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Marlene Dumas sets record for most expensive artwork by living woman artist.

New York’s marquee spring auction week, which began on Monday, May 12th, has not been without its disappointments. But one bright spot lifted the mood at Christie’s 21st-century evening sale on Wednesday, May 14th: Marlene Dumas’s Miss January (1997)—a portrait of a blonde woman nude from the waist down—soared to $13.63 million, setting a new auction record for an artwork by a living woman artist. (All prices include fees.)

The previous record for a living woman artist was held by Propped (1992) by Jenny Saville, which sold for £9.5 million ($12.69 million) at Sotheby’s London in 2018. The sale is still around $77.44 million less than the record-holding work by a living male artist: Jeff Koons’s Rabbit (1986), which sold at Christie’s for $91.07 million in 2019.

Wednesday’s 21st-century evening sale at Christie’s brought in a total of $96.46 million, pushing the house’s spring total to $626.5 million. The sale’s top lot was Baby Boom (1982) by Jean-Michel Basquiat, which sold for $23.41 million. This work, depicting three figures in the artist’s signature style amid frenetic strokes of blue paint, was created in the same year as his most expensive paintings, including Untitled (1982), which set the artist’s auction record when it sold for $110.48 million at Sotheby’s in 2017.

Tension rose among market-watchers early in the week, perhaps set off by the last-minute withdrawal of Andy Warhol’s Big Electric Chair (1967–68), which carried an undisclosed low estimate of around $30 million, at Christie’s 20th-century sale on May 13th. Nine lots were withdrawn from Sotheby’s 20th-century sale on May 13th. Four lots were withdrawn at Christie’s 21st-century evening sale, including an unguaranteed Christopher Wool painting with an estimate of $3.5 million to $5.5 million.

Three of the four records set at Christie’s on Wednesday were by women artists. Simone Leigh’s Sentinel IV (2020) sold for $5.73 million, surpassing her previous record set by Las Meninas II (2019), which sold for $3.08 million at Sotheby’s in 2023. Emma McIntyre’s Up bubbles her amorous breath (2021) sold for $201,600. This smashed the New Zealand–based artist’s previous auction record, set by If there is light that has weight (2021), which sold at Christie’s in 2024 for £100,800 ($126,147).

The fourth auction record set at Wednesday night’s sale was for Louis Fratino’s You and Your Things (2022), which sold for $756,000. The artist’s previous record was held by An Argument (2021), which sold for $730,800 at Sotheby’s in 2022.

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Esaí Alfredo’s Oil Paintings Merge Mysterious Narratives with ‘Miami Vice’ Noir

Esaí Alfredo’s Oil Paintings Merge Mysterious Narratives with ‘Miami Vice’ NoirCinematography and a sense of wonder play central roles in large-scale, enigmatic oil paintings.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Esaí Alfredo’s Oil Paintings Merge Mysterious Narratives with ‘Miami Vice’ Noir appeared first on Colossal.

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Christie’s in New York Sees Records for Female Artists, The Met is Gifted 6,500 Artworks, Paris Cultural Center Short-Changed Over Migrant Occupation: Morning Links for May 15, 2025

Here’s what we’re reading this morning, folks.
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Shepard Fairey Drops New 2 Colorway “DEI-TY” Screenprint

Shepard Fairey Drops New 2 Colorway
Shepard Fairey is dropping a new print today, Thursday, May 15 at 10am PST, with“DEI-TY” via ObeyGiant. The 2-colorway edition “critiques the dismantling of diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts in the U.S., directly referencing the Trump-era rollback of DEI programs. Fairey’s classic iconography, paired with this timely political message, feels like a continuation of his long-standing legacy of using art as protest.” 
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Grace Wales Bonner and Lubaina Himid are among 36 medalists for Art Basel Awards 2025.

On May 15th, Art Basel announced 36 medalists for the inaugural Art Basel Awards, a new initiative recognizing outstanding individuals and institutions shaping contemporary culture. The honorees include some of today’s most revered artists and other creative leaders, including David Hammons, Lubaina Himid, Joan Jonas, Betye Saar, fashion designer Grace Wales Bonner, and cultural theorist Saidiya Hartman. The final 12 gold medals will be awarded in December during Art Basel Miami Beach.

Presented in partnership with BOSS, the 2025 Art Basel Awards span nine categories, three of which are devoted to artists: emerging, established, and icon. Six additional categories include cross-disciplinary creators, curators, museums and institutions, patrons, allies, and media and storytellers.

Speaking at a press dinner in New York in April, Art Basel CEO Noah Horowitz framed the awards as part of a larger vision for the company outside its famed art fairs: “When we go beyond the moments of the fairs, we believe that Art Basel can be more active—and in many ways has a responsibility to be more active—to serve the community of artists, galleries, museums, institutions, collectors,” he said. “The spirit of the awards really was about how to further support the progression of artists’ careers, how to recognize excellence in the industry.” He added that the art world does not have a leading awards platform, “so we’re aspiring to fill that void.”

While many art fairs distribute awards to recognize exhibiting artists and galleries, often through sponsorship from brands and institutions, the Art Basel Awards are novel as a standalone initiative with year-round programming. In the art world, the most prestigious accolades for artists are typically awarded by foundations and institutions, such as the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale, the MacArthur “Genius Grant,” and the Turner Prize.

Lubaina Himid, who won the Turner Prize in 2017 and will represent the U.K. at the 2026 Venice Biennale, is recognized in the Art Basel Awards’s icon category. A pioneer of the British Black Arts Movement, the artist is known for her paintings and sculptures that reframe historical narratives. In the established category, Delcy Morelos is honored for her expansive earthworks, which have transformed spaces like Dia Chelsea in New York and the Arsenale at the 2022 Venice Biennale with sensorial installations rooted in Indigenous traditions. Among the emerging voices is Meriem Bennani, whose witty video installations and sculptures draw on the flow of global culture in the digital age.

Medalists in the cross-disciplinary creators category include the acclaimed fashion designer Grace Wales Bonner, who was prominently featured at the 2025 Met Gala; Italian design studio Formafantasma, which is recognized for its ecologically conscious work; and writer and theorist Saidiya Hartman, who was named for her influential work on cultural memory and history.

The inaugural cohort of medalists was selected by an international jury of major museum leaders and curators, chaired by Vincenzo de Bellis, Art Basel’s director of fairs and exhibition platforms. Jurors included Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, president and director of the Sharjah Art Foundation; Hans Ulrich Obrist, artistic director of the Serpentine Galleries in London; and the late Koyo Kouoh, who passed away last week and was executive director of Zeitz MOCAA in Cape Town and curator of the 61st Venice Biennale. The jury selected the 36 medalists from a pool of nominees submitted by a global network of anonymous individuals.

De Bellis noted that, while the awards are cross-disciplinary, the emphasis on artists is intentional. “This structure may evolve over time,” he told Artsy, “but we wanted to begin by showing just how much we care about artists.”

The 36 medalists will be celebrated during Art Basel’s flagship fair in Switzerland in mid-June. They will take part in the first Art Basel Awards Summit, a public day of talks and panels. This December, during Art Basel Miami Beach, the medalists will vote among themselves to determine the 12 gold medalists.

A total of $300,000 will be distributed among the gold medalists through unrestricted honorariums, philanthropic gifts, and public commissions. According to Horowitz and de Bellis, the program is designed not only to honor excellence but also to foster artists’ careers, cross-disciplinary collaboration, and mentorship.

The full list of 2025 Art Basel Awards Medalists, organized by category, follows:

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Linda Morey-Burrows on leadership, longevity, and calling out bias with a smile

As part of our Leadership theme, we sat down with Linda Morey-Burrows, founder of MoreySmith and StudioMorey, to talk about staying the course, leading through complexity, and navigating decades of…
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Maurizio Cattelan “Endless Sunday” at Centre Pompidou-Metz

An endless Sunday, when time is suspended between leisure and rebellion. To celebrate its 15th anniversary, the Centre Pompidou-Metz is inviting the general public to take a vertiginous dive into the history of art and contemporary thought through the Endless Sunday, an exceptional exhibition that will be taking over the entire museum. More than 400