• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

Sep 28, 2025

Wall Power
Northern Trust
Marion Maneker Marion Maneker

Hello, sports fans, and welcome back to Wall Power. I’m Marion Maneker.

Surrealism has been the driving force of the art market in the past few years. We’ve talked about it in a number of ways, including this assessment of the Whitney’s new show about surrealism in the ’60s. Tonight, Julie Davich comes at it from a new direction, with a look at some contemporary artists bringing surrealism’s interest in the uncanny into the 21st century. She also previews Galerie Sardine and Anne Buckwalter’s new show.

But first, a reminder that there’s still a little more time to take advantage of Puck’s fourth anniversary deal for new subscribers: 20 percent off your first year if you subscribe by October 4. Join our community yourself, or buy a friend a gift subscription. Or, if you’re already a member and thinking about upgrading to Wall Power’s Inner Circle, now is a great time: We’re also offering 20 percent off there. Just click here to claim your spot.

Let’s get started…

  • Outside the white box: It’s been about a century since white walls with sparse paintings became the norm for displaying art, and 50 years since the term “white cube” was popularized. Galerie Sardine founder Valentina Akerman thought it might be time for a new standard—or, rather, a return to an old standard. “I wanted to create a kind of modern-day salon,” she told me. “I’ve always felt there was space for something more personal, more conversational, where artists and art could be experienced.” That desire for intimacy informed her gallery’s name, which refers to sardines packed together in a small tin.

    Now, after two summers hosting shows and accompanying dinners in a farmhouse in Amagansett, Akerman is bringing the itinerant project to a loft space in SoHo. “I want to continue to put all these exhibitions in spaces that are not white boxes,” she said. She’s targeting a November opening with a show of figurative paintings by Justin Bradshaw, an English artist who moved to Italy to pursue his fascination with classical art, along with ceramics by Colombian-born artist Maria Robledo. Artists whom Akerman has exhibited in the past include Sophie von Hellermann, Erin and Sam Falls, Ana Benaroya, and Nate Lowman.

    Akerman, who was also born in Colombia, runs in artist circles, professionally and personally. She spent most of her career designing artist books and producing artist editions, and she’s also married to painter Joe Bradley, who has been represented by David Zwirner gallery since 2023. She said artists are responding to her nontraditional model of exhibition and representation. “In this moment of redefining the nature of things in the art world,” she said, “there’s room to do something interesting and different.”

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Northern Trust
Northern Trust

Have you planned for the future of your art collection? Explore our guide for valuing, appraising and transferring your art collection to ensure the pieces you spent decades collecting live on as you intended.

  • Anne Buckwalter at Uffner & Liu: Long before “cottagecore” became part of the mainstream—before Audrey Gelman opened the Six Bells, and Dôen dresses and William Morris fabrics became de rigueur—there was Anne Buckwalter. Raised in Pennsylvania Dutch country, Buckwalter, now in her late 30s, paints country interiors in gouache on wood panels, with quaint flourishes like floral wallpaper, folk furniture, hooked rugs, and cross-stitch samplers. She depicts entire rooms or zooms in on particular tableaux, such as a dining table set for a meal. She plays with patterns, like wood grain or intricate lace, and flattens the perspective, which makes the objects on the tables and dressers appear ready to slide right off.

    Coming off a summer exhibition at the Farnsworth Museum in Maine, where she lives, Buckwalter is showing her latest works at Uffner & Liu gallery on the Lower East Side. If you look closely at the paintings, you’ll find unmistakable hints of desire. The decorations on some of the depicted stoneware pitchers and chairbacks are nudes, some of them in sexual positions. In several paintings, the eroticism is more overt, with figures seen through lace curtains or peeking out from underneath tables—but always partially obscured, and never showing their faces. “She’s asking, ‘What does it mean to be a woman in the home?’” gallery partner Lucy Liu explained to me, “and contrasting that with the liberal feeling that can exist in that space.”

    Her new series of gouaches on paper, which start at $4,000, are quilt patterns, with sexual elements hidden in the fabrics. (The show title, Lover’s Knot, is also a quilt pattern.) The paintings are priced at $8,000 to $25,000. The Rose Art Museum in Waltham, Massachusetts, is in talks to bring her Farnsworth exhibition, Manors, there. Otherwise, you have until November 1 to see her show downtown.

Now for the main event…

Surreal Genius

Surreal Genius

A subset of a booming market is getting its due, with young female artists helping to push the growth. This is all happening even without consensus on what, exactly, “contemporary surrealism” is.

Julie Brener Davich Julie Brener Davich

Surrealist art is having a moment for many reasons—not least because, as a specialist friend once posited, the surreal is often preferable to reality, and offers occasions to laugh in profoundly unfunny times. As Gagosian’s Freja Harrell, who works with two surrealist artists, put it to me, “Surrealist imagery is resonating now because it’s the visual language of excess and estrangement.” No wonder, then, that the genre is booming relative to the rest of the somewhat lackluster art market—just look at the results of the recent auction of surrealist works from the Pauline Karpidas collection, which doubled its presale estimate.

The market for female surrealists, in particular, has experienced a well-documented explosion. In the past few years, Leonora Carrington, Remedios Varo, and Dorothea Tanning all achieved world-record prices for their work, and in November, Sotheby’s expects to set a record for Frida Kahlo with El Sueño (La cama), from 1940, estimated at $40 million. This rising tide has also lifted the market for contemporary surrealism, with young talents like Swiss artist Louise Bonnet, who paints humorously distorted shapes with human qualities, and Polish artist Ewa Juszkiewicz setting artist records in recent years.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Northern Trust
Northern Trust

Have you planned for the future of your art collection? Explore our guide for valuing, appraising and transferring your art collection to ensure the pieces you spent decades collecting live on as you intended.

The size of the contemporary surrealism market is minuscule compared to that of the classic surrealists—Juszkiewicz’s and Bonnet’s records are, respectively, $1.6 million and $738,000, whereas Carrington’s is $28.5 million. But it’s growing rapidly. A recent report from Sotheby’s showed that sales in the contemporary surrealist category rose nearly 265 percent between 2018 and 2024. For the category’s female artists, the jump was more than 400 percent. While these figures are based on an extremely limited and subjective sample of just 15 artists, they gesture at the remarkable levels of demand.

But despite the hype, it’s surprisingly difficult to get consensus on what contemporary surrealism actually is—or isn’t. Robert Zeller, who wrote the literal book on the subject, described new surrealist painting as having an “uncanny” quality. But that’s a pretty capacious container. Another hallmark is a play on art history. “One of the important things about surrealism is that they looked back to the past for inspiration,” Zeller told me. “This is very different from other modernist groups that wanted to start over again in Year 0, who viewed the past as being derelict of value—deadweight.”

Churches and Dollhouses

Several contemporary surrealists are finding an audience with their subversion of traditional genres, from landscapes to portraits to still-lifes, with some of the most compelling work coming from young women drawing on Old Masters. Maria Kreyn, a Brooklyn-based artist, along with Juszkiewicz and her fellow Gagosian artists Bonnet and Anna Weyant, all belong in that rarefied group. “The underpinnings are the same, but the results are so different,” said Harrell.

Kreyn is known for her dramatically lit paintings in the Renaissance tradition of Caravaggio, Rembrandt, and Van Dyck. They earned her a Vanity Fair piece in 2018, followed by a commission from Andrew Lloyd Webber to create a series of paintings based on Shakespeare’s plays for a Covent Garden theater. Her more recent paintings, however, are J.M.W. Turner–esque: turbulent seascapes, with skies that look like unfolded origami. “It’s about mental puzzles, like ‘What does the world look like if your eyeball is a prism, not a sphere?’” Kreyn mused when I stopped by her studio last week.

The Russia-born artist works with Maria Vega of the M.O.N. Art Foundation to display the works in historic churches. Her fourth such project is an upcoming exhibition of dramatic seascapes at Fitzrovia Chapel during Frieze London; an installation last year during the Venice Biennale garnered her a great deal of attention. Soon after that, her only painting ever to appear at auction—Gravity, from 2024—made HK$4.1 million, or $525,000, against an estimate of HK$1 million, at Sotheby’s Hong Kong.

Northern Trust
Northern Trust

As for Juszkiewicz, she’s the poster child for contemporary surrealism: One of her paintings appeared on the cover of Zeller’s 2023 book, New Surrealism. She takes 18th and 19th century portraits of richly dressed women and obscures their faces, either wrapping them in sumptuous fabrics or covering them with plaited hairdos or elaborate floral arrangements. “Taking something familiar and putting a twist on it makes it easy for people to understand,” said Harrell, who works with both Juszkiewicz and Bonnet. “That kind of estrangement makes us see the underlying structures, how women were staged as silent symbols.” Juszkiewicz has a big 2026 coming up, with the publication of a monograph in March and the opening of a solo show at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid in May.

