The Mint Museum is proud to present a major exhibition exploring the artistic and cultural revolutions of 19th-century Europe. Renaissance, Romanticism, and Rebellion: European Art from the Smith-Naifeh Collection brings together more than 70 extraordinary paintings, sculptures, and works on paper—offering visitors a rare opportunity to view one of the most distinguished private collections of European art in the United States.
Art News
Young Maurice Golubov was an unlikely candidate to become a famous American artist. Born in 1905 in Vetka, a small town in Tsarist Russia to an Orthodox Jewish family. One of six children, he came into this world during a pogrom and his mother, with her newborn, sheltered in a basement for several days. When he was six he found a copy of Gustave Doré’s famous Le Grande bible de Tours (1866) in a barn, sumptuously illustrated with 241 wood engravings.
Gallery Henoch is pleased to present States of Being, a selection of works by Eric Zener. The scope of the paintings in this exhibition cannot be fully appreciated without reference to Zener’s larger body of art, which has characteristically involved the interplay between human beings and water.
203 Fine Art is pleased to present Second Wave: The Beginning of a Post-War Era, an exhibition that explores the lasting influence of artists who, supported by the GI Bill, helped shape the evolving artistic landscape of Taos, New Mexico in the years following World War II.
This September, Studio Shop Gallery, the oldest retail business in Burlingame and one of California’s longest-standing art galleries, celebrates a remarkable milestone: 110 years of connecting people with fine art, custom framing, and community. Established in 1915, the gallery has not only survived – it has flourished – through wars, challenging economic times, shifting cultural landscapes, and a rapidly evolving art market.
The June Kelly Gallery is pleased to open its 2025-2026 season with an exhibition of Karin Batten's resplendent abstract improvisations of color, texture, and crafty colocation of form. The title Swimming on Mars reflects the artist’s persistent fascination and engagement with the natural world during her travels and her love of water.
The Buffalo AKG announced that Northern Lights, a celebration of the boreal ecozone’s influence on Nordic and Canadian artists, will open at the museum on Friday, August 1, and will remain on view through January 12, 2026. The exhibition is jointly organized by the Buffalo AKG and the Fondation Beyeler, where it opened on January 26 in Basel, Switzerland.
The Tampa Museum of Art announces the opening of In a New Light: American Impressionism 1870–1940, Works from the Bank of America Collection, on view from August 7 through November 30, 2025. This sweeping exhibition brings together over 100 works by more than 75 artists to explore the evolution and uniquely American adaptation of Impressionism. The exhibition showcases the diversity, beauty, and depth of regional art colonies across the country, from New Hope and Taos to Carmel and Cape Ann.
Santa Fe Art Auction’s annual Native Market sale will be held this year from August 12th through 14th, prior to SWAIA’s Santa Fe Indian Market—a vibrant, renowned annual event and the largest market for Indigenous art in the world. Native Market will feature many fine works by Pueblo and Indigenous artists, spanning from traditional pieces from the mid-nineteenth century to contemporary art from Native artists practicing today, many of whom have exhibited and won awards at Indian Market.
Nestled against the Sangre de Cristo mountains in downtown Santa Fe, Nedra Matteucci Galleries is a 15,000 square-foot adobe building housing one of the most stunning collections in the region. Its prominence as a respected art institution and one-of-a-kind character has led to its legacy as a legendary Santa Fe landmark for over 50 years.