Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Pastel Society Events Programme

I don't normally do a post about the events programme for a national art society exhibition. However this is the BIGGEST events programme from the Pastel Society that I've ever seen - and so.....

The Annual Exhibition 2026 of The Pastel Society opened today at the Mall Galleries and continues until 7th February

The Pastel Society Studio is in the East Gallery at the Mall Galleries

There is an Events Programme 

  • all events are FREE with admission and no booking is required.
  • Unless otherwise stated, the events will take place in The Studio (East Gallery)
Here's your options - with dates and who is doing what.  Note there are lots of opportunities to try out different media and work on your own to see whether or you like dry media.

To see more of the artwork by the person giving the demonstration/talk/whatever click the link in their name (only applied to the first listing).

Events Programme | Pastel Society Annual Exhibition 2026


Simon Hodges & Richard Rees

Thursday 22 January, 11am and 2pm

  • 11am Simon Hodges PS; Use it or lose it A short illustrated talk and Q&A about Vice President Simon's thoughts on the creative process.
  • 2pm Richard Rees PPS will take you through the amazing qualities of Caran d’Ache pastel varieties and show you how they can open up a world of creativity.

Curtis Holder

Friday 23 January, 11am and 2pm

  • 11am Curtis Holder PS SGFA CBPP Demonstration Curtis will talk and draw through a pencil portrait in his own unique way. A seated model may be requested from the audience.
  • 2pm Curtis Holder; Demonstration Curtis will talk and draw through a pencil portrait in his own unique way. A seated model may be requested from the audience.

Simon Hodges

Saturday 24 January, 11am and 2pm

  • 11am Simon Hodges; Pastel & the painting process A short illustrated talk, demonstration and Q&A about his thoughts on the painting process using pastel.
  • 2pm Enjoy uninterrupted time to use pastels and dry media in the studio. A Pastel Society member will be on hand to informally demonstrate, give advice and answer questions.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

BRAND NEW FORMAT for Landscape Artist of the Year Series 12 (2027) announced!

I can hardly believe it. Landscape Artist of the Year is having a RADICAL change of format for Series 12
  • which will be recorded summer this year 
  • for broadcast in early 2027.
The Public Announcement - see below

Just over a week ago, I wrote a post titled How Pottery Throwdown is a better programme than Artist of the Year

At the weekend I highlighted in my first review of the new series (Review: Episode 1 of Landscape Artist of the Year Series 11 (2026) - Derwent Water) how absolutely ridiculous it is to be deciding who is the best artist for a commission - when all the artists are being asked to paint very different locations - some of which bear no relation whatsoever to the commission!

Back In December, I had the opportunity to chat to a member of the production team - and said what I don't write on this blog.

Yesterday I was told via email that LAOTY is changing its format - but the announcement was not yet public

This morning we have the formal public announcement 
on https://skyartsartistoftheyear.tv/landscape-artist-of-the-year/ of the change I was told about yesterday.  See belo
We have some exciting news. Landscape Artist of the Year is introducing a brand-new format.

For the next series, we’ll select ten artists to take on landscape challenges across the country, returning week after week to create work in new locations. Each episode will see one artist eliminated, giving those who progress the chance to create multiple works and develop their practice over time. More locations mean more time in the pods, greater opportunity to refine your approach, and a fuller chance to show the range and consistency of your work. By following the same artists throughout the series, ideas can evolve and the quality of the work can build.

If you’re a confident, adaptable artist who enjoys responding to different places, conditions and moods, and you’d like the chance to create work in the pods more than once, we’d love to hear from you.
As part of the show we will still be inviting artists to join us as Wildcards and paint along with the pods, but we won’t be running the Wildcards as a competition.

