The 10 Art Moments That Defined 2025
From the Louvre heist to Beeple’s uncanny robot dogs, these were the art moments of 2025 that pushed contemporary art into headlines.
In 2025, art did not behave. It left the gallery, showed up in headlines and forced itself into public view. Museums were shut down. Works were stolen, damaged, argued over. Artists took sides. Institutions were put on the spot. You did not have to be looking for art to run into it.
The moments that follow are not about prestige or scale. They are about impact. These were the flashpoints that shaped how art was talked about, handled, and fought over this year, whether that happened in a museum, on a beach, on an oil rig, or online.
Maurizio Cattelan’s ‘America’ Was Stolen Again
February 2025
Maurizio Cattelan’s solid-gold toilet resurfaced as a global headline after it was stolen from Blenheim Palace in England, where it was installed as part of a public exhibition. The fully functional sculpture was removed in a rapid daytime theft that caused flooding and structural damage to the historic building. First unveiled in 2016 as a pointed critique of wealth and inequality, the work has long existed at the edge of absurdity and risk.
Anne Imhof Transformed the Park Avenue Armory
March 2025
Anne Imhof presented “DOOM: House of Hope” at the Park Avenue Armory, converting the vast drill hall into a multi-hour immersive performance environment. The work combined choreography, sound, architecture, and endurance-based action, with performers moving through and around the audience. Building on themes established in earlier works, Imhof examined power, vulnerability, and surveillance culture, while pushing the limits of how performance art occupies institutional space at scale.
A Tourist Damaged the Terracotta Warriors
June 2025
An international outcry followed after a visitor entered a restricted area at the Mausoleum of Qin Shi Huang in Xi’an and damaged two Terracotta Warriors. The site houses more than 8,000 life-size figures created over 2,000 years ago and is among the most significant archaeological discoveries in history. The incident renewed debates around cultural heritage protection, museum security and how institutions manage mass tourism in the age of virality.
Anish Kapoor and Greenpeace Staged a Climate Protest in the North Sea
August 2025
Anish Kapoor collaborated with Greenpeace on “BUTCHERED,” a large-scale intervention staged on a Shell gas rig in the North Sea. Red liquid was poured across the structure, transforming an industrial site into a stark visual statement about environmental destruction. Positioned far outside traditional art spaces, the action functioned as both protest and artwork, marking a moment where contemporary art directly confronted fossil fuel extraction.
KAWS Publicly Denied a Slawn Collaboration
August 2025
KAWS publicly denied claims that he had collaborated with British Nigerian artist Slawn after Slawn posted images suggesting a joint project. KAWS described the post as misleading, prompting widespread discussion about authorship, influence, and credit within contemporary art. The incident highlighted how quickly narratives can spread through social media.
Ruth Asawa Received a Landmark Retrospective
October 2025
Ruth Asawa became the focus of a major retrospective jointly organized by the Museum of Modern Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Spanning six decades, the exhibition presented her iconic looped wire sculptures alongside drawings, studies, and archival material. Widely regarded as one of the most important museum exhibitions of the year, the show reframed Asawa’s role in postwar art and addressed decades of institutional underrecognition.
The Louvre Closed After a Daytime Jewelry Heist
October 2025
The Louvre temporarily shut its doors after thieves carried out a swift daytime robbery targeting historic jewelry, reportedly including Napoleonic-era pieces. The incident unfolded in minutes but forced one of the world’s most visited museums to suspend operations while authorities investigated. Beyond the immediate loss, the heist raised broader concerns about security, visibility, and the challenges faced by major cultural institutions.
James Turrell Announced His Largest Skyspace
October 2025
James Turrell announced plans for his largest ‘Skyspace’ installation to date, set to open at the ARoS Aarhus Art Museum. The monumental circular structure will feature a large ceiling aperture designed to frame the sky and alter perception through shifting light conditions.
Beeple’s Robot Dogs Dominated Art Basel Miami Beach
December 2025
At Art Basel Miami Beach, digital artist Beeple debuted “Regular Animals,” an installation featuring animatronic robot dogs fitted with hyperreal heads modeled after tech leaders and cultural figures. The dogs moved through an enclosed space, photographed visitors, and expelled printed images, referencing artificial intelligence, surveillance, and image overproduction. The work quickly became one of the most discussed presentations of the fair.
Pussy Riot Was Designated an Extremist Organization in Russia
December 2025
Russian authorities formally designated Pussy Riot an extremist organization, making association with the group a criminal offense. Known for blending performance, music, and protest, Pussy Riot has long operated at the intersection of art and political resistance. The ruling underscored the risks faced by politically engaged artists and reinforced the role of art as a direct challenge to state power in 2025.













