Your art world, assembled by AI. Here's what's happening behind the scenes.
When you signed up, you told us what you care about — regions, mediums, topics, specific artists. That's the starting point. From there, the system learns from what you actually read, click, and save. Your feed gets sharper over time.
You can fine-tune anytime from your profile. Change your regions, add cities, follow new artists — the feed adjusts immediately.
AI continuously scans art publications, gallery websites, museum announcements, auction results, biennial and fair communications, and blogs across every region. Sources include Artforum, Frieze, The Art Newspaper, Hyperallergic, e-flux, and hundreds of regional publications in multiple languages.
Every article is automatically categorized by geography, medium, topic, and the artists, galleries, and institutions mentioned in it. Related articles are clustered into stories so you see the full picture, not isolated fragments.
When multiple sources cover the same exhibition, artist, or event, we group them into a single story. You see how many outlets are covering it, from which angles, and can read the sources that matter most to you. Stories are scored by recency, source quality, and relevance to your interests — the most important things surface first.
Type any artist name, topic, or city into the interests field. If it matches something we already track, you'll see a green check — confirmed coverage. If it's new to us, it gets a blue check and goes on your watchlist.
The system actively searches for content about your watchlist terms. When it finds relevant articles, they enter the same pipeline as everything else — categorized, clustered, and delivered to your feed. You can track watchlist status from your profile.
We ingest sources in their original languages — German exhibition reviews, Japanese art blogs, Brazilian criticism, Nigerian art publications. Everything is available to you via the language selector. AI translation handles news and informational content well. For critical texts where nuance matters, we always link to the original.
Each day, AI assembles a concise summary of what matters most across the art world — tailored to your interests. Think of it as your morning scan: the stories gaining traction, the exhibitions opening, the discussions worth following. It appears when you visit the site and is available anytime from the Today page.
We extract exhibition data from the articles we process — who's showing where, opening and closing dates, cities and venues. Browse current exhibitions globally or filter by the cities you care about. If you've added cities to your preferences, exhibitions there get priority in your feed.
We're working on deeper intelligence features — artist discovery based on substantive signals (not social media popularity), exhibition relationship mapping, critical discourse tracking, and market context for collectors. The goal is to surface connections that no single person could track manually.
We're also expanding source coverage, especially for non-English-speaking regions. If there's a publication or scene we're missing, tell us — your watchlist entries directly inform what we add.
AI is excellent at monitoring thousands of sources, extracting structured data, identifying patterns, and personalizing what you see. It can read, summarize, translate, and categorize at a scale no editorial team could match.
It cannot replace critical judgment. It cannot access private information — private sales, undisclosed collections, closed conversations. It cannot predict the future. We present what the public record shows, flag what we don't know, and always link to original sources so you can judge for yourself.