Categories
Art Fair - International - News

TEFAF Maastricht 2026: 276 galleries, 26 new entrants and a major event in the art market

Recognised as the world’s largest art fair, TEFAF Maastricht 2026 will return from 14 to 19 March 2026, with VIP access on 12 and 13 March. The event will bring together 276 international galleries at the Maastricht Exhibition & Conference Centre.

The fair will cover 7,000 years of art history, from antiquity to contemporary art. It remains a central venue for museum acquisitions, investment in premium art and the circulation of rare works.

Hallway at TEFAF Maastricht 2026 with visitors, international gallery booths, and the fair’s signature hanging floral installations. Magazine Art Mag
 ©Lorraine Bodewes

26 New Galleries Join the Main Fair: A Milestone Expansion for 2026

The 2026 edition introduces 26 new galleries, marking one of the most significant expansions in TEFAF’s recent history. These new participants will strengthen core sections including:

  • Paintings & Old Masters
  • Works on Paper
  • Modern & Contemporary Art
  • 20th- and 21st-Century Design
  • African, Oceanic & Tribal Arts

This growth underscores a rising global demand for curated, museum-quality works, while reflecting TEFAF’s commitment to excellence, diversity, and academic rigor

Central lounge area at TEFAF Maastricht 2026, with visitors moving between art galleries, floral installations, and exhibited works. Magazine ART MAG
 ©Lorraine Bodewes

TEFAF Focus 2026: 7 Curated Presentations Highlighting Iconic Artists and Rediscovered Legacies

In 2026, TEFAF Focus—the fair’s curated section introduced in 2024—will deepen its exploration of cross-disciplinary dialogues between art mediums and historical periods. Featured presentations include:

  • Galerie Thomas Schulte showcasing photography by Robert Mapplethorpe
  • TAFETA (UK) presenting the influential work of Ladi Kwali, a defining figure of Nigerian modernism, currently spotlighted at the Tate Modern
  • Demisch Danant highlighting the furniture and design innovations of Gerrit Rietveld

Focus 2026 will also explore themes such as minimalism, French realist traditions, and Scandinavian textile expertise, offering collectors new perspectives and curatorial insights.

Visitor viewing two contemporary abstract paintings in a gallery at TEFAF Maastricht 2026, featuring modern and Aboriginal art. published by Art Mag
D’Lan Contemporary Gallery ©Lorraine Bodewes

TEFAF Showcase 2026: Nine Emerging Galleries Shaping the Future of the Global Art Market

Since 2008, TEFAF Showcase has been the leading platform for emerging galleries poised to enter the high end of the market. In 2026, nine galleries with strong curatorial identities and international ambitions will participate:

  • AGO Projects ( Mexico)
  • Erik Bijzet Sculpture and Works of Art (Netherlands)
  • Galerie Boquet (France)
  • Dries Criel (Belgium)
  • DEVALS (France)
  • Van Herck – Eykelberg ( Belgium)
  • Roberti Fine Art ( UK)
  • Torres Nieto Fine Arts (Germany)
  • Trias Art Experts (Germany)

Their offerings span collectible 21st-century design, specialized sculpture, rediscovered Dutch Masters, Renaissance artworks, and modern minimalist dialogues—reinforcing Showcase as a predictor of future market leaders.

Visitor observing a large, intricately decorated antique Asian screen at TEFAF Maastricht 2026, the international fine art and antiques fair
Jorge Welsh Gallery  ©Lorraine Bodewes

Showcase Prize 2026 Powered by J.P. Morgan: A Key Indicator for Collectors and Institutions

For the third consecutive year, the J.P. Morgan Private Bank Showcase Prize will honor one outstanding participant whose vision, expertise, and impact elevate the global art ecosystem. Widely regarded as an indicator of future success, the prize strengthens the section’s role as a strategic platform within TEFAF.

TEFAF Summit 2026: A Global Forum on Culture, Policy, and the Future of Heritage

On March 16, 2026, TEFAF will host its third Annual Summit at the MECC in partnership with the Netherlands National Commission for UNESCO. This major international event will examine the theme:

“Beyond Economic Impact: Rethinking Culture in Public Policy.”

More than 30 international experts, cultural policymakers, institutional leaders, economists, and art-world decision-makers will participate in high-level roundtables and exchanges.

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Overview of TEFAF Maastricht 2026 with colorful hanging floral installations, visitors, and international art galleries Magazine Art Mag
 ©Lorraine Bodewes

Key topics include :

  • the strategic value of culture beyond economic indicators
  • integrating art and culture into public policy frameworks
  • the evolving societal role of museums and cultural institutions
  • innovative models for cultural governance in a changing global context

Protecting Global Heritage: Innovation and Actionable Solutions

The Summit aims to deliver concrete, collaborative solutions for:

  • global cultural heritage preservation
  • protection of historically significant objects
  • innovation in public cultural policy

The discussions are supported by AXA XL Insurance, a global leader in fine art and high-value object insurance across more than 200 countries, reinforcing TEFAF’s commitment to safeguarding cultural assets worldwide.

A lire aussi :

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Why is TEFAF Maastricht 2026 considered the world’s leading art fair?

Because it brings together the most prestigious galleries globally, offering museum-quality works spanning 7,000 years of art history.

Where will TEFAF Maastricht 2026 take place?

At the MECC Maastricht, one of Europe’s top venues for major art and cultural events.

Which sections are expanding in 2026?

Paintings, Works on Paper, Old Masters, Modern & Contemporary Art, 20th/21st-century Design, and African & Oceanic Arts.

What is the purpose of TEFAF Showcase?

To support the next generation of influential art dealers and offer them a global platform.

Who supports the TEFAF Summit 2026?

The Summit is backed by AXA XL Insurance and organized with the Netherlands National Commission for UNESCO, both leaders in cultural protection and heritage policy.

Categories
News

Endless Sunday: Maurizio Cattelan Transforms the Centre Pompidou-Metz with a Landmark Exhibition

Zeno Zotti

From 8 May 2025 to 1 February 2027, the Centre Pompidou-Metz celebrates its 15th anniversary with one of its most ambitious exhibitions: Endless Sunday. Nearly 400 works from the Centre Pompidou enter into dialogue with 40 iconic creations by Maurizio Cattelan. A total, immersive, and unsettling journey that transforms the museum into a sensory and political labyrinth.

A major exhibition that redefines Cattelan’s place in contemporary art

With Endless Sunday, Maurizio Cattelan becomes not only one of the featured artists but also co-curator alongside Chiara Parisi, Director of the Centre Pompidou-Metz. He casts a sharp, incisive gaze on the Centre Pompidou’s collections, revealing, through unprecedented juxtapositions, the zones of tension that run through the history of modern and contemporary art.

From the entrance, visitors come face-to-face with L.O.V.E., his provocative anti-monument: a monumental raised middle finger, a symbol of defiance and anti-authority. A statement of intent. A promise: nothing here will be comfortable.

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Monumental sculpture Felix by Maurizio Cattelan depicting a giant cat skeleton displayed in a modern museum space, contemporary art installation at the Centre Pompidou-Metz, with dramatic lighting emphasizing the imposing structure of the artwork. Art mag
Maurizio Cattelan, Felix, 2001 Oil on polyvinyl resin, fiberglass and steel, 792 × 182 × 610 cm Courtesy Maurizio Cattelan’s Archive Photo

A journey shaped like an alphabet primer: total immersion in contemporary mythologies

The exhibition adopts the form of an abecedarium, a nod to Gilles Deleuze, which allows visitors to revisit the great themes of modernity through historical works and installations by Cattelan.

Highlights include:

D – The Beginning of the War Will Remain Secret
Around Chen Zhen’s monumental Round Table and Cattelan’s spectacular Sunday, the exhibition reveals the political fractures of the contemporary world: inaccessible diplomacy, violence beneath a golden veneer, the memory of European conflicts.

H – Hatred, Friendship, Seduction, Love, Marriage
A section dedicated to the game of chess, featuring an exceptional loan: Marcel Duchamp’s chess table, presented to the public for the first time. Cattelan responds with Good Versus Evil, a board populated by porcelain figurines tinged with political satire.

N – We the Animals
The famous Felix — a giant cat skeleton — enters into dialogue with Julie Curtiss, Gloria Friedmann, and Francis Bacon, offering a powerful reflection on animality, vulnerability, and the metamorphosis of the body.

An immersive scenography that transforms the museum

Designed by Berger&Berger, the scenography transforms the Grande Nef into a circular space inspired by the museum’s hexagonal architecture. The serpent Uroboros, symbol of the infinite cycle, structures the itinerary and reinforces the theme of Sunday as a suspended, cyclical, unending moment.

Exhibitions within the exhibition — cinema entrances, a miniature gallery (Wrong Gallery) — blur the boundaries between the real, the museal, and the fictional worlds.

The exceptional return of André Breton’s Studio Wall

For the first time, André Breton’s Studio Wall leaves its Paris home to be presented in Metz. Composed of 255 objects — masks, fossils, sculptures, and personal mementos — it embodies the spirit of Surrealism and the notion of objective chance dear to Breton.

Its presence in Endless Sunday acts as a key for interpretation: a museum envisioned as a free, intuitive space, traversed by intersecting and colliding narratives.

A landmark exhibition celebrating the Centre Pompidou-Metz’s 15th anniversary

Performances, concerts, film, workshops, and talks: the museum offers four uninterrupted days of festivities from 8 to 11 May 2025. Highlights include:

LaBOLA performances by La Ribot,
• Re-enactment of RSVP by Senga Nengudi,
Pink & Silver Anniversary Ball orchestrated by Vinii Revlon
• Urban mini-battles, DJ sets, outdoor screenings
• A series of talks centered on the exhibition’s works

Together, these events reaffirm the Centre Pompidou-Metz’s direction: a living museum, open to transdisciplinary practices, where contemporary creation meets the public in all its forms.

A Sunday that never ends: why this exhibition is unmissable

Endless Sunday does not merely juxtapose works. It reveals what our rituals, our rest, our beliefs, and our revolts say about us.

The exhibition’s strength lies in:

• its museographic ambition: 400 works, 40 pieces by Cattelan, a total occupation of the building
• its visual power: monumental installations, immersive scenography
• its transhistorical dialogue: from Derain to Bacon, from Duchamp to Vieira da Silva
• its political depth: power, violence, cycles of time, fragility of the body
• its singular dimension: the presence of Breton’s Wall, the mise en abyme of the Wrong Gallery, curatorship entrusted to a major artist.

It is an exhibition that unsettles, disorients, amuses, and disturbs.
It is a museum reinventing itself for its 15th anniversary.

A major cultural event for 2025–2027.

See also:
Centre Pompidou-Metz 2026: the must-see exhibitions that will shape the year

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Categories
News

Centre Pompidou-Metz 2026: The Unmissable Exhibitions Set to Define the Cultural Year

vue du centre pompidoe Metz
Jacqueline Trichard

The Centre Pompidou-Metz unveils an exceptionally ambitious programme for 2026, positioning itself as one of Europe’s most compelling cultural destinations. Four major exhibitions — Louise Nevelson, François Morellet, Séraphine de Senlis, and Shigeru Ban — form a coherent and thoughtfully curated journey through modern and contemporary creation. For visitors from the UK and beyond, the season offers a rare opportunity to encounter artists who shaped, questioned, and expanded the artistic language of their time.

Figure seated in front of a monumental wooden wall sculpture, composed of geometric modules and vertical elements, photographed in black and white, illustrating the immersive and architectural sculptural universe associated with the exhibition ‘Mrs. N's Palace’ and the aesthetics of 20th-century environmental sculpture.
Portrait of Louise Nevelson, circa 1969, in front of Night-Focus-Dawn Copyright: © Estate of Louise Nevelson. Licensed by Artist Rights Society (ARS), NY/ADAGP, Paris / Photo: © Courtesy Jeanne Bucher Jaeger, Paris-Lisbon/All rights reserved

Louise Nevelson: A Sculptural Landmark for 2026

From 24 January to 31 August, the retrospective Mrs. N’s Palace immerses visitors in the shadow-filled, monochromatic assemblages of Louise Nevelson. Her iconic black wall sculptures, constructed from discarded urban materials, transform the gallery into a meditative architectural landscape.
Striking in scale and atmosphere, this exhibition is one of 2026’s defining sculptural events — and an overdue celebration of an artist who remains insufficiently recognised on this side of the Channel.

