After three decades at the forefront of Los Angeles’ contemporary art world, Tim Blum is closing a major chapter. This summer marks the end of BLUM’s physical presence in both Los Angeles and Tokyo, with the fate of its long-anticipated New York space still up in the air. The closures follow a final slate of exhibitions running through mid-August.
In a candid interview with ARTnews, Blum cited burnout, not business, as the driving force behind his decision. “This is not about the market,” he said. “This is about the system”—referring to the relentless pace of the gallery world: nonstop art fairs, openings, and the demands of global artist management.

The move comes two years after the end of his decades-long partnership with Jeff Poe. The two co-founded Blum & Poe in 1994, a gallery that played a foundational role in shaping both the Los Angeles art scene and the international careers of artists like Takashi Murakami and Yoshitomo Nara. The Tokyo location followed in 2014, and the rebrand to BLUM took place in 2023, after Poe’s departure.
Now, Blum is stepping into what he describes as a “more flexible model”—eschewing permanent gallery spaces and formal rosters in favor of collaborations, long-term artist projects, and alternative approaches to engagement. It’s a shift he says has been brewing for years, tracing back to the 2008 financial crash as an early signal that the traditional gallery model was beginning to feel unsustainable.
Despite stepping away from gallery ownership, Blum remains committed to the art world. “I’ll still be buying and selling art,” he confirmed, though no longer in an advisory capacity. “It’s part of my DNA.”
His final Los Angeles exhibitions—featuring Sarah Rosalena, Tomoo Gokita, Adam Silverman, and Wilhelm Sasnal—will close on August 16. In Tokyo, the group show Surface and Signal runs through August 2.
“I’ve decided I need to step off the merry-go-round,” Blum said. “And this time, I actually am.”