Meanwhile, Anna Weyant similarly puts a humorous, subversive spin on historical tradition in her work. For her most recent project during New York Fashion Week, she took the familiar trope of a dollhouse and blew it up to life-size proportions at the Academy Mansion, complete with giant doorknobs, making her audience feel like the dolls inside. A wonky candelabra sat atop the towering dining table; the baroque-style dressing table was topped with an oversize hairdryer; a Disney-inspired fountain was in the center of the courtyard. “These pieces have given me purpose and comfort in uncertain and unsettling times,” Weyant said of the items she carefully placed throughout the house. Her best paintings have made multiples of their estimates at auction, with her $1.6 million world record achieved at Sotheby’s in 2022 against an estimate of $150,000.

There are a few more contemporary surrealist artists with shows to look out for this fall. The opening of Sasha Gordon’s first show at David Zwirner, featuring her unnerving self-portraits, was jam-packed in New York last week. In London, Victor Man, whose top auction price multiplied tenfold in 2023 to $2.2 million, has his first solo exhibition of his “psychologically layered” paintings at David Zwirner. And Lévy Gorvy Dayan is pairing works by Leonor Fini with up-and-comer Aleksandra Waliszewska in a show curated by Alison Gingeras. If you’re priced out of these artists’ markets, check out the program at Megan Mulrooney Gallery in L.A. Mulrooney sold out her booth of Piper Bangs’s paintings of biomorphic objects at the Armory Show, and is currently showing the unsettling, swollen still-lifes of Ginny Casey.

 

Thanks, Julie. And with that, I hope you all had a great weekend.

M

Line Sheet

The ultimate fashion industry bible, offering incisive reportage on all aspects of the business and its biggest players. Anchored by preeminent fashion journalist Lauren Sherman, Line Sheet also features veteran reporter Rachel Strugatz, who delivers unparalleled intel on what’s happening in the beauty industry, and Sarah Shapiro, a longtime retail strategist who writes about e-commerce, brick-and-mortar, D.T.C., and more. 

The Varsity

Puck sports correspondent John Ourand and a rotating cast of industry insiders take you inside the executive suites and owners boxes where the decisions that shape the entire sports business are made. You’ll hear interviews with players, network execs, and everyone in between. The Varsity is an extension of John’s private email for Puck by the same name. New episodes publish every Wednesday and Sunday.

Stories
The Kimmel Fallout Matrix

The Kimmel Fallout Matrix

MATTHEW BELLONI

OpenAI’s Bull Case

OpenAI’s Bull Case

IAN KRIETZBERG

NFL’s Angsty Suitors

NFL’s Angsty Suitors

JOHN OURAND

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Art

Sotheby's Klimt
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
The Hot 50: Our Semiannual Market Temp Check
An excavation of the art market’s robust performance in the second half of 2025, with the latest (and greatest) data from ARTDAI. As you’ll see, the market is healthier and more varied than ever.
White Cube Gallery New York
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Dye Hard & Humeau’s Bat Cave
Fresh from their holiday hibernation, New York galleries are once again buzzing with crowded openings and legendary works from the likes of Humeau, Pousette-Dart, Eggleston, and Flavin.
Steve Ivy Heritage Auctions
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Condition Report: Steve Ivy, C.E.O. of Heritage Auctions
An eye-opening conversation with the auction house founder (and lifelong numismatist) on the explosion of the collectibles market, Heritage’s $2 billion year, and his middle-school obsession with coins.


Joan Semmel
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Sex & The Single Artist
A career-spanning new exhibit of Joan Semmel captures an artist challenging conventional nudes, addressing women’s liberation, and making her own depictions of sexuality, aging, and herself.
National Gallery of Art
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Washington’s Other Culture Wars
The Stars We Do Not See, a new show at the National Gallery, offers a reflection on the past and modernism that seems perfectly at home in the capital these days.
Money Painting
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
The Art-Backed Loan Crisis That Wasn’t
A recent column in the Financial Times tried to sound the alarm about an apparent crisis in the art loan business. But a close inspection of the data behind the story—and a survey of art loan business insiders—reveals a much more nuanced picture.