In summary:

  • 10 artists (rather than the 8 different artists per episode) will be chosen for the whole series
  • one leaves each week
  • ALL the artists create artworks at ALL the locations
  • More scope for:
    • showing what you can do in terms of range and consistency
    • getting used to being filmed so you perform better (that's not what they say but it is what will happen)
  • artists can still turn up to paint as "Wildcards"
  • NO Wildcard competition
  • If you apply, your work will be reviewed by prominent judges from the art world. 
  • If selected for the show, you will receive £500 for each episode you take part in, plus reimbursement for travel, accommodation, and meal expenses. 
  • An additional £10,000 commission will be awarded to the winner.
  • the deadline for entries has been brought forward to Monday 23rd March 2026.
    (it was in May before the change).
This televised art competition gives artists four hours to paint a UK landscape. One artist is eliminated each episode, and one finalist is ultimately crowned the winner.

Filming the heats of Landscape Artist of the Year is planned to take place around the UK in Spring/ Summer 2026

The Benefits for Artists

Monday, January 19, 2026

Last Call for Entries for Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours Annual Exhibition 2026

You have 4 DAYS LEFT to submit an entry to the OPEN Annual Exhibition 2026 of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours.

Alongside the work of its elected members, leading figures in contemporary watercolour and water-based media, the RI welcomes both emerging and established artists who push the boundaries of the medium through traditional and experimental approaches.

 

Why enter this exhibition?

  • This is the biggest exhibition dedicated to paintings in water colours in the UK.
  • around 50% of the artworks are from the Open Submission
The exhibition is the largest of its kind, featuring over 400 of the finest works from around the world.
  • displays a wide diversity in approaches to paintings using watercolour media and subject matter - from traditional to the more contemporary.
  • although more contemporary artwork has a lower profile in the show and tends to favour acrylic and mixed media.
  • relatively little of what I tend to term the "can't draw, can't paint, won't sell" school of painting which lacks application to both concept and craft
The overall impression is that most of the artists in the show, on the whole, are very much more inclined to paint natural scenes associated with the outdoors - and have a distinct preference for more traditional media.

To be more precise, last year:
  • more than a third paint landscapes or cityscapes
  • just under 20% painted portraits and human figures
  • 14% painted still life and interiors
  • less than 10% painted Marine and Coastal OR Wildlife and Animals OR other topics.
  • very few people created abstract paintings

This is worth a study - in terms of what subjects get painted in what media
(from my review of the 2025 exhibition - see link above)
 

Call for Entries for RI Annual Exhibition 2026


The deadline for entries for the 214th Exhibition of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours is 2pm on Friday 23 January 2026
  • Information about how to enter starts on the Mall Galleries website
  • Submission is via the OESS website
  • There is a single-stage virtual judging process for ALL submitted works.
  • Selected works should be delivered to Mall Galleries, London, for inclusion in the exhibition by Saturday 16th March (10am-5pm)
  • The Annual Exhibition opens on 25 March and closes on 11 April 2026

Who can enter

Sunday, January 18, 2026

LAOTY: A video all about the Pods!

This is a fabulous new (Instagram) video about the PODS from the Landscape Artist of the Year team at Storyvault Films (who make the programme) - highlighting:

  • the Production Designer Bruce French - who is responsible for the design of the pods and how they work
  • the Pods and how they work
This post also takes a look at:
  • some of the places the pods have been - across the UK and Ireland
  • what a production designer is
  • who is Bruce French?

The Pods Video


It's a fabulous short video giving your a very nearly complete insight into what they have to do and how they work (obviously somethings are "secret").

 

 The Pods in Action - in the UK and Ireland


The Pods at Fountains Abbey in Yorkshire
See SERIES 4: Episode 1 
The Pods at Felixstowe Docks
See Series 4: Semi Final

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Review: Episode 1 of Landscape Artist of the Year Series 11 (2026) - Derwent Water

This is the first of my (very long) reviews of the eleventh series of Landscape Artist of the Year in 2026. I've watched and reviewed every series of Landscape Artist of the Year since 2018. 


This review follows the same format of my other reviews and considers.
  • the location and weather
  • the artists' profiles
  • themes arising during the episode
  • who was shortlisted and who won
However I do have a couple of important preambles and information about the commission before we start.

If you want to make sure you get every review of every episode in this series, might I suggest you review my page about how to subscribe - absolutely for free.


Preamble - about the "Landscape Artist of the Year" programme


The episodes are broadcast at 8pm every Wednesday evening on Sky Arts (on Freeview Channel 36 and Sky and Now TV).
  • The Series has 9 episodes - at 9 different locations in total (6 Heats + semi-final + Final + Commission)
  • Six Heats are held at each of the six locations which were filmed last summer in the 
    • Lake District (Derwent Water and one other location)
    • London (St James Park and The Thames from HMS Wellington, London)
    • Dover (Dover Castle, Kent and Dover Ferry Point, Kent)
    • as has happened in the past there are urban structures than landscapes.
  • 48 artists are selected from "c.2,000 applications" (they always say this and I'm not sure I believe them).
  • Each selected artist arrives with their submission landscape (which I will keep coming back to repeatedly regarding its importance)
  • Eight of these artists compete in each heat on location in a pod 
  • Each artist has 4 hours to paint the location landscape the artists are given - from the pod they are assigned (unless you rebel as some have done in the past - and turn round / wander off / etc!)
  • 50 wildcard artists also attend each heat - although we see very little of them
  • Three pod artists are shortlisted and their submission artwork and heat painting are considered together
  • The Judges have changed since the last series - see below
  • the winner of each heat moves forward to the semi-finals
  • The Semi Final and Final look as if they will be at two very big structures
    • The Ouse Valley Viaduct, West Sussex
    • Falkirk Wheel, Scotland
  • In the Semi-Final all the heat winners and one or more wildcard winners will compete for the three places in the final
  • The three Finalists produce two paintings - a commission (prior to the final) and a painting in the Final - in 4 hours. 
  • One artist is chosen as Landscape Artist of the Year
  • The Winner receives a £10,000 commission to produce a landscape artwork for a nationally important museum or art gallery 

The Series 11 Commission


The £10,000 Commission Prize for 2026 is to create a landscape of Ireland's Holy Mountain, the pyramid shaped Croagh Patrick - an important pilgrimage site in County Mayo, in Ireland.

Croagh Patrick in County Mayo, Ireland - the subject of the commission
Croagh Patrick, nicknamed 'the Reek', is a mountain with a height of 764 m and an important site of pilgrimage in County Mayo, Ireland. The mountain has a pyramid-shaped peak and overlooks Clew Bay, rising above the village of Murrisk, several kilometres from Westport. It has long been seen as a holy mountain.
The painting commissioned (by Sky Arts) will be on view in The National Gallery in Dublin after the series finishes being broadcast in Spring 2026.

What we need to know about the Commission

THE VERY BIG QUESTION FOR ME

Do the Judges KNOW what the commission subject is going to be when the heats start and they start selecting "the best artist"? 

  • I would have thought you would have to - in order to be able to make sensible decisions for the "client commission". Note that I'm working on a "horses for courses" principle here. (i.e. you're probably NOT going to choose a portrait artist for a major landscape commission. However within landscapes, people also have preferences - expressed by their output eg urban vs rural; structures vs land) 
  • Surely - in principle - EVERY finalist ought to be somebody who could do a very good job of the commission?
  • However, a recent conversation I had suggested that might NOT be the case.....
I think this is something that needs to be spelt out.... 
Maybe in this next series being filmed this summer...???

Surely the whole scope (the locations) and intent (who are the best artists?) of the ENTIRE LAOTY Series should be focused on who is the best artist to deliver the Commission?

You would think so wouldn't you.....?

Preamble - about my reviews

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Kate Bryan is no longer a Judge for Artist of the Year

You, like me, may have missed the announcement from Kate Bryan that she has stepped down from being a Judge for Artist of the Year Programmes created by Storyvault Films for Sky Arts.  She's been a Judge for both series for 13 years.

The announcement came via a post on her Instagram account (see below) - and NOT via the Artist of the Year account.  Which I thought very odd. Normally any well planned announcement goes live contemporaneously. 

(The latter was of course in the middle of its social media marketing in the week run up to the launch of the 11th Series of Landscape Artist of the Year - and you don't "pull focus" on one of your major social media plans!)

Here's the text of the announcement

Post on Kate Bryan's Instagram account 5 days ago (Sunday?)

What's very unclear is what's next


I'd love to know the reason why....

It's a Goodbye rather than a See You All Later.

Given the timing, I wounder whether it might be linked to an annual renewal of a contract - or not as the case might be.

People normally have a plan, a Grand Plan or at the very least a "to do" list before jumping ship.  However, based on her website and Instagram, it's unclear what Kate Bryan's is - as her message above says nothing. Her website also needs a major update. 

So my queries start with:
  • Does her Curatorship of the  ever growing Art Collection for Soho House now require more of her time
  • Is she trimming and refining her portfolio of interests and client and making them more focused and profitable?
  • Is there something completely new in the offing?
  • Does she want to spend more time with her daughter?

I have found one thing - and I can well understand why this might be thought of as a bit of a conflict of interests.

There is a new art competition - and I can do no better than to quote from the news I found. Although this was announced last November - with few ripples hence I've only just found it.

A collaborative competition between Hisense and VIDAA Artwork is being run in partnership with Portrait Artist of the Year and Landscape Artist of the year judge Kate Bryan

Launched by TV manufacturer Hisense, the contest has one top prize of £1,000 and a 55” Hisense Canvas TV. The winning piece - along with those of 19 other finalists - will be unveiled at an exclusive exhibition at Dolby House in London.

All 20 creations will then be showcased on Hisense’s new Canvas TV, a 4K QLED television designed to resemble framed artwork. When switched to Art Mode, it turns any living room into a gallery.
Daily Mirror 14 November 2025

Whatever the reasons, Kate Bryan is no more in relation to Artist of the Year. She was my least favourite Judge, by a long way and for a variety of reasons which I won't spell out here.


PLEASE can the next Judge be an active portrait artist

It will be interesting to see who replaces her on Portrait Artist of the Year which kicks off in April.

I can think of any number of portrait artists who would do extremely well in the role.

I'm very happy to make recommendations of people I know who are

  • excellent portrait artists;
  • with good critical faculties - specifically related to portraiture and commissions; 
  • who are also articulate; and 
  • "perform" well in front of cameras.
There's another important criteria which I'd be happy to spell out to Storyvault Films.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Readers' Comments on The Great Pottery Throwdown

Yesterday I hoped my commentary How Pottery Throwdown is a better programme than Artist of the Year might have some resonance with readers of my blog.

I was surprised to see how very many thought 

  • my analysis was spot on
  • offered a few more views of their own.
So today is a READERS SPECIAL. Below you'll find comments left on my post when it was published on my Facebook Page yesterday

There were a number of themes - and I've organised the comments under the themes. Any emboldened comments are due to me highlighting them in bold.

Participating Potters in The Great Pottery Throwdown 2026
(Facebook 30 December 2025)

I highly recommend subscribing to The Great Pottery Throwdown Facebook Page. Always guaranteed to make you feel good!

What makes Throwdown special?

Totally agree-it’s a very skilfully put together programme, with an approach that seems very supportive and yes educational. The judges are very skilled in their field and respond with useful feedback and in a way that is positive and specific.
It’s thoughtful, gentle and actually about process and creativity and skill
. Jo York Art
I totally agree with your assessment. There’s one more aspect of Throwdown that brings me joy, and that is how close the participants get to each other. There’s a real sense that they develop lifetime friendships and a community of likeminded people. And they help each other, whether it’s carrying things to the drying room, or flipping something heavy over. I remember an episode where one potter asked another for advice. The advice given was real advice, intended to really help. Diana Hume

Very much agree. I am a painter and art teacher but I prefer Throw Down to L/PAOTY. Much more interesting, educational and a pleasure to watch. Sue Bradley Artist

Plus a lot more in the section on the Judges..... 

Why the Format works

it’s mainly the format which lends itself to better showcasing the contestants’ skills (one big project which can be practiced and prepped plus a shorter test which is not revealed in advance) Hil Beavan 

The Great Pottery Throwdown is a gem! We get to know the potters over several weeks and care about them. As a group, they are so supportive of each other and the judges genuinely want them all to do well. I’m a painter, but this is my favourite programme to watch. Sarah Clark

Art versus Craft

I love the Pottery one, watch it religiously. Your comparison is spot on Katherine. I think the difference stems from the age old craft verses art problem that most people in the art world seem to suffer from, i.e. they seem to be afraid of the “craft” of art, the mastery of skills and techniques. It is almost like the magic circle, such a mysterious secret, that to really show and explain the process would not be good for the general public.  Sarah Wimperis 

The Judges


The Throwdown Judges 2026
Rich Miller and Keith Brymer Jones

Keith Brumer Jones 
25 March 2025
Last year, I had the good fortune to meet Keith Brymer Jones at Grayson Perry's exhibition at the Wallace Collection. I of course did the naff fan thing and introduced myself and said how much I enjoyed the show!

This is what you had to say.....
The warmth of the two Pottery judges of course makes a massive difference to setting the tone, and you never feel they look down their noses at anyone’s work even if it is not to their personal taste. This means that they can be straightforward about their comments, which always have a kind spin - even when something gets splatted in the Bucket of Doom! And of course they deliver their judgments directly to the contestants rather than behind the easels in a secret discussion. Hil Beavan
I love Pottery Throwdown! And how Keith gets so emotional when someone does good. He truly cares. Patty Henderson

Such kindness shown, and encouragement and I could go on….  Jane Duncan
The judges seem to care about the potters & their work &, yes, your comments about criteria for making & judging are spot onCath Allwood
Plus contrasting how the Judges behaved with the Judges in PAOTY/LAOTY
When they go around to each contestant during the makes, they often give helpful advice on what they see as the pitfalls to come. 
The po-faced inane utterances of the infamous trio from PAOTY and LAOTY are the very opposite. Kate Pearce
I wished that the PAOTY or LAOTY gets more detailed crit by the judges at the end. I found their cursory opinions often very vague and feels some of the artists were short changed for their efforts. I don’t see the points to show their discussion for the selections when the actual paintings were hidden from the viewers. It makes it look less serious about art than making a TV show. Yoriko Cole 

and my final word on the contrast with PAOTY/LAOTY 

You only have to read the comments on just about every review I write of every PAOTY / LAOTY episode to realise that very many viewers are very critical of the Judges. Mostly in relation to wiffle waffle language and the obscured way in which they talk about the judging.

What would be interesting is to change the judges and see if people were still critical i.e. is it the format or is it the judges? 
Making A Mark

About the Throwdown Judges


Here's a teeny bit about both of them. 
  • They are, of course, THE REAL THING i.e. practising potters - except they make ceramics and tiles! 
  • They've both been at it for a very long time - and they run their own businesses!

Keith Brymer Jones

Many people know me as the judge on the popular TV show, the Great Pottery Throw Down, but my real job, and my passion, is ceramics. I have been a ceramicist and design expert amassing both knowledge and experience for over four decades. Not only have I been successful with my own collection of ceramics, the award winning ‘Word Range’, I also work collaboratively with both British & International designers, artists illustrators & fashion houses. 

Rich Miller

Richard studied ceramics at the Surrey Institute of Art and Design, graduating in 2003 . For the last 19 years he’s been running Froyle Tiles, a handmade tile company based in Surrey. Specialising in the bespoke production of high fired stoneware tiles, they have to date carried out a range of commissions for a variety of notable architects and designers.

and should Love Productions be reading.....


At least one reader out there would like Love Productions to tackle Printmaking as well!
Although I watch all the programmes you mention TGPT is definitely my favourite. I’m not a potter but I am an artist and a printmaker and would love to see the firm behind the Pottery, Sewing Bee and Bake off tackle Printmaking- with a different technique each week and a technical challenge as well.. I think it would be interesting and informative- the general public have no idea of the work involved in producing print based artwork! Drusilla Cole, Former Senior lecturer at University of the Arts London 

Monday, January 12, 2026

How Pottery Throwdown is a better programme than Artist of the Year

There have been a number of television programmes over the years about creating/making things in a competitive context and I've commented on a lot of them (see my Art on Television page)

I've been writing reviews of the Portrait and Lansdscape Artist of the Year series (and others) since 2018 and I've been watching The Great Pottery Throwdown since it started - but never reviewed it.

However this year, I feel prompted to say why I think Pottery Throwdown is a better programme

This is in the context of the multiple criticisms over the years of PAOTY and LAOTY, many of which are shared by viewers.

The Love Productions pic for The Great Pottery Throwdown

So here goes

Thursday, January 08, 2026

OPEN EXHIBITIONS 2026 REMINDER #1: (Mall Galleries Jan - June 2026)

This is my 2026 List of summaries of ALL the current Calls for Entries for Open Exhibitions by the National Art Societies in the UK and Ireland published to date.

#1 TODAY: I'm publishing the first half of the list - about the national art societies based at the Mall Galleries who have exhibitions in the period January - June 2025.

#2 TOMORROW: I'll publish the second half of my list - of other FBA and national art societies and major art competitions.

# SUNDAY: I'll summarise the key things OPEN ARTISTS need to know regarding 
  • why open artists can sell well if selected for open exhibitions
  • what they need to know to do so

Calls for Entries by FBA Societies


TIP:
Being exhibited in an important national exhibition is an excellent way of marketing yourself and your art.

I've seen a lot of amateur artists develop into professional artists and become officers - and even Presidents - of leading national art societies in the 20 years that I've been writing this blog.
 
Below are SUMMARIES of various Calls for Entries by Annual Exhibitions by the national art societies which are members of the Federation of British Artists.
  • They are all holding exhibitions in the period January - June 2026
  • Their exhibitions are all held at the Mall Galleries
  • This is the page where you can find all the Open Calls for Entries
(Note: Tomorrow's post highlights the other FBA Art Societies and other national art societies. Not all who hold exhibitions at the Mall Galleries are members of the FBA.)

My summaries are NEVER ever a substitute for you taking your time to read ALL the Terms and Conditions of Entries very carefully. I've provided links to where you can read these below. REMEMBER!
  • You can get selected and then not hung if you mess up.
  • I recommend you remember to pay particular attention to framing / presentation for exhibition
    • delivering artwork; and
    • VAT before entering or pricing. (see note at end)

Royal Society of British Artists


Note - this one closes tomorrow at NOON!

You can read my blog post Open Call for Entries: Royal Society of British Artists - Annual Exhibition 2026

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Make sure your photography helps you get selected for an art exhibition!

One of the things the Royal Academy of Arts does extremely well is to provide model instructions on "how to" for its call for entries for the Summer Exhibition (see yesterday's blog post Call for Entries: The RA Summer Exhibition 2026)

One aspect of that relates to the information they now provide for all those who MUST present a digital image of their artwork - which is 
  • how an artwork is judged in the first round
  • how it appears for sale on the online exhibition on the RA website
If you aspire to being one of those 4,000 artworks which makes it through the first screen sift of digital images then:
  • as well as producing a good artwork
  • you also MUST produce a good digital image of it!
So this is by way of a reminder of what people need to know.
Various art societies having open exhibitions would do well to take a look!