See also : Louise Neverlon: fragmented architectures and landscapes of memory

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

François Morellet: A Centenary Celebrated in Spectacular Form

Opening on 3 April, 100 pour cent is the most extensive survey ever devoted to François Morellet, a key figure in geometric abstraction and a founder of GRAV (Groupe de Recherche d’Art Visuel).
Bringing together one hundred works across more than seven decades, the exhibition captures the wit, precision and optical play that characterise Morellet’s practice. Far from austere, his work reveals a mischievous mind delighting in order, chance, and the unpredictable behaviour of light.

See also : François Morellet – 100 Percent: A Landmark Retrospective

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Séraphine de Senlis: A Visionary Painter Reappraised

From 31 October, a major monographic show revisits the extraordinary oeuvre of Séraphine de Senlis, whose fervent floral compositions have recently been reinterpreted through ecological and spiritual perspectives.
Vibrant, dense and otherworldly, her paintings transcend the naïve label traditionally attached to her work. Instead, the exhibition presents Séraphine as a visionary whose intuitive relationship with the natural world speaks strongly to contemporary sensibilities.

See also : Séraphine de Senlis, a visionary of life at the Centre Pompidou-Metz

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

Shigeru Ban: Architecture with a Human Touch

In December, the Centre Pompidou-Metz turns to its own architect. Shigeru Ban, winner of the Pritzker Prize, curates an exhibition reflecting on his distinctive approach to building — one rooted in humanitarian responsibility, material innovation and elegant simplicity.
Models, prototypes and experimental structures reveal how Ban’s work marries aesthetic refinement with social purpose, offering an illuminating perspective on sustainable architecture.

See also : Shigeru Ban: An Immersive Tribute at Centre Pompidou-Metz

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

A Museum Alive with Movement and Experimentation

Throughout the year, Maurizio Cattelan’s evolving exhibition Dimanche sans fin brings humour, subversion and unpredictability to the galleries. Participatory projects by Marina Abramović and Elizabeth Peyton further position the Centre Pompidou-Metz as a dynamic institution where the visitor is invited not merely to observe but to take part.

A Season of Remarkable Coherence and Ambition

With its blend of major retrospectives, visionary installations and contemporary reflections on ecology, spirituality and social engagement, the Centre Pompidou-Metz delivers one of its most accomplished seasons to date.
For British visitors, 2026 offers an ideal moment to rediscover the museum and explore a programme that is as intellectually rich as it is visually compelling.

Support independent publishing! Subscribe to ART MAG and receive each issue in advance, in both print and digital format
👉 Subcribe 6 issues / 1 year
👉 Offer ART MAG

What are the main exhibitions at the Centre Pompidou-Metz in 2026?

The 2026 season features four major exhibitions: Louise Nevelson, François Morellet, Séraphine de Senlis, and Shigeru Ban. Each offers a distinctive perspective on modern and contemporary art, alongside the ongoing exhibition Dimanche sans fin by Maurizio Cattelan.

When does the Louise Nevelson exhibition open?

The exhibition Mrs. N’s Palace opens on 24 January 2026 and runs until 31 August 2026. It is one of the most significant European presentations of Nevelson’s sculptural work in recent years.

What can visitors expect from the François Morellet centenary exhibition?

Opening on 3 April 2026, 100 pour cent brings together one hundred works across seven decades, offering the largest retrospective ever dedicated to François Morellet. The show highlights his playful approach to geometry, light, and optical perception.

Is there an exhibition dedicated to Séraphine de Senlis?

Yes. A major exhibition devoted to Séraphine de Senlis runs from 31 October 2026 to 12 April 2027. It revisits her visionary floral compositions through contemporary ecological and spiritual perspectives.

Is Maurizio Cattelan’s exhibition still open in 2026?

Yes. Maurizio Cattelan’s evolving exhibition Dimanche sans fin remains open throughout 2026 and continues until 1 February 2027. New works are regularly added, making each visit unique.