Latest
How a controversial bust of Winston Churchill made its way back to the Oval Office
President Donald Trump has returned the statue—one of an identical pair—to his office, but it has not been a simple journey
Aaron De Groft, Orlando Museum of Art director fired in Basquiat forgery scandal, has died, aged 59
Following successful stints at museums in Virginia and on Florida’s Gulf Coast, De Groft’s career became mired in the Basquiat fakes fiasco
Documentary on Jewish dealer Max Stern’s collection finds answers and absurdity
A new film focuses on two paintings Stern was forced to sell as the Nazis rose to power in the 1930s, which ended up at the Düsseldorf City Museum
Gaza ceasefire: Palestinian culture workers return home to rubble
Artists and cultural activists tell The Art Newspaper what they have found on their return
Major shake up at Artnet as founder retires after more than three decades
The annual general meeting in February will propose new board and fresh blood for the online art market business
World Economic Forum in Davos
From Refik Anadol and Sougwen Chung to Misty Copeland and Tom Daley: what to see and listen to at Davos
The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum features a glacier-themed opening concert, specially commissioned exhibitions from leading digital and craft-based artists and a cultural table featuring global figures from arts and sport
Davos loses out on key Modern and contemporary collection after voters reject Kirchner Museum extension
The Ulmberg collection, comprising works by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Max Beckmann, Lyonel Feininger, Francis Bacon and Louise Bourgeois, may go to the city of Chur
How the World Economic Forum is offering a global stage for collaboration between art and technology
With a focus on melting ice caps, Joseph Fowler, the World Economic Forum’s head of arts and culture, completes an environmental trilogy of opening concerts at the forum's annual meeting in Davos
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner: the artist’s life in Davos
For 20 years, the troubled Expressionist found refuge, respite and inspiration in the Alpine town
Maria Balshaw: ‘Attitudes towards sustainability have shifted much faster in the last three to five years’
The director of the Tate discusses the measures that the global museum sector is taking to address the climate and environmental crisis
Singapore Art Week 2025
Singapore Art Week 2025 runs 17-26 January and brings together more than 160 events for the city’s biggest celebration of the visual arts
Let there be light: Singapore Art Week brings art to every part of the city
Visitors to this year's Singapore Art Week are spoilt for choice, with more than 160 events and exhibitions to take in, from art fairs to shows of established and emerging Southeast Asian artists
From organisations nurturing young talent to a successful new art fair, Singapore's art scene is hitting its stride
As this year's Singapore Art Week kicks off, we take a look at the development of the city-state's museums, galleries and wider arts ecosystem over recent years
An insider's guide to Singapore Art Week: Tini Aliman
The sound artist describes creating ‘poetic cartography’ that retells the stories of the land
An insider's guide to Singapore Art Week: Yeo Shih Yun
The founder of INSTINC art space on the DIY spirit of Singapore’s art scene
An insider's guide to Singapore Art Week: Robert Zhao Renhui
The artist on how the city’s art scene is becoming more focused on sustainability and ecological themes
Art market
How galleries can get to grips with Trump 2.0
A round up of practical solutions for those braced for turmoil
Paintings depicting the infamous Maralinga nuclear bomb tests to feature at Melbourne Art Fair
The Indigenous artist Harriette Bryant Created delves into the human cost of the tests conducted by the UK in South Australia in the 1950s
‘The market is still the domain of famous male artists’: Guerrilla Girls open their first commercial gallery show in New York
The feminist art collective’s commercial debut in their hometown, at Hannah Traore Gallery, is intended to introduce their activist work to a new generation
Frieze will proceed with Los Angeles fair following deadly wildfires in the city
A fair spokesperson said the decision came after “careful consideration and extensive conversations with galleries, partners and city-wide stakeholders”
‘Can you match the colour of your work to my couch?’: Inside the world of private art commissions
Artists are regularly asked to create pieces to suit the particular tastes of buyers—but taking direction suits some more than others
Museums & Heritage
How National Galleries of Scotland aced the sustainability transition
The Edinburgh institution is leading the way for cultural institutions to reduce their environmental impact with a deeply-embedded, long-term strategy
January acquisitions round-up: Lavinia Fontana’s Portrait of Antonietta Gonzales goes to Tokyo museum
Other acquisitions this month include a Bronze Age Peebles stone hoard, and Yatreda Art Collective’s Abyssinian Queen NFT
A newly discovered bath complex—thought to be the biggest in a Pompeiian home—is set to open to the public
The spa complex was thought to have been owned by a powerful politician
Sara Raza to lead revamped Centre for Contemporary Art in Tashkent
The London-born curator, who has previously organised shows at events such as the Venice Biennale, has been appointed as the artistic director and chief curator of the museum in Uzbekistan’s capital
Vancouver Art Gallery gifted collection of 122 Modern and contemporary works
The gifted works, collectively valued at C$10m ($7m), come from Vancouver collectors Brigitte and Henning Freybe and include pieces by Frank Stella, Robert Rauschenberg, Julie Mehretu and more
