Ukraine shortly before the Russian invasion.

    The new album, he said in a recent Vanity Fair video interview, features longtime Tim Burton collaborator Danny Elfman, who “scored a bunch of the songs.” He also spoke about his admiration for Burton, particularly his incorporation of “matte painting and German expressionism” into his practice.

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    Jazz Monroe

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  • As Nuggets offense thrives, Jonas Valanciunas quips: ‘Setting a good screen is selfish’

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    To screen or not to screen is not a question in Denver.

    To roll and perchance to score, now there’s the appeal.

    First-year coach David Adelman doesn’t deal lightly in superlatives, so it was notable when he recently described Denver’s roster as “the best Nuggets screening team we’ve had in a long time.”

    But he and one of his most prolific screeners did have an amusing difference of opinion about the nature of setting a good screen — the implication of it.

    “Guys (are) giving themselves up. … Making the effort to get a hit for somebody else to allow them to have success,” Adelman raved last week. “Sometimes the assist total, 30, is great. But you look back and you look at the screen-assist numbers and what creates offense behind that, it’s an unselfish thing that guys in the NBA don’t all want to do.”

    Adelman listed names, crediting almost half of Denver’s roster for contributing: Bruce Brown, Peyton Watson, Tim Hardaway Jr., Spencer Jones. Centers Nikola Jokic and Jonas Valanciunas. The biggest bodies, obviously, are often the heftiest screeners.

    “Our team, for whatever reason this year,” Adelman said, “has been very successful at doing it.”

    Valanciunas has a reason.

    “You know, setting a good screen is selfish,” he said. “Because you’re gonna be open. I’m a selfish guy. Setting good screens.”

    Disclaimer: At least half of what the Lithuanian big man says is tongue-in-cheek to some extent, and he even laughed at his own comment in this case.

    But the humor in his voice didn’t take away from the sliver of truth to his words. Adelman agreed on Monday night before the Nuggets hosted the Houston Rockets.

    “I think it was (Hall of Famer) Chris Mullin that said, ‘I want to be the best screener on the team because I want to shoot the most shots.’ It makes a lot of sense,” Adelman said. “If you (set a) rip screen correctly and you cause confusion, you get to shoot. If you’re a big that sets screens, you create the pocket. The ball finds you (in the pick-and-roll).

    “Same thing with a guy like Jamal (Murray). If you set a flare screen, a lot of times, two (defenders) are gonna go with him. And that means you’re the guy that benefits. Peyton gets dunks every other game that way. So yeah, there is something to that.”

    The Nuggets have long been particularly adept at using their guards as screeners. Christian Braun, who didn’t make the list of shoutouts from Adelman in his initial comment, has mastered the art of when and how to release from a screen. He often reads the defense and slips to the basket for easy layups and dunks, courtesy of assists from a distributor like Jokic, Murray or Aaron Gordon.

    Hardaway has frequently benefited from being the “weakest” link in three-man actions with Jokic and Murray, stepping out to the 3-point line after setting a screen and launching open shots when the defense fixates on Denver’s stars.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Art BAEsel: A Curated Collection Of Mesmerizing Muses Who Made An Impression At Miami Art Week 2025

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    Art BAEsel!

    Source: IG: @myricka_

    The first week of December is officially synonymous with the unwrapping of Queen of Christmas, Mariah Carey, and famed Miami Art Week which creates meaningful opportunities for emerging artists, nonprofit arts organizations, and galleries while shifting the culture as the heart of the art world.

    Widely regarded as the world’s largest celebration of art and culture, Miami Art Week attracts an international audience of curators, collectors, cultural leaders, and art lovers for artsy vibrance against the vibrant backdrop of Miami, Miami Beach, Wynwood, and now Coral Gables.

    Founded in 2017, Miami Art Week amplifies diverse voices through signature events like Art Basel–the world’s premier series of art fairs bustling with exclusive activations, large-scale installations, informative panels, and unique local programming as a major hub for the global art market. 

    This year, the star-studded event kicked off with NBA champions Dwyane Wade and Dorell Wright’s Second Annual Ace Members Only Golf Experience at the iconic Miami Springs Golf Course–a historic landmark in the fight for integration within the sport of golf.

    Miami Art Week 2025
    Source: @EMCCinema

    Powered by REBRAND NY–a business strategy company for athletes, Body Armor, On The Rocks Cocktails, Pacino’s Men’s Grooming, and Amber & Opal, the exclusive experience brought together a powerhouse lineup of athletes, entertainers, VIP tastemakers, including JR Smith, Alonzo Mourning, Ja Rule, and more.

    Miami Art Week 2025
    Source: @EMCCinema

    The event opened with Wade and Wright reflecting on 20 years since the Miami Heat’s 2006 NBA Championship before thanking their peers, colleagues, and associates for joining them on the second annual outing.

    Miami Art Week 2025
    Source: @EMCCinema

    In 1949, Black golfers challenged discriminatory policies at the course, igniting a legal battle that laid the foundation for public access across the country.

    Now, 76 years later, Wade and Wright are building on this triumph to create a space where minority athletes and leaders can network, cultivate relationships, and access the same influential environments where business deals are forged.

    Miami Art Week 2025
    Source: @EMCCinema

    “We wanted to create a space where we could combine culture, community, and competition while opening doors that weren’t always open to us,” said Wade.

    As the Ace Members Only community continues to grow, Wade and Wright are committed to expanding programming, youth outreach, and industry access through the game of golf.

    Miami Art Week 2025
    Source: @EMCCinema

    Have you ever experienced Miami Art Week/Art Basel? If so, what was your favorite moment? Tell us down below and enjoy our picture-perfect collection of mesmerizing muses on the flip.

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  • PAFA’s holiday pop-up offers a rare chance to buy prints without gallery prices

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    The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts will hold its annual Brodsky CenterHoliday Pop-Up Print Sale on Saturday, Dec. 13, turning the Hamilton Building lobby into a temporary print shop from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    All of the limited-edition prints are priced below $200, a point that draws both new and seasoned collectors each year. The works come out of the Brodsky Center’s residency program, where artists collaborate with master printers and papermakers to produce museum-quality editions. The program’s focus on supporting artists from marginalized communities often shapes the subjects, styles and techniques represented in the sale.

    The selection includes prints by American and international artists, making it an easy stop for anyone looking to start a small collection or pick up a thoughtful holiday gift.


    Brodsky Center Holiday Pop-Up Print Sale

    Saturday, Dec. 13 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
    Lobby of PAFA’s Hamilton Building
    128 N Broad St.
    Philadelphia, PA 19102


    This content was generated by PhillyVoice Media Events, not by the editorial staff.

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  • It’s The Met’s Second-Biggest Party of the Year. There’s Nothing Small About It.

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    Hollein then announced that the evening had raised $5 million, a new record for the event and a massive haul for any museum, though not quite in the same stratosphere as that of…the Met Gala, which raised $31 million this year for the Costume Institute. And then he pressed play on a short film made especially for the evening, featuring two living artists with work in The Met’s collection, Wangechi Mutu and Alex Katz. It was projected onto the gigantic walls that house the Temple of Dendur, everyone in their penguin suits rapt with awe. Each artist picked an object from The Met’s collection; Mutu homed in on a nearly 3,000-year-old statue of Osiris, while Katz chose an Edgar Degas drawing of Mary Cassatt at the Louvre.

    At the end of the video, Katz summed up the night’s whole vibe, saying, “In all my experiences in New York, the happiest day I ever had was when I came into The Met and saw my painting.”

    “What do you think about your art adding to The Metropolitan Museum’s collection?” the interviewer asked.

    “I think it’s a big asset!” Katz said, laughing.

    And just because we’re so excited…we have to mention…

    Across the country, another museum is announcing some big news: The Vanity Fair Oscar Party is moving to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

    That’s right—the best party on Hollywood’s biggest night will now be held at the brand-new campus for LACMA, a month before it’s set to open to the public. The Peter Zumthor–designed building is already winning over the hearts and minds of Angelenos, and it’s a great privilege to bring this historic event to perhaps the most anticipated new fortress of art constructed this century.

    “The idea of Hollywood has never been more expansive than it is today,” said Mark Guiducci, global editorial director of Vanity Fair, when announcing the new venue. “The film industry intersects with so many disciplines, and the silos between them are breaking down. Artists make films. Sports stars are producers. Movie moguls fund art museums. And technology is embedded throughout. We’re thrilled to capture that energy with a cultural institution that undergirds the importance of Los Angeles and the industry at a time when Vanity Fair and LACMA are both entering exciting new chapters.”

    Have a tip? Drop me a line at nate_freeman@condenast.com. And make sure you subscribe to True Colors to receive Nate Freeman’s art-world dispatch in your inbox every week.

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    Nate Freeman

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  • Pageant of the Masters Brings Art’s Greatest to Life With 2026 Production ‘The Greatest of All Time’

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    An Unforgettable Tribute to the G.O.A.T.s of Art History July 9 – Sept. 4, 2026

    In today’s culture, the term “G.O.A.T.” – greatest of all time – is everywhere, from sports to entertainment. For the 2026 Pageant of the Masters, the question is: Who are the G.O.A.T.s of art? The Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach proudly announces the 2026 Pageant of the Masters theme, “The Greatest of All Time,” will celebrate the artists, innovators, and masterpieces that have defined the history of art. Running nightly from July 9 through Sept. 4, 2026, next summer’s Pageant will invite audiences on a global journey through the timeless works and legendary creators to discover for themselves who truly deserves the title “G.O.A.T.” in a show filled with surprises, spectacle, and magic. Tickets are on sale now and may be purchased online at www.foapom.com or by phone at (800) 487-3378.

    Masterpieces won’t just hang on walls – they’ll come alive in breathtaking tableaux vivants, blending art, music, and theatrical illusion. Audiences can expect a high-energy experience that celebrates not only the genius of the artists, but also the enduring power of their work to move and inspire.

    “Do I really think the history of art has one artwork that can be considered the greatest of all time? No!” laughed longtime Pageant Director, Diane Challis Davy. “But that’s exactly what makes this show so exciting. We’ve taken on the challenge of finding 40 works that could each make their case for being one of the greatest: whether for their technique, their influence or their power to move us centuries later.”

    The 2026 Pageant will feature legendary works from Michelangelo, Diego Velázquez, Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Frida Kahlo, and Norman Rockwell. “My personal favorites are John Singer Sargent and Winslow Homer,” Davy added, “but works from around the world will also be given their due.”

    Presented under the stars in the Pageant’s 2,600-seat Irvine Bowl amphitheater, real people will step into the spotlight, perfectly posing as their counterparts in larger-than-life works of art. Each living picture will unfold with the Pageant’s signature fusion of stage magic, original music performed by a live orchestra, and captivating narration.

    Challis Davy concluded, “I like to think that’s also what we do here at the Pageant. Just as the Festival supports art in our community, I hope to see this year’s Pageant encouraging everyone’s greater appreciation for art.”

    The 2026 Pageant of the Masters production “The Greatest of All Time” will run nightly from July 9 through Sept. 4, 2026. Early ticket purchase is recommended, the Pageant is highly sought after and draws art enthusiasts from around the world. For updates, follow the Festival on social media @FestivalPageant and visit www.foapom.com.

    Source: Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach

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  • San Francisco Dr. Don Hershman’s steady hand masters the art of surgery

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    SAN FRANCISCO — Discipline, creativity and a steady hand — all traits that an artist must possess.

    According to Dr. Don Hershman, they are qualities that a surgeon must possess. He would seemingly know, because he is both of those things.

    “I always said there is a part of my brain that turns on at a certain point in the painting and in the surgery. I mean the blank canvass is daunting. When you are beginning a surgery, it’s the beginning of an adventure. It’s a creative energy that not many people have the experience of talking about, because surgeons are surgeons and artists are artists. Not many people do both,” Hershman said.

    As a board-certified surgeon and a celebrated San Francisco-based artist, his artwork and paintings have been featured in solo and group exhibitions across the United States and internationally. Different series of paintings depict several subjects. Code-switching is a subject that is exhibited in some recent works. The depiction is about the practice of changing ones language, tone and behavior to adapt to different social contexts.

    “People adjust their language to fit in. I can only speak for my experience as a gay man going through medical school having to code-switch. Back in the day, being gay was completely unacceptable and you couldnt get through your surgical training if you were out. I didnt feel victimized by it, because it’s just the way thigs were,” Hershman said.

    Hershman continues to flourish in both professions and says they compliment each other in practice.

    “It doesnt matter whether a patient is a privileged patient or someone that is poor, discriminated against or marginalized. When they are in that chair, they are just a patient. Everybody is equal. Everything flattens right out. It gives you a bird’s-eye view of the world in that way.

    Healthcare, that’s the privilege of it, and it makes you more human. As an artist, it makes me a better artist,” Hershman said.

    Learn more here.

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    CCG

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  • Tom Stoppard Leaves ‘Majestic Body of Intellectual Work’

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    LONDON, Nov 29 (Reuters) – Tom Stoppard, one of Britain’s best-known playwrights, has died at the age of 88. Below are some tributes and reactions.

    “Tom Stoppard was my favourite playwright. He leaves us with a majestic body of intellectual and amusing work. I will always miss him.”

    Stoppard’s agent said it was an honour to work with him.

    “We are deeply saddened to announce that our beloved client and friend, Tom Stoppard, has died peacefully at home in Dorset, surrounded by his family. He will be remembered for his works, for their brilliance and humanity, and for his wit, his irreverence, his generosity of spirit and his profound love of the English language.”

    THEATRE CRITIC MARK SHENTON

    “For over 50, 60 years he’s dominated the theatre,” Shenton told Sky News. “And the cinema as well. He had a phenomenal impact. He was probably Britain’s leading playwright.”

    “We are so sad to learn of the death of Tom Stoppard,” The Writers’ Guild of Great Britain said. “A recipient of our Outstanding Contribution to Writing in 2017, he was presented by fellow playwright and former WGGB President (David Edgar) who said of him: ‘Like no one else, he has challenged, dazzled and amazed.’”

    (Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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    Reuters

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  • Award-winning Denver art gallery announces closure after 16 years in business

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    DENVER — Mirada Fine Art Gallery, which first opened in Indian Hills before relocating to downtown Denver in 2020, announced they will be closing its doors by the end of the year.

    For the past 16 years, Mirada Fine Art Gallery has been a rather popular spot in Denver’s art scene. They won many awards in Colorado including American Arts Awards for Top Galleries in the United States for 2022, 2023 and 2024.

    Richard Butler

    “Mirada is a gallery that features contemporary art from across North America,” said owner Steve Sonnen. “We feature a number of Colorado artists, but in addition to that, we have artists from Canada and Mexico and pretty much all of North America.”

    Sonnen called the decision to close “bittersweet,” noting that Mirada has always been a family-run operation. His sister, Jan Thompson, manages the gallery, and his wife handles bookkeeping. He said protecting the gallery’s atmosphere and its reputation played a major role in his decision not to sell.

    “We’ve built this very distinctive look and feel,” he said. “It’s a little bit of a part of me, and a part of my sister and my wife. If you just sold it, you lose all control over what happens with the gallery. And it would really break my heart to see it go in a totally different direction.”

    Sonnen said the plan to close has been in motion for years. When he moved Mirada downtown, he intentionally signed a five-year lease timed to end with his retirement.

    ss1.png

    Richard Butler

    “We always had planned to go out at this time, and so it’s nice to be able to go out on our own terms,” he said.

    The gallery will remain open through December 28, 2025. For the first time in its history, Mirada is offering rotating closeout sales featuring different artists each week.

    “In the 16 years we’ve been in business, we’ve never done a sale,” Sonnen said. “But this is sort of an unusual situation.”

    Sonnen and his wife plan to spend part of their retirement in the home they built in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. That is the place they fell in love with after honeymooning there decades ago. Still, he said leaving Mirada behind will bring its own mix of emotions.

    “When we started the closeout sale, I don’t think it really kicked in until then,” he said. “We had so many clients call or email to say they were sad we were going out of business. It’s going to be weird not being surrounded by this artwork and these amazing clients and artists, but I’m excited about the next chapter.”

    Sonnen said Mirada’s success belongs as much to its artists and supporters as it does to his family.

    owners.jpg

    Mirada Fine Art Gallery

    Owners Steve and Jenni Sonnen

    “My goodbye message to both our artists and our clients would be that it was all them that did this,” he said. “We really appreciate their business and them supporting us. I think people got something out of the gallery, but we definitely got a lot back from them.”

    Mirada Fine Art Gallery will continue its regular hours and events throughout the year as it prepares for its final day of operation.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

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    Richard Butler

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  • 36 Hours in San Antonio, Texas: Things to Do and See

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    Stroll a 15-mile riverside promenade, eat street-style tacos and dance to Tejano and cumbia music in this big Texan city with a small-town feel.

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    Samuel Rocha IV and Stacy Sodolak

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  • Mary Boone, Art Scene Queen, Looks Back at Her Life in Parties

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    In 1977, Mary Boone paid about $1,700 a month to rent a gallery space in SoHo to show relatively unknown artists. Within a few years, her eponymous gallery and the artists she championed, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel, and David Salle, had ushered in a new creative era. Known as a no-nonsense dealmaker, Boone cultivated difficult geniuses, wooed pedigreed collectors, and accumulated a closetful of Chanel. But in 2018, after four decades in the art world, she was suddenly embroiled in scandal. Boone was convicted of tax fraud, forced to close her two galleries, and served 13 months in prison. She kept a low profile after her release, but that didn’t last long. In 2024, the band Vampire Weekend released a single titled “Mary Boone.” “[Lead singer] Ezra Koenig called me up and said, ‘Tomorrow we’re going to drop your song,’ ” recalls Boone. “It’s flattering.” Now she’s enjoying a comeback. On a recent Tuesday, the 74-year-old was at Lévy Gorvy Dayan, the uptown Manhattan gallery where her first curatorial effort post-prison has been on view since September. “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties” features work by the artists she helped launch. After prison, she says, “I thought I was never going to do this again!”

    Mary Boone pictured in 1956, at age 5.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Born in Pennsylvania to Egyptian parents, Boone moved to Los Angeles as a child after her father died. In Los Angeles, she says, “it was like every day was Saturday. We lived by the beach; you were always in the sand.” Growing up, she discovered she had a talent for drawing. “Everyone encouraged me to become an artist.”

    Boone with Michael Werner.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone married the German art dealer Michael Werner in 1986. Their honeymoon, in Venice, overlapped with a professional commitment: One of Werner’s artists, Sigmar Polke, was included in the city’s Biennale. “It always seemed like the art world and our lives intermixed,” says Boone. Like her, Werner had emerged from a working-class background, and had earned a reputation for nurturing young talent. Though they divorced in the 1990s, the two remain close friends.

    Boone pictured in her SoHo gallery in 1982.

    Michel Delsol/Getty Images

    Boone studied at the Rhode Island School of Design. As a student, she caught the attention of the artist Lynda Benglis, who also lectured at universities. Benglis told her, “You can’t be in Providence—you have to be in New York.” Boone moved to the city in 1970 and hung out in the Max’s Kansas City scene, which was populated with the likes of John Chamberlain, David Bowie, and Patti Smith. Mostly, though, she found herself at the Odeon and the Ocean Club. “You’d go in, and there would be a table with Barbara Kruger, Cindy Sherman, Laurie Simmons, and Sarah Charlesworth. Then there’d be another group with David Salle, Julian Schnabel, and Ross Bleckner. It was just fun.”

    Ileana Sonnabend and Boone.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone’s first gallery was at 420 West Broadway, which also housed the influential galleries run by divorced art world giants Leo Castelli and Ileana Sonnabend. “I used to joke that when the elevator was broken, which was a lot of the time, people would come into my gallery instead of going up to see theirs.” Both became important mentors and friends of hers. Here, Sonnabend and Boone celebrate their joint birthday in October 1981. “I was turning 30, and she was not turning 30.”

    Leo Castelli with his then girlfriend, the art writer Laura de Coppet (left), and Boone at art collector Douglas Cramer’s Los Angeles ranch for a party celebrating Boone’s wedding, in 1986.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Castelli joined forces with Boone to usher in the neo-Expressionist movement of the 1980s. “Leo didn’t race to show my artists. I had to persuade him to do a show with me,” says Boone.

    Boone in front of the Berlin Wall in 1989, while on a trip to visit an artist.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone met Werner in 1981 at the opening party for Norman Rosenthal’s landmark show “A New Spirit in Painting” at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Many of Werner’s artists, including Gerhard Richter and Anselm Kiefer, were on display, and Boone wanted to exhibit them in New York. “I was too young of a dealer to show them, but slowly we started working together.”

    In 1987, Boone and Werner had their only child, a son named Max. After giving birth, “I just got a whim to have my hair cut off,” says Boone. “It was a lot of change becoming a parent. I was really lucky—I have a great kid.” Max has worked with both Boone and Werner, and recently struck out on his own as a gallerist.

    Mary Boone and Jean-Michel Basquiat.

    Image and Artwork © 2025 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ARS.

    “Jean-Michel found out where Andy Warhol would go to lunch, and he went there and started selling drawings to everybody,” says Boone, who staged a Basquiat show in 1984. “I made it my business to meet him.” At top, Basquiat and Boone are pictured at that exhibition in Boone’s gallery. “He had a thing with his mother. I think I became a substitute for his mother, and Andy became a substitute for his father.” Warhol took the bottom photo in 1985, as Basquiat prepared for an opening. “He didn’t let the packers pack up his paintings. He rolled them up and dragged them.”

    “I always liked artists who did something I had never seen before,” says Boone. She originally turned down the chance to represent Eric Fischl, known as the “bad boy of painting” for his voyeuristic style, but she eventually relented and worked with him for 30 years. The two are seen here at the opening of his show at the Whitney Museum of American Art, in 1986.

    Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

    Boone attends the 1990 launch party for Bob Colacello’s Andy Warhol biography, Holy Terror. She showed numerous Warhol works throughout her career, and he eagerly embraced her stable of young artists. “I think he really loved being the head figure,” says Boone. Warhol was the first person to show up to Boone’s inaugural Basquiat exhibition, together with “this man who was smaller than he was, and it turned out to be Manolo Blahnik. Andy tried to get him to buy a Basquiat painting, which was, like, $10,000 at the time. Maybe $5,000. Manolo said he was saving up his money to open a shoe store.”

    Boone and Nicole Miller attend a party in 1989 at The Lowell to celebrate Miller’s collaboration with Absolut Vodka.

    Patrick McMullan/Getty Images

    “Nicole Miller and I have been friends since our days at RISD. We moved to New York together.” While Boone rose to the top ranks of the art scene, Miller’s fashion brand established her as a household name in the 1980s. “I’m very loyal, and so is she.”

    Boone with Eric Fischl (center) and Michael Werner at Fischl’s 1985 solo show at Kunsthalle Basel.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    When Boone first moved to New York, she worked at Bykert Gallery, which was run by Lynda Benglis’s boyfriend, Klaus Kertess. “At around four or five, all the artists would start coming in, like Richard Serra, Brice Marden, Chuck Close, and Agnes Martin. Hearing these artists talk about art really was educational,” she says. Kertess left the gallery in 1975 to become a writer, and Boone decided to strike out on her own. “For every artist I ended up showing, I went to a thousand studios. Slowly, I put together a group.” Here, she is pictured with Eric Fischl (center) and Werner at Fischl’s 1985 solo show at Kunsthalle Basel.

    Boone attending a Christophe de Menil fashion show at the Palladium, in 1985.

    Patrick McMullan/Getty Images

    Boone’s first brush with the press had come in 1974, when a young Anna Wintour asked to include her in a Harpers & Queen story on stylish young New York women. “I told her, ‘Please don’t write about me, because I don’t want to be talked about in terms of my clothes. I want to open my gallery.’ ” Nonetheless, Boone paid attention to fashion. “It started with Armani. I, and a lot of other dealers, wore the low-key gray.” She developed a taste for Chanel when she found a trove of vintage couture suits in her size at auction. “I bought one or two. Tina Chow bought the rest of them, like, 30. Then Lagerfeld took over Chanel, and I wore that most of the time.”

    Boone and Julian Schnabel in 1980.

    Photo by Bob Kiss

    Julian Schnabel’s first solo show in New York, at Boone’s gallery in 1979, was a breakthrough for both artist and gallerist. Previously, Schnabel had worked as a cook at the trendy Ocean Club restaurant. (David Salle, another of Boone’s artists, also cooked there.) Schnabel’s plate paintings—literally paintings on broken plates affixed to a canvas—marked a break from the minimalism of the 1970s. “It was just something completely different,” Boone says.

    DAVID X PRUTTING/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

    Schnabel’s defection from Boone’s gallery to Pace, in 1984, was her first major setback. “I was heartbroken,” she says. Here, she poses with Schnabel’s son Vito at his gallery show in 2008. “It shows you life is just a circle of events. Hopefully, the good outweighs the bad.”

    New York magazine and Vox Media, LLC

    A 1982 New York magazine cover on the booming art market named Boone “The New Queen of the Art Scene.” The city had emerged from bankruptcy, and suddenly money was flowing into the art world. The article painted Boone as a new type of gallerist, one always ready to pour a glass of champagne or make 10 phone calls to close a sale. “I kind of blocked it out,” she says. “I became a symbol. But, listen, a lot of young women, like Thelma Golden, came up to me and said, ‘I wanted to go into the arts because of seeing that cover.’ ” She credits Wintour, then working as New York’s fashion editor, for her inclusion.

    Fairchild Archive/Penske Media via Getty Images

    In the 1980s, a magazine asked a selection of gallerists how they celebrated a big sale. Most said with champagne or food. Boone said she bought a new pair of shoes. Her reputation as a shoe lover has followed her ever since. “Someone told me Warhol read that. Then I got my first invitation to lunch at the Factory,” she says. “I do like shoes, because they’re about moving forward. And particularly being a woman in what was still a man’s world, it was like taking steps.”

    Boone with Parker Posey and Posey in the film Basquiat.

    Left: Marion Curtis/Starpix/Shutterstock. Right: Eleventh Street Prod/Miramax/Kobal/Shutterstock

    Parker Posey with Boone, played a fictionalized version of the gallerist in Schnabel’s 1996 film, Basquiat (right). Boone likes to separate herself from the character: “Parker asked me some things, but she pretty much did her own thing.” Even so, Boone is a fan of both the actor (“I wish she could play me in real life”) and the film. “This is Julian’s story about what he thinks of me, Jean-Michel, and himself. It’s a good movie because he’s a painter. A lot of the problem with movies about artists is believability.”

    Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan, photos by Elisabeth Bernstein

    Initially, Boone and her band of artists were dismissed as a fad. “I never really listened to that,” says Boone. “I just had to keep doing serious shows.” Her 2025 exhibition at Lévy Gorvy Dayan presents the people she worked with as the definitive 1980s American artists.

    Boone with collector Stan Cohen on opening night of her 2025 exhibition.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    The exhibition includes a Barbara Kruger silkscreen bearing the phrase: what me worry? “I’ve shown that work three different times, and it’s never looked as good as it does here.”

    Boone with Pharrell Williams and the artist KAWS in 2013.

    Neil Rasmus/BFA/Shutterstock

    The VIPs who have shown up to Boone’s galleries on opening night include Steve Martin, Monica Lewinsky, Diane Sawyer, Bianca Jagger, Katie Couric, and David Bowie, among many more. Here, she poses with Pharrell Williams and the artist KAWS at the opening of a 2013 show she organized. Nonetheless, Boone never chases celebrities on opening night. “There should be a lot of energy focused on the art and the artists.”

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  • Previously unseen Renoir painting of his son sells for over $2 million at auction

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    A previously unknown work by French impressionist painter Auguste Renoir of his toddler son Jean sold for $2.08 million (1.8 million euros) at a Paris auction on Tuesday, the Drouot auction house told AFP.

    The oil painting — “L’enfant et ses jouets – Gabrielle et le fils de l’artiste, Jean” (“The Child and His Toys – Gabrielle and the artist’s son, Jean”) — had never been exhibited or sold before, though versions have been displayed in museums in Washington, D.C., and Paris, according to PBS.

    It belonged to Jean’s godmother, Jeanne Baudot, a friend and student of Renoir’s, who passed the painting on to her heirs.

    Believed to have been painted between 1890 and 1895, it features the artist’s second son, who went on to become an Oscar-winning filmmaker, shown sitting with his nanny.  

    People view Renoir’s painting, “The Child and His Toys – Gabrielle and the Artist’s Son, Jean,” in Paris on Nov. 7, 2025.

    Mohamad Salaheldin Abdelg Alsayed/Anadolu via Getty Images


    Pascal Perrin, an art historian and Renoir expert, lauded the “exceptional condition of the work, which has undergone no restoration,” while presenting the canvas.

    “We were particularly surprised by how fresh the painting was,” Perrin told PBS earlier this month. “In other words, it is a painting that has retained all of its colors perfectly, which has not been recanvassed, retouched or revarnished.” 

    Jean Renoir, born in 1894, went on to receive a Lifetime Achievement Academy Award in 1975, several years before he died at the age of 84. His works include the 1930s classic “La Grande Illusion,” which follows two French prisoners of war trying to escape German captivity during World War I.

    The painting of him as a child had been valued at 1-1.5 million euros and was acquired by an “international buyer,” Drouot said on Tuesday.

    “It is exceptional because, first of all, it is a masterclass of intimacy,” auctioneer Christophe Joron-Derem told PBS. “We see this very tender relationship between Jean and Gabrielle, who knows how to control the child so that Renoir can paint him.”

    The high-end art market has dipped in recent years, but lately, record-breaking sales have indicated a revival in demand.

    A self-portrait by celebrated Mexican artist Frida Kahlo sold for $54.66 million in New York last week, a record for a painting by a woman, two nights after a Gustav Klimt canvas fetched $236.4 million — a record for a modern art piece.

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  • The Winners and Losers of New York Auction Week

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    Courtesy of Alive.

    WINNER: BOOKSHELVES AND TABLES

    Christie’s had a somewhat controversial install of work from the collection of Stefan Edlis and Gael Neeson. Specialists hung one gallery almost identically to their Chicago apartment (sans the wraparound lakeside views) with the Cindy Sherman way up high and a Warhol above a fake fireplace. Very prominently featured were the couple’s furniture pieces, including two bookshelves by Diego Giacometti and two ultrarare Giacometti coffee tables. And when they came on the block at the evening sale, the two bookcases, one after another, commanded fierce bidding wars, flying past their high estimates, the functioning furniture outselling the paintings. It was a bit mystifying to watch multiple bidders chase one of the chicer Giacometti design grails on offer, a low table with fox heads, to a final price of $4.5 million, more than the Princes and the Peytons and many of the Warhols. These things are just part of the game these days. Appropriately enough, I walked into a collector’s living room this week, and there was a Giacometti table.

    WINNER: LAUDER WORK ON PAPER

    Not just the Klimt—basically all of the Leonard Lauder collection was out of reach for even a mega-collector with a ton of money in the bank. Which makes it all the more charming that, in the day sale, there were a few choice works on paper offered for a cheap-sounding four figures. Lauder bought them from galleries in the ’70s and ’80s: Elizabeth Murray and Joel Shapiro from Paula Cooper, and the Dorothea Rockburne from John Weber. This week, the works on paper all had an approachable low estimate of $5,000. They ended up selling for a lot more—nearly ten times that for the Murray as well as the Rockburne—but compared to the Klimt, still affordable-ish!

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    Nate Freeman

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  • Jane Birkin’s Actual Hermès Bag Will Be Auctioned to Fund Future Foundation

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    If you’ve ever wanted the famously exclusive Hermès Birkin bag, now’s your chance. On December 15, a Birkin 35 in black box calf leather with gold metal trim will be auctioned off by Orne Enchères at Hôtel Drouot in Paris.

    A status symbol featured on everything from Sex and the City to Real Housewives, the Birkin bag is named after late actor and singer Jane Birkin, who died on July 16, 2023. The specific bag being auctioned belonged to Birkin, who later gave it to her best friend, photographer Gabrielle Crawford. Crawford will donate the proceeds to help finance the “future Jane Birkin Foundation.” The bag is estimated to go for as much 100,000 to 120,000 euros.

    “It is in homage to this friendship, to the hectic adventure that was their life together, that Gabrielle has decided to entrust these souvenirs to the auction in order to continue Jane’s philanthropic battles and to create a foundation in her name,” reads a statement from Orne Enchères.

    According to the press release, the Birkin 35 in black box calf leather was “one of the first bags offered by Hermès” to Birkin. According to Crawford, Birkin used this bag every day for years and it “became a sort of mobile warehouse.”

    “Gifts from all over the world hung from the handles—bells, Japanese lucky charms,” the press release continues. “It weighed a ton. But she and it were inseparable. She never forgot it.” Eventually, Birkin gave it to Crawford, her best friend of nearly six decades.

    Crawford and Birkin met in 1964, at a photo shoot for the Daily Mail’s 1965 “Girls to Watch” promotion. “My friendship with Jane was unique and irreplaceable,” Crawford told Paris Match last year. “A true friend gives you self-confidence. We played that role for each other for 58 years…. She said I was her antidote to disaster.” Crawford wrote a 2024 biography of Birkin, C’est Jane, Birkin Jane.

    Le sac Birkin mis en vente par la maison Orne Enchères à l’Hôtel Drouot le 15 décembre 2025.Clemens Klenk

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    Valentine Ulgu-Servant

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