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Is the Art Market Ready for a Bull Run?
With $5.4 billion in combined sales, 2025 was a pretty decent year for Sotheby’s, Phillips, and Christie’s, as well as the broader auction market. But a deeper analysis of sales across price ranges, average lot values, and the percentage of works sold below estimate may foretell what 2026 brings.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Art

Eduardo Costantini
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
A Match Made in Buenos Aires
How a family of Swiss industrialists helped deepen and redefine Argentina’s premier art museum, years after their deaths.
KAWS brian Donnelly
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Kaws and Effect
After Covid zombified downtown San Francisco, SFMOMA director Christopher Bedford turned to an artist with a Warholian grasp of pop culture—and the ability to reengage both families and the tech set.
Reed Hastings
Mark Healy • September 28, 2025
Reed Hastings’ Mountainhead
Since stepping down as C.E.O. three years ago, Netflix co-founder and executive chairman Reed Hastings has largely devoted himself to philanthropy and Powder Mountain—his Utah ski resort that now includes an ambitious public art park and is changing the very notion of a mountain town.


Ken Goldin
Alex French • September 28, 2025
The Goldin Boy
The reigning king of collectibles is celebrating a third season of his Netflix show and a new stability in the collectibles and memorabilia market, which is better informed and more properly authenticated than ever. That doesn’t mean he’s above selling a Cheeto if there’s a market for it—especially if it makes for good TV.
Charles Stewart
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Charlie’s Angels
It’s been a monumental year for Sotheby’s, which secured nearly $1 billion from the Emiratis, sold the Macklowe and Lauder collections, and made a new home on Madison Avenue. C.E.O. Charles Stewart sits down for a candid discussion about his auction house’s big year and the emerging Gulf market.
Helene Schjerfbeck Self-Portait with Black Background_1915
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Helene of Finland
The new Helene Schjerfbeck show at the Met offers a rare opportunity to see the work of a truly important artist, whose significance was obscured only by the fact that she lived in a small country far from the center of culture.


Phillips Art Auction
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Art’s $14B Goldilocks Year
In the space of a few short months, we’ve seen the public art market return not only to viability, but vibrancy—even if we’re only just returning to a baseline level of sales.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Art

Jay Krehbiel
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Condition Report: Jay Krehbiel, the Man in the Middle
Freeman’s, the ambitious Midwest auction house, is conquering the middle market between multimillion-dollar auctions and weekend estate sales. Herewith, executive chairman Jay Krehbiel opens up about his M&A pathway, the economics of undercutting the big houses, and the tension between operating locally and globally.
Faith Ringgold
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
History Is Written by the Gallerists
Three striking new gallery shows—Faith Ringgold, Richard Diebenkorn, and Julian Schnabel—show how gallerists work hard to steer perceptions and provide context to decades-old works. It’s harder than it looks.
Robert Rauschenberg
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
The Rauschenberg Chronicles
In celebration of the centennial of Robert Rauschenberg’s birth, two new museum shows in New York explore the work of an artist who always seemed both ubiquitous and somewhat forgotten.


Art advisors
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
The Art Advisor Justice League
Art advisors are a fairly recent phenomenon, and no one is showing how it’s done better than Patti Wong, Brett Gorvy, and Wentworth Beaumont. In this lively roundtable discussion, the three explain an advisor’s role in a murky market, how the back office operates, and why ambitious collectors need consultants now more than ever.
Francois Xavier Lalanne, Hippopotame Bar
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Lalanne Jockeys
The latest offerings at Christie’s, Sotheby’s, and Phillips anticipate a still-strong design market, with a wide selection of works by Les Lalanne—including a multimillion-dollar hippo—leading the category alongside Tiffany, Giacometti, and the recently deceased Frank Gehry.
Design.Miami
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
50 Hours in Miami
A mid-December tour of Design.Miami, Art Basel, the New Art Dealers Alliance fair, and the ICA Miami opening revealed a steady flow of visitors, plenty of eager buyers, and an ostensible return to form for the city’s biggest annual art fair.


Sotheby's Art Auction
Marion Maneker • September 28, 2025
Two Weeks in November
A deep data-driven dive into the November sales and what they tell us about the art market’s “just right” moment.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover