After 16 years helping build one of the most powerful galleries in the world, Cristopher Canizares is stepping away from Hauser & Wirth to try something the art market still hasn’t quite figured out how to define: an artist management agency.The longtime partner will leave at the end of May to launch the Artist Legacy Bureau, a tightly run operation focused on long-term career strategy. He plans to work with a small group of artists—around five or six—keeping the model intentionally narrow and hands-on.Canizares announced his intention to leave just over a week ago, with the support of Hauser & Wirth president Marc Payot, who described him as a “trusted colleague” and “powerful advocate” for the gallery’s artists and program. Payot added that the gallery expects to remain in close collaboration with Canizares in his next chapter.Over more than a decade at Hauser & Wirth, Canizares cycled through roles spanning sales, artist management, and exhibition planning. What stuck was the strategic side: thinking through how an artist’s career develops over time, and how to position it for longevity. “It’s really taking something that has been occupying a fraction of my time and making it the whole of it,” he told ARTnews.The new venture is designed to sit alongside the gallery system rather than compete with it. Canizares will work directly for artists, advising across their relationships with galleries, institutions, and collectors.“I am hired by the artist, I am paid by the artist, I work for the artist,” he said, describing a structure that allows him to operate across multiple galleries on a client’s behalf. His model, he added, is “less like CAA and more like a family office,” with an emphasis on discretion and long-term planning over visibility or scale.That positioning lands at a moment when the art world has grown large enough to support new layers of specialization. As galleries have expanded into global businesses, with heavier sales calendars and larger staffs, some of the slower, more strategic work of career-building has become harder to prioritize. In recent years, a small but growing group of advisors and agencies has stepped in to fill that gap. Firms like 291 Agency, founded by former Gagosian staffer Max Teicher, have built businesses around holistic artist management, while larger talent companies like UTA have expanded into the art world, signaling broader interest in representation models borrowed from entertainment. (In September 2024, UTA said they’d put their Fine Arts division “on pause”.)Canizares is positioning Artist Legacy Bureau within that shift, though on a smaller and more discreet scale.“I don’t want to build a giant company,” he said. “I want to be deeply engaged with a very small group of artists.”One of those artists will be Rashid Johnson, whom Canizares has worked with closely at Hauser & Wirth for more than a decade. Johnson will continue working with his existing galleries while also engaging Canizares in an advisory role.The business will launch independently, with no financial stake from Hauser & Wirth. That separation, Canizares said, is essential to maintaining flexibility and ensuring that his work remains fully aligned with artists’s interests across different gallery relationships. He leaves the gallery on supportive terms, closing out a 16-year run that tracked closely with Hauser & Wirth’s own expansion into a global enterprise. If that growth reflects the art market’s increasing scale, Canizares’s next move points to its next phase: a more specialized and more segmented system built around the needs of the artist.