Aaron De Groft, Orlando Museum of Art director fired in Basquiat forgery scandal, has died, aged 59
Exhibitions
‘The market is still the domain of famous male artists’: Guerrilla Girls open their first commercial gallery show in New York
The feminist art collective’s commercial debut in their hometown, at Hannah Traore Gallery, is intended to introduce their activist work to a new generation
Buyers can name their price at gallery that challenged artists to create hard-to-sell works
Haul Gallery in Brooklyn, which recently transitioned to a non-profit model, is offering conceptually or physically difficult works for as little as $1 apiece
The self-styled ‘first English abstract artist’ Paule Vézelay gets an overdue exhibition
The show at the Royal West of England Academy in Bristol will explore the little-known artist’s remarkable life and career
‘The event as spectacle’: how Weegee’s photographs were more than just documentations of life
An exhibition at the International Center of Photography will explore the larger-than-life photographer’s ability to create sensational images, whether photographing the hoodlums of New York or stars of Hollywood
Tadek Beutlich, from Second World War soldier to master weaver in the picturesque village of Ditchling
An exhibition at the Ditchling Museum of Art and Craft untangles the life and work of the Polish-born artist who reinvented craft weaving as an art form
Book Club
‘The painter in me did not die’: novelist Orhan Pamuk turns his hand to art
Notebooks filled with the Turkish author's drawings reflect events spanning the past decade
An expert’s guide to Brazilian Modernism: five must-read books on the subject
All you ever wanted to know about the topic, from its impact on global Modernist art to a novel capturing the “atmosphere of heady excitement”—selected by the curator Rebecca Bray
‘An impossible stillness that artists have chased’: Alvaro Barrington on Piero della Francesca’s Baptism of Christ
In this exclusive extract from a new book, the London-based artist explains why Piero’s painting is his favourite in the National Gallery collection
Magnum’s opus of America: a new photography compendium reveals the many sides of the US
The publication’s co-editor Peter van Agtmael chooses seven key images from legendary agency’s new book
Opinion
Comment | Why seeing art by train should be the next big thing
Flying to an exhibition is increasingly unjustifiable. But by choosing the train, visitors can enjoy endless, inspiring encounters with art and life
Comment | What happens behind the scenes at the museum is what really matters
From delicate cleaning to forklifts, the unseen, but crucial, investment often goes unnoticed
Comment | Why the road to the sale of Frieze is a winding one
The potential sale raises questions around how to value the prestigious and unique art brand
Comment | Despite what some critics claim, art today isn’t really too obsessed with ‘social justice’
In viral essays and beyond, those who bemoan the dominance of identity politics in museums often reveal more of their own biases than of the art world's
The Year in Review: escalating art attacks and responses to war
This year has been marked by a rising number of politically-motivated attacks on art. But we should not forget the power of art to unite diverse groups of people
The Week in Art
A podcast bringing you the latest news from the art world, every week
Los Angeles wildfires, World Monuments Fund’s watch list, a Hokusai drawing manual—podcast
How the most devastating fires in Southern Californian history are affecting artists and art workers, plus chats about the work the WMF is doing to protect world heritage and a new book about Katsushika Hokusai’s methods
Obituaries
David Lynch, artist and film-maker who portrayed America’s dark side with surreal humour and violence, has died, aged 78
Lynch trained as a painter before becoming a successful film-maker and ultimately returning to visual art in recent decades
Pippa Garner, art and gender provocateur, has died, aged 82
Garner's witty deviations in form, text and body addressed the consumerism and sameness plaguing US culture
Jimmy Carter, the US president and Renaissance man who believed in art and rock and roll, has died, aged 100
The Southern Baptist peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia, was a dedicated amateur portraitist and made a deep cultural impact when in office
Joe Average, Canadian artist and Aids activist, has died, aged 67
Known for his bold, bright-hued paintings, prints and murals, Average was a pillar of Vancouver’s creative community
Zilia Sánchez, Cuban artist renowned for shaped, abstract canvases, has died, aged 98
Sánchez, who fled Cuba and ultimately settled in Puerto Rico, only achieved widespread critical acclaim late in her career
Books
Beetlejuice and beyond: the origins of Tim Burton’s world of gothic romance and its enduring influence
Catalogue accompanying exhibition at London’s Design Museum explores the US film-maker’s unique aesthetic
Intense repartee: a collection of letters that the critic John Berger exchanged with his artist son
The correspondence between John and Yves Berger is both moving and enlightening
Two books explore Piet Mondrian's journey into abstraction—and his posthumous influence on 1960s fashion
How, two decades after his death, did Mondrian become a brand icon, and make a lasting contribution to the “youthquake”?
This newly translated volume compiles the photographic traces of a libidinous love affair
Author Annie Ernaux and journalist Marc Marie’s collaborative memoir documents a passionate yet haunted relationship
The arts should be recognised as a key part of what it means to be human, argues a new publication
An urgent treatise on the decommodification of culture by the professor of cultural economy Justin O’Connor
A brush with... podcast
A podcast that asