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  • At Salon Art + Design 2025, Innovation, Form and Function Meet Market Enthusiasm

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    Salon Art + Design’s 14th edition runs through Monday, November 10, 2025. Miguel McSongwe/BFA.com

    Beautifully curated and seamlessly uniting art and design, Salon Art + Design 2025 unfolded once again within the grand setting of the Park Avenue Armory, offering a natural elegance few fairs achieve. It’s an event that never feels forced or overly eclectic; here, 50 global exhibitors assembled a calibrated and elegant mix celebrating craftsmanship at the crossroads of tradition and innovation. The fair maintains the thrill of discovery, offering rare and exquisite objects that require no connoisseur’s credentials to appreciate—especially when the Upper East Side crowd begins shipping champagne. As former director now Chairwoman Jill Bokor told Observer “The atmosphere of the Park Avenue Armory is perfect for an event like Salon, because it, in itself, is a curated work of design.”

    At opening night on November 6, that atmosphere—along with the fair’s hallmark elegance—was palpable in every corner, from the Art Deco treasures at Bernard Goldberg Fine Art radiating the charm of the Belle Époque across continents (several of which sold by the opening night) to the ancient South Arabian and Byzantine pieces at Ariadne, which extended the fair’s reach far beyond the 20th Century into the timeless spirituality of the ancient world.

    Although design and furniture have been among the collectible categories most affected by Trump’s tariffs—some of which are set to rise to 50 percent in January 2026—dealers at Salon are still presenting an impressive array of modern and contemporary design from across geographies. Several gallerists admitted that their participation was possible only because their pieces had already been imported, noting that the U.S. market is likely to feel the full impact of the new duties in the coming months. Under the executive order signed by Trump on September 29, a 25 percent tariff applies to wood imports and derivative products—including upholstered furniture and kitchen cabinets—effective starting October 14. Imports of softwood timber and lumber face a 10 percent rate, while upholstered wooden products incur a 25 percent duty. Kitchen cabinets and their components are likewise taxed at 25 percent per order, with rates set to climb in January 2026 to 30 percent for upholstered furniture and 50 percent for cabinetry and related parts. This comes at a moment of remarkable strength for the market for collectible design and decorative arts: according to ArtTactic, the category grew 20.4 percent in 2025 to reach $172 million, up from $143 million the previous year.

    Visitors seated around a large wooden table amid warm lighting and vintage furniture during Salon Art + Design 2025.Visitors seated around a large wooden table amid warm lighting and vintage furniture during Salon Art + Design 2025.
    Salon Art + Design showcases the pinnacle of design, presenting the world’s finest vintage, modern and contemporary pieces alongside blue-chip 20th-century artworks. Miguel McSongwe/BFA.com

    High attendance at Salon Art + Design’s opening night reaffirmed not only the enduring allure of the fair’s finely curated intersection of art and design but also the growing breadth of its audience—one increasingly active within this more fluid and inclusive space where disciplines meet. The evening drew an exceptional roster of collectors, curators and tastemakers, described by many as “a who’s who of design and art.” The aisles buzzed with familiar figures from the worlds of culture and collecting, including Jeremy Anderson, Paul Arnhold, Alex Assouline, Jill Bokor, Elizabeth Callender, Rafael de Cárdenas, Lady Liliana Cavendish, Beth Rudin DeWoody, Linda Fargo, Alessia, Fe and Paola Fendi, Douglas Friedman, John and Christine Gachot, Monique Gibson, Nathalie de Gunzburg, Maja Hoffmann, Mathieu Lehanneur, Dominique Lévy, Ben and Hillary Macklowe, Lee Mindel, Carlos Mota, Dr. Daniella Ohad, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, Claire Olshan, Bryan O’Sullivan, Nina Runsdorf, Irina Shayk, Robert Stilin, Sara Story, Indré Rockefeller, Emmanuel Tarpin, Jamie Tisch, Nicola Vassell, Stellene Volandes, Emily Weiss and Charles and Daphne Zana, among many others.

    In one of the first rows, Converso Modern’s booth paired Alexander Calder’s vibrant tapestries—crafted in Guatemala and Nicaragua—with a tribute to Pennsylvania’s New Hope Modern Craft Movement, the 1960s community that bridged traditional craftsmanship with modern design. Highlights included sculptural metal and carved wood pieces by Phillip Lloyd Powell and Paul Evans, shown alongside the elemental modernism of George Nakashima.

    Awarded this year’s Best Booth, the London-based Crosta Smith Gallery presented a moody, cinematic homage to 1930s Art Deco—refined, atmospheric and irresistibly elegant. Marking the centenary of the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, the defining event of the Art Deco era, the gallery presented a selection of impeccably preserved works in wood, lacquer and galuchat celebrating a century of decorative mastery. Each piece reflected the sophistication of the 1920s and 1930s, including exquisite creations by Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann, Katsu Hamanaka and Clément Rousseau. Particularly striking was a pair of lacquer panels by Hamanaka depicting Adam and Eve dancing in nature with quintessential Deco elegance—the sinuous lines and subtle symbolism balanced by the sensual tension of intertwined snakes. Equally rare was Ruhlmann’s méridienne in amboyna burl wood, gilt bronze and silk bourrette upholstery—a unique variant of the Marozeau model commissioned by the Borderie family, epitomizing his sculptural refinement. Founded in 2018 by Marine Edith Crosta and Daniel Smith after collecting Art Deco while furnishing their home in the south of France, the gallery is now participating in all leading design fairs, including PAD London.

    Crosta Smith Gallery’s Art Deco installation at Salon Art + Design 2025 featuring lacquer panels of Adam and Eve, vintage furniture, and soft lighting.Crosta Smith Gallery’s Art Deco installation at Salon Art + Design 2025 featuring lacquer panels of Adam and Eve, vintage furniture, and soft lighting.
    Crosta Smith Gallery at Salon Art + Design 2025. Crosta Smith Gallery

    Nearby, Downtown-based Bossa Furniture continued to serve as a bridge between the U.S. and Brazil, showcasing the warmth of modernist Brazilian design through an intergenerational dialogue between Joaquim Tenreiro—one of the founders of modern Brazilian design—and contemporary designer Lucas Recchia, accented with a vintage stool by Lina Bo Bardi. Returning for their second year at the fair and fresh from Design Miami/Paris, Bossa sold a unique chaise by Joaquim Tenreiro during the preview, priced at $90,000, along with two pieces by Recchia.

    Many exhibitors adopted a curatorial approach that seamlessly integrated art and design, blurring distinctions between collectible furniture, fine art and historical masterpieces. At Incollect, a captivating juxtaposition paired modernist and contemporary design with an Anish Kapoor reflective sculpture and playful Picasso ceramics, creating a lively dialogue between modern icons.

    Elsewhere, Galerie Gabriel skillfully paired modern design with works by Sam Falls, while several booths leaned fully into fine art. Opera Gallery, with its global presence, offered an interior-friendly selection of blue-chip names designed to appeal to Salon’s broad audience. Standouts included a striking George Condo drawing priced around $100,000, a sensuous Picasso work on paper and sculptures by Manolo Valdés—among them a wooden reinterpretation of his Menina series inspired by Velázquez. Another highlight was Carlos Cruz-Diez’s optically mesmerizing Physichromie Panam 112, shown alongside pieces by Juan Genovés, Thomas Dillon, Keith Haring, Cho Sung-Hee, Jae Ko and André Lanskoy.

    The 60-year-old Galerie Gmurzynska, specializing in 20th-century modern and contemporary classics, impressed with a monumental Louise Nevelson work, City Series (1974), spanning an entire wall and exemplifying her mature phase of assemblage sculpture. The booth also included three mixed-media collages by Nevelson, a rare early wood panel by Robert Indiana from his Coenties Slip period and Yves Klein’s F 48 (1961), a luminous piece from his Monochrome und Feuer exhibition. A rare surviving box construction by Dan Basen from the 1960s New York avant-garde rounded out the presentation. “We love taking part in Salon Art + Design. The blend of art, design and jewelry is truly exceptional, a great experience. The opening was extremely well attended, and we have sold one work so far,” said gallery director Isabelle Bscher, who represents the third generation of the Swiss-born Gmurzynska family at Salon Art + Design 2025.

    New York-based Onishi Gallery, known for championing contemporary Japanese art and design, presented “Clay, Iron, and Fire: The Bizen and Setouchi Heritage,” a striking tribute to Japan’s enduring craft traditions. The exhibition celebrated the intertwined legacies of Bizen ceramics—born 900 years ago from the region’s iron-rich clay and revered by tea masters for their organic textures—and Osafune swordmaking, famed for its refined curvature, subtle grain and balance. With works ranging from a $2,900 sword to ceramic masterpieces priced between $30,000 and $50,000, the booth embodied Japan’s devotion to transforming natural materials into lasting beauty, infused with the timeless aesthetics of wabi-sabi and ichi-go ichi-e.

    Similarly devoted to the Japanese spirit of craftsmanship, the minimalist, clean booth of Ippodo Gallery explored the meeting point between Eastern sensibility and Western material practice, featuring Ymer & Malta’s pioneering resin light sculptures (Paris), Akira Hara’s intricate Murrine glass works (Venice) and Andoche Praudel’s tactile ceramics (Loubignac). Examining materiality as a universal language, their works dissolved the boundary between art and function, finding beauty in tactile intelligence. By the close of opening day at 9 p.m., the gallery had sold more than $60,000 worth of art. “The preview event drew a large number of enthusiastic visitors, and it’s clear that the fair has grown and evolved since last year,” Churou Wang, the gallery’s associate director, told Observer. “We’re looking forward to seeing how the coming days unfold.”

    Minimalist gallery display with neutral walls, ceramic vessels on white pedestals, and soft organic lighting at Salon Art + Design 2025.Minimalist gallery display with neutral walls, ceramic vessels on white pedestals, and soft organic lighting at Salon Art + Design 2025.
    Ippodo Gallery. Courtesy Ippodo Gallery

    On the contemporary design front, London’s Gallery FUMI stood out with a presentation celebrating its new representation of San Francisco-based artist and designer Jesse Schlesinger, coinciding with his first-ever design exhibition, Pacific, at the gallery’s London flagship. Ahead of a dedicated presentation at FOG Design + Art in San Francisco, FUMI showcased Schlesinger’s sculptural furniture—works merging nature, philosophy and material consciousness. A second-generation carpenter deeply rooted in the Bay Area, Schlesinger crafts with locally salvaged wood, blending ceramics, bronze, glass and wood into meditations on texture, surface and function.

    London’s Charles Burnand Gallery, which specializes in collectible design and lighting, presented a captivating booth that reflected the growing shift in taste toward design rooted in organic sensitivity and material depth. Its curated presentation, “Liminal Monuments: The Edge of Becoming,” unfolded as an elegant choreography of designers across geographies, exploring form in a state of becoming—continuous growth, evolution and transformation. Every object in the booth felt interconnected and evocative of natural structures, from plant life to geology, offering a contemporary design language that draws inspiration from nature to rediscover the soul of materials and humanity’s relationship with them.

    Particularly outstanding among the booth’s luminous creations was Midnight Tulip by Ian Milnes—a meditation on the transience of beauty, capturing a fleeting moment suspended between bloom and disintegration. Inspired by the 16th-century phenomenon of “broken tulips” and crafted from sycamore, walnut, cherry and resin, its marquetry petals appeared to drift outward in slow motion, their blackened, watercolor-like surfaces evoking both bloom and decay—embodying a space where fragility and radiance coexist. Equally striking were the organically graceful, cocoon-like wire-crochet lamps by Korean designer Kyeok Kim, floating in the corner like luminous cellular formations that connected the micro- and macrocosmos through shared patterns and order. Handcrafted from fine metal mesh, these sculptural lights existed in a liminal space—both soft and metallic, airy yet architectural—expressing fragility and endurance in perfect balance.

    Gilded bronze Roman bust displayed in Phoenix Ancient Art’s booth at Salon Art + Design 2025, surrounded by classical sculptures and reliefs.Gilded bronze Roman bust displayed in Phoenix Ancient Art’s booth at Salon Art + Design 2025, surrounded by classical sculptures and reliefs.
    Alexander the Great as Apollo, 1st century B.C.-1st century A.D, presented by Phoenix Ancient Art. Gilded bronze, obsidian and gypsum alabaster eyes. Photo: Elisa Carollo

    And as always, Salon Art + Design offered museum-quality treasures at the top tier of the market. A standout among them was Alexander the Great, presented by Phoenix Ancient Art—a gilded bronze Roman sculpture from the 1st Century with obsidian and alabaster eyes that radiated the aura of a rediscovered world. Believed to be one of only two known portraits of Alexander—the other housed in Herculaneum—the work was a rare masterpiece of ancient craftsmanship.

    Todd Merrill Studio’s booth also bridged designers across geographies, uniting leading artists from North America, Europe and South Korea, reaffirming the gallery’s reputation for material innovation and sculptural form. Highlights included Amsterdam-based Maarten Vrolijk’s Sakura Pendant Lighting—a luminous evolution of his Sakura Vessels—and German artist Markus Haase’s new bronze and onyx works, including a monumental chandelier and reimagined Circlet series pieces that merged sculpture and illumination through exceptional craftsmanship.

    While some of the biggest names in collectible design—Carpenters Workshop, Friedman Benda, Salon 94 and Nilufar—were absent this year, likely due to the proximity of the Paris and Miami fairs, their absence was hardly felt. Instead, Salon Art + Design 2025 unfolded with a rare sense of cohesion and restraint, offering a stage where eras and disciplines engaged in a fluid dialogue that held at its center a timeless sense of beauty born from the convergence of material awareness, craftsmanship and innovation—qualities that defined the fair’s most striking functional yet evocative objects.

    A gold-walled booth at Salon Art + Design 2025 featuring sculptural lighting, curved cream sofas, abstract paintings, and collectible design pieces.A gold-walled booth at Salon Art + Design 2025 featuring sculptural lighting, curved cream sofas, abstract paintings, and collectible design pieces.
    Todd Merrill Studio at Salon Art + Design 2025. Miguel McSongwe/BFA.com

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    At Salon Art + Design 2025, Innovation, Form and Function Meet Market Enthusiasm

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • Memory, Matter and Minimalism: Inside Dia Art Foundation’s 2025 Fall Night

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    The Dia Art Foundation’s annual Fall Night was a celebration of Melvin Edwards and Meg Webster. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    For more than half a century, Dia Art Foundation has redefined how art can be supported, exhibited and preserved—particularly when it comes to large-scale, long-term, or site-specific works that fall outside the confines of traditional museums and commercial galleries. On Monday (Nov. 3), its annual Fall Night once again celebrated that mission with an elegant dinner that drew a remarkable number of artists—far more than most New York institutions can claim—reminding everyone that artists remain firmly at the center of Dia’s vision.

    Observer spotted an impressive roster of artists shaping the language of contemporary art today, including a particularly smiling and socially engaged Marina Abramović (currently preparing for a major exhibition at the upcoming Venice Biennale), alongside Doug AItken, Tony Cokes, Mary Corman, Jung Hee Choi, N. Dash, Torkwase Dyson, Miles Greenberg, Rachel Harrison, Tehching Hsieh, EJ Hill, Anne Imhof, Suzanne Jackson, Vera Lutter, Nate Lowman, Jill Magid, Tyler Mitchell, Tiona Nekkia McClodden, Kent Monkman, Camille Norment, Precious Okoyomon, Nicolas Party, Howardena Pindell, Alan Ruiz, Martha Rosler, Gedi Sibony, Haim Steinbach, Amy Sillman, Pat Steir, Richard Tuttle, Cheyney Thompson and William T. Williams.

    The evening began with a cocktail reception and exhibition viewing at Dia Chelsea, where guests admired 12 + 2Duane Linklater’s first major U.S. commission. His monumental clay animal forms inhabited the space, evoking a primal connection to matter. These gigantic creatures seemed to emerge from an elemental prehistory, before and beyond civilization’s structural and rational constraints. In one of the rooms, a circular wall relief of swirling clay channeled a sense of cosmic gesture—an improvised cosmology unfolding in earthy motion, connecting the microcosm of human making with the broader entropic order that regulates all forces between energy and matter.

    The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were also open for guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater.The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were also open for guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater.
    The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were open to guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Guests then moved to 547 West 26th Street, where long, white linen-decked tables awaited. Dinner began with welcoming remarks from Nathalie de Gunzburg, chair of Dia’s board. Next, a radiant Jessica Morgan, Dia’s director, then took the dais. “Paris was a blast,” she said, beginning her speech with genuine enthusiasm following her just-concluded art week abroad, where she opened “Minimal” at La Bourse de Commerce in Paris. The show, a collaboration between the Pinault Collection and Dia, brought part of Dia’s holdings to Europe for the first time, pairing them with a rarely seen selection of works from the French magnate’s collection. The show celebrated the aesthetics and philosophy of Minimalism while tracing its global evolution and enduring influence.

    The night’s honorees, Melvin Edwards and Meg Webster, both hold deep significance for Dia. Their concurrent presentations Upstate spotlight how each pioneering practice anticipated many of today’s most urgent artistic concerns. Artist Sanford Biggers delivered a heartfelt tribute to Edwards, reflecting on their shared Houston roots and the profound emotional and artistic bond between them. His remarks captured how Edwards has imbued the rigorous formalism of his welded metal assemblage—steel, chain, barbed wire, machine parts—with a uniquely human and political charge: abstract forms that pulse with the weight of history and memory, between oppression and liberation.

    Next, architect Steven Holl paid homage to Webster, tracing how her practice infused Land Art and process-based sculpture with a prescient ecological consciousness. Merging nature and culture, matter and energy, her works embrace the entropic principle of impermanence and transformation while prompting reflection on sustainability and humanity’s relationship with the earth. Webster’s art—poised between the elemental and the formal, the human-shaped and the naturally evolving—feels particularly timely today, as she enjoys a long-overdue moment in the international spotlight, from Dia’s Beacon presentation to her installations currently on view in the frescoed rotunda of La Bourse de Commerce.

    De Gunzburg (with her husband, Charles de Gunzburg) and Morgan were joined by trustees Sandra J. Brant, J. Patrick Collins, Carol Finley, Jahanaz Jaffer, Dana Su Lee, Sara Morishige and Cordy Ryman. The crowd also included collectors, philanthropists and cultural figures such as Amy Astley, Stewart Butterfield and Jen Rubio, Lynne Cooke, Lisa Dennison, Fairfax Dorn, Michael Fisch, Molly Gochman, Steven Holl, Stephanie Ingrassia, Hiroyuki Maki, Courtney J. Martin, Sukey Novogratz, Monique Péan, Loring Randolph, Scott Rothkopf, Axel Rüger, Salman Rushdie, Bernard and Almine Ruiz-Picasso, Olivier Sarkozy, Ivy Shapiro, Allan Schwartzman, Akio Tagawa, Ann Temkin, Helen and Peter Warwick and Sara Zewde.

    And of course, no Dia gathering would be complete without members of the gallery world who have long supported the foundation’s mission: Paula Cooper, Lucas Cooper, Arne Glimcher, Alexander Gray, Carol Greene, Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, José Kuri, Dominique Lévy, Alex Logsdail, Siniša Mačković, Ales Ortuzar, Sukanya Rajaratnam, Thaddaeus Ropac, Almine Rech-Picasso and Kara Vander Weg were all among the evening’s guests. Below, we offer a glimpse into the night’s most memorable moments.

    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg and Marina Abramović

    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg, Marina Abramović.Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg, Marina Abramović.
    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg and Marina Abramović. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Dominique Lévy and Sanford Biggers

    Dominique Lévy and Sanford Biggers. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Steven Holl

    Steven Holl paid his tribute to Meg Webster.Steven Holl paid his tribute to Meg Webster.
    Steven Holl. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Meg Webster

    Meg Webster.Meg Webster.
    Meg Webster. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Howardena Pindell and Ann Temkin

    Howardena Pindell and Ann Temkin. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Amy Astley

    A blonde woman in a dinner.A blonde woman in a dinner.
    Amy Astley. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Molly Epstein and Hugh Hayden

    Molly Epstein, Hugh Hayden.Molly Epstein, Hugh Hayden.
    Molly Epstein and Hugh Hayden. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Nicolas Party

    Nicolas Party.Nicolas Party.
    Nicolas Party. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman and Lucas Cooper

    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman, Lucas Cooper.Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman, Lucas Cooper.
    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman and Lucas Cooper. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Axel Rüger, Cathy Ho Lee and Scott Rothkopf

    Axel Rüger, Cathy Ho Lee and Scott Rothkopf. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso

    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso.Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso.
    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Scott Rothkopf and Shelley Fox Aarons

    Scott Rothkopf, Shelley Fox Aarons.Scott Rothkopf, Shelley Fox Aarons.
    Scott Rothkopf and Shelley Fox Aarons. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti and Charles de Gunzburg

    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti, Charles de Gunzburg.Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti, Charles de Gunzburg.
    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti and Charles de Gunzburg. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley and Sukanya Rajaratnam

    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley, Sukanya Rajaratnam.Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley, Sukanya Rajaratnam.
    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley and Sukanya Rajaratnam. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Li Xin and Thaddaeus Ropac

    Li Xin, Thaddaeus RopacLi Xin, Thaddaeus Ropac
    Li Xin and Thaddaeus Ropac. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed and Tiona Nekkia McClodden

    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed, Tiona Nekkia McClodden.Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed, Tiona Nekkia McClodden.
    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed and Tiona Nekkia McClodden. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Akio Tagawa and Karen LaGatta

    Two asian looking people in a dinner.Two asian looking people in a dinner.
    Akio Tagawa and Karen LaGatta. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Sarah Gavlak

    Sarah Gavlak.Sarah Gavlak.
    Sarah Gavlak. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    David Israel, Maynard Monrow and Julie Hillman

    David Israel, Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman.David Israel, Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman.
    David Israel, Maynard Monrow and Julie Hillman. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Joost Elffers and Pat Steir

    Pat Steir, Joost Elffers.Pat Steir, Joost Elffers.
    Joost Elffers and Pat Steir. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    William T. Williams and Alexander Gray

    Alexander Gray, William T. Williams.Alexander Gray, William T. Williams.
    William T. Williams and Alexander Gray. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Paul Richert-Garcia, David Lewis and Barry X Ball

    Paul Richert-Garcia, David Lewis and Barry X Ball. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Dana Lee and Heather Harmon

    Dana Lee, Heather Harmon in front of a clay animal sculptureDana Lee, Heather Harmon in front of a clay animal sculpture
    Dana Lee and Heather Harmon. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Vanessa Yoa and Brandon Chen

    Vanessa Yoa, Brandon Chen in front of a clay sculpture.Vanessa Yoa, Brandon Chen in front of a clay sculpture.
    Vanessa Yoa and Brandon Chen. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Maynard Monrow and Stephanie Ingrassia

    Maynard Monrow and Stephanie Ingrassia. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor and Jillian Brodie

    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor, Jillian Brodie.Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor, Jillian Brodie.
    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor and Jillian Brodie. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Tehching Hsieh and Hiroyuki Maki

    Tehching Hsieh, Hiroyuki Maki.Tehching Hsieh, Hiroyuki Maki.
    Tehching Hsieh and Hiroyuki Maki. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Jessica Morgan

    Jessica Morgan. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Memory, Matter and Minimalism: Inside Dia Art Foundation’s 2025 Fall Night

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    Elisa Carollo

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