How to Photograph your Work - by the Royal Academy of Arts 


See How to Photograph Your Work - from the RA website
There is also a video to view - AFTER you have registered on the RA website to submit an artwork.

Key Points included are highlighted below. I've reworded some to make them clearer! 
Plus reordered them into what's really important to know first!

You can also consult relevant pages in the Image Management for Artists section of my Art Business Info for Artists website

What you are aiming to produce

Monday, January 05, 2026

Call for Entries: The RA Summer Exhibition 2026

This is for all artists interested in submitting their art to this year's Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts.

The entry opens this Wednesday and the number of entries is limited!

First, a preamble before we get on the details of the Call for Entries.

I've always been quite ambivalent about the Summer Exhibition held by the Royal Academy of Arts each year. Which has not stopped me analysing and writing a LOT about it. See the end of this post for links to past exhibitions - and some very useful information for would-be exhibitors.

I think it is a very worthy cause, insofar as receipts help fund the free art education provided to students at the RA Schools.

On the one hand, I think it includes quite a lot of utter rubbish. 

However, it also includes art with incredible impact that you might not otherwise see - and that's not just by the member RAs.

However it is ABSOLUTELY HUGE and I now find it to be exhausting. 

  • Probably my age (I'm now 71 and have osteoarthritis) to some extent, 
  • but also something to do with the numbers visiting, the noise and the lack of seats in what is a VERY large exhibition (well over 1,000 artworks - some of which are large). 
  • In the end it becomes a complete sensory overload. I'm pleased to say I can cope with other smaller exhibitions very much better - so not just me being older!

Of late I've stopped visiting - but I do watch the videos AND I do look at the online exhibition!

Partly because I refuse to subscribe to the RA any more - which I did for years and years and years - because frankly I don't find the annual subscription cost (currently £148) in the context of what's on offer to be persuasive any more. 

That and the fact they took away the Chesterfields in the Friends Room. After a long visit viewing art you want a comfy seat - and Fortnum & Masons over the road now fulfils that need at a much reduced cost!


Call for Entries

Entry opens for the 2026 exhibition on Wednesday 7th January 2026

Hence why I'm writing this now - as you will see if you read on.

The overall process - from beginning to end - is MUCH MORE COMPLICATED than anything else you apply for so you need to get it right.

The RA have been doing this for a long time and have LOTS of information for you - and you do need to read it. 

Friday, January 02, 2026

The ArtReview Power List 100 in the last 20 years (2005, 2015, 2025)

It's always worthwhile to keep an eye on what's changing in the upper echelons of the art genre/business - what's changing and what's not.  

The turn of the year is a good time to reflect on how things are changing....

ArtReview's Power 100 is an annual ranking of the most powerful people in Art and is always worth a look.  

  • The core concept of the list revolves around the mechanisms and impact of influence in the art world.
  • A lot of what changes tends to filter down over time - so it's a bit like looking into the future. 

Changes in the ArtReview Power 100:
who was at the top in the last 20 years 
(see FULL TABLE below)
This post looks at 
  • who are the Power 100 in 2025 
  • how the list has changed RADICALLY in the last 20 years. 

and gives me an opportunity to give my very analytical brain a work out - and to look at the trends over time.

The Power 100 is ArtReview’s annual portrait of power in the artworld. It is an attempt to describe the individuals and groups that have shaped what art has been seen and how it has been seen over the past 12 months (broadly speaking, the calendar year). And yes, that is an indication that ArtReview views the artworld as, essentially, a social structure: a network of relationships that are triggered by the actions of individuals. 
They define this further
The criteria for inclusion are:
  • that each person of the Power 100 has had an active influence on the art being made and shown now;
  • that influence has to be active
Of course, it really all depends on WHO you ask..... 

The Top 10 in the Power 100 2025