The Headlines
CALLING TIME. The director of Tate in London, Maria Balshaw, will step down in spring 2026 after almost a decade within the position, the establishment stated in a press launch. Balshaw, who joined in 2017 after main Manchester Artwork Gallery and the Whitworth, succeeded Nicholas Serota following his 29-year tenure. She referred to as her time at Tate a privilege and stated the establishment is nicely positioned for brand new management. Throughout her directorship, Balshaw oversaw main exhibitions together with “Van Gogh and Britain,” “Yoko Ono,” and “Sargent and Vogue.” Her remaining venture shall be a large-scale Tracey Emin survey at Tate Fashionable subsequent yr. Tate highlighted Balshaw’s efforts to diversify the gathering and develop its world scope, noting that membership grew to 150,000 underneath her management. Chair Roland Rudd praised her dedication to widening public entry to artwork and supporting a broader vary of artists. Balshaw’s departure comes amid monetary pressure. Tate has lately reduce about 40 jobs to scale back prices and is working with a deficit funds for 2024–25. Employees have staged walkouts over pay, citing poor working circumstances. Customer numbers additionally stay under pre-pandemic ranges, with important drops at Tate Fashionable, Tate Britain, and Tate St Ives.
GIMME THE LOOT. The Smithsonian Establishment’s Nationwide Museum of Asian Artwork stated it can return three Khmer Empire sculptures to Cambodia as a part of its dedication to eradicating unlawfully obtained objects from its assortment. The works—Head of Harihara, The Goddess Uma, and Prajnaparamita—are believed to have been looted greater than 50 years in the past throughout Cambodia’s civil battle. The New York Occasions studies that after Cambodian officers questioned the provenance of Khmer works within the museum’s holdings, curators reviewed acquisition recordsdata and located lacking export permits and proof that the objects had handed via recognized traffickers. In accordance with museum director Chase F. Robinson, the circumstances raised important moral considerations. The returns are the primary underneath a Smithsonian-wide coverage adopted in 2022 that urges all 21 museums to think about broader historic elements—together with colonial-era plunder and illicit commerce during times of warfare—when evaluating repatriation claims. Cambodia’s tradition ministry welcomed the Smithsonian’s openness, noting that a long time of unrest left the nation weak to looting. Officers at the moment are discussing methods for the works to stay on view via partnership agreements. The transfer aligns with comparable efforts on the Asian Artwork Museum in San Francisco, which is making ready to return 13 Cambodian objects linked to the late seller Douglas A. J. Latchford, whose community has been tied to widespread artwork trafficking.
The Digest
The US Senate unanimously permitted the Holocaust Expropriated Artwork Restoration (HEAR) Act of 2025 on December 10. The invoice renews and expands the unique 2016 laws, which is about to run out in 2026, and goals to assist heirs reclaim artwork looted through the Holocaust by extending the time they should file claims. [The Art Newspaper]
The UC Irvine Langson Orange County Museum has appointed Kathryn Kanjo as its new director. Kanjo, who has spent the previous 9 years as director and CEO of the Museum of Up to date Artwork San Diego, turns into the primary chief of the establishment, which was formally established in October. [Artforum]
A fire relationship again 400,000 years was found close to the village of Barnham in England. Warmth-shattered flint axes and two items of pyrite, thought to have been used to create sparks, had been additionally uncovered. [CNN]
ART SG, Southeast Asia’s main artwork honest, returns to Marina Bay Sands from January 23-25, and can mark the primary time it co-organizes and hosts boutique native honest S.E.A. Focus in the identical venue. [Ocula]
The Kicker
INSIDE THE TENT. With Artwork Basel Miami Seaside within the rearview mirror, the Observer’s Elisa Carollo takes a deeper take a look at the honest’s buzziest new part, Zero 10, devoted to digital artwork. Whereas the brand new part was a transparent vote of approval for a sector that has lengthy struggled for validation from the normal artwork world, Carollo speaks with main figures in digital artwork about what the sector would possibly acquire—or lose—from that integration. Decentralization, a brand new artwork ecosystem, and a really totally different viewers of collectors have all the time been central to digital artwork’s attraction. Is there a approach ahead that enables digital artwork to plug into Artwork Basel and different conventional artwork enterprises with out sacrificing these defining options? It’s anybody’s guess. However what is definite is that the crypto world has a mountain of liquidity that the artwork market may benefit from proper now.

