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THE DAILY PULSE


A Work Saved: When a Sculpture Becomes a Witness to War
At the Venice Biennale, not all works come from protected spaces or abstract ideas. Some arrive from real places, shaped by history and the violence of the present. In the Ukrainian Pavilion, a suspended sculpture greets visitors with a quiet strength: it is a deer, a work not originally created for the Biennale but brought here because it was no longer safe elsewhere. The sculpture, titled Deer and created by Ukrainian artist Zhanna Kadyrova, was located in a public space i
10 febTempo di lettura: 2 min


Why the Impressionist Exhibition at the Ara Pacis Is Worth Visiting
I recently visited the exhibition “Impressionism and Beyond: Masterpieces from the Detroit Institute of Arts” at the Ara Pacis Museum in Rome, and I left pleasantly surprised. It is undoubtedly one of the most interesting cultural events in the city at the moment and will be on view until May 3, 2026. The 52 works on display all come from the American museum’s collection, making this a particularly rare opportunity: these masterpieces are not easily seen in Europe and rarely
10 febTempo di lettura: 1 min


New Trajectories of Collecting: Anna Aldighieri Among the Most Promising Voices in Fine Art Photography
In the increasingly competitive landscape of contemporary art, certain figures occasionally emerge who stand out for their consistency, depth, and steady growth—qualities that do not go unnoticed by professionals. Such is the case of Anna Aldighieri , an Italian photographer who is consolidating a significant presence on the international scene and is today recognized by observers and collectors as one of the artists to follow closely. Her work stems from an authentic and dee
10 febTempo di lettura: 2 min


Collecting the Present: Claudia Bisson and the New Routes of Contemporary Art
Claudia Bisson and the New Routes of Contemporary Art
10 febTempo di lettura: 2 min


Frida Kahlo “Arrives” in Miami: A New Luxury Residential Project Inspired by Her Art
In Miami, art meets architecture and real estate in a project that’s already generating buzz: the launch of luxury apartments inspired by Frida Kahlo, one of the most beloved and instantly recognizable artists of the 20th century. In the heart of Wynwood — the city’s emblematic district for urban creativity — a new residential complex bearing her name is taking shape, with the ambition of transforming the very idea of living into an experience rooted in art, color, and identi
5 febTempo di lettura: 2 min


Cortina 1956: Olympic Memory, Archives, and Contemporary Art.The Story of Fondazione Dompé
In 1956, Cortina d’Ampezzo became the center of the world with the Winter Olympic Games—an event that left a lasting mark on Italy’s cultural and visual history. More than a sporting competition, the Games represented a moment in which Italy projected a new image of itself: modern, internationally minded, and capable of weaving together nature, architecture, graphic design, and communication. Seventy years later, that experience continues to be reinterpreted not only by sport
2 febTempo di lettura: 2 min


Venice Biennale 2026: South Africa Faces a “Empty Pavilion” Risk After Cancellation of Gabrielle Goliath’s Project
VENICE / JOHANNESBURG – As the technical deadline for submitting national pavilion proposals to the Venice Biennale 2026 approaches, South Africa finds itself at the center of a controversy that blends contemporary art, politics, and geopolitics .South Africa’s Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Gayton McKenzie , has halted Elegy , the project selected to represent the country at the Biennale Arte 2026 , prompting artist Gabrielle Goliath and curator Ingrid Masondo to
22 genTempo di lettura: 3 min


On the Tracks of History: The Papal Villas Train Returns from Rome to Castel Gandolfo
There’s a unique way to leave Rome, away from traffic and noise, following tracks that cross centuries of history and breathtaking landscapes. The Papal Villas Train resumes its Saturday journeys, offering a one-of-a-kind experience of art, nature, and spirituality, from the heart of the Vatican to the hills of the Castelli Romani. Each week, a modern electric train departs from the enchanting Vatican station – usually closed to the public – heading to Castel Gandolfo, overlo
19 genTempo di lettura: 2 min


Postwar works, Top 5 of 2025: when the market started chasing “fetishes” again
There is a moment, before every important purchase, when an artwork stops being an image and becomes a question. Not “how much is it worth?”, but: what place does it occupy in my life? And above all: what does it say about me, right now, as I choose it? 2025, at least in the slice of the market that captured the spotlight, told exactly this story: the return of the artwork as a threshold. Not merely a safe asset, not just a “name” to add to a collection, but a psychological d
7 genTempo di lettura: 3 min


When Museums Become Assemblies: In the UK (and Beyond), Art Is Governed “by Sortition”
Imagine receiving a letter from a museum—not an invitation to a private view or a new membership offer, but a request to take part in a decision. Not an online survey with predefined answers, not a generic “tell us what you think” that vanishes into an archive, but an invitation to sit down with other citizens—selected like you—to deliberate on what a cultural institution should be, who it should serve, and what public responsibilities it should uphold.
4 genTempo di lettura: 5 min


The Hermes case: return of archeological finds to Italy and museum loans in the United States until 2030
When the return of works of art is no longer a point of arrival
18 dic 2025Tempo di lettura: 3 min
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