While individuals who identify as transgender have existed for a very long time, the concept is still a taboo topic in many fields – including art history.
June was chosen as the Month of Pride to commemorate riots in the neighborhood of Greenwich Village, Manhattan, NYC, which were a response to a police raid that took place on June 28, 1969.
The Asheville Art Museum presents Native America: In Translation, an exhibition curated by Apsáalooke artist Wendy Red Star, on view from May 22 through November 3, 2025.
BLUM is presenting NAKED, an exhibition of new paintings by Tokyo-based artist Tomoo Gokita. This is the artist’s third solo exhibition with the gallery.
Louis Stern Fine Arts is presenting Mark Leonard: Common Threads. This selection of paintings provides a comprehensive view of Leonard’s artistic development throughout his career and highlights his unique synthesis of intellectual and emotional approaches to painting.
The Center for Maine Contemporary Art (CMCA) is presenting the exhibition Nicole Wittenberg: Cheek to Cheek, a new grouping of the artist’s largest paintings to date.
Mungo Thomson’s work uses and subverts the technologies of consumption and mediation to explore the interpenetration of subjectivity, perception, and cultural memory.
The Milwaukee Art Museum presents the most comprehensive exhibition in a decade of works by Erin Shirreff, a highly regarded contemporary artist at the forefront of sculpture, photography, and video.
Exhibited together for the first time, these early paintings embellished with love hearts, graphic text, suggestive shapes and depictions of friends and lovers reveal David Hockney’s precocious talent during the most formative chapter of his career.
Pace announced its representation of the German-born, Los Angeles-based artist Friedrich Kunath, who is known for his layered, lyrical work across painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, and video.
Galerie Lelong is presenting "Sweet Life", the first solo exhibition in Europe by American artist Alison Saar, whose poetic yet critical approach explores the complex history of sugar cane in America and its links to Africa and Europe.
Galerie Eva Presenhuber is presenting Momma’s Baby, Daddy’s Maybe, the gallery’s second solo exhibition with the US artist Chase Hall. For his first exhibition in Vienna, Hall has produced a series of new paintings and works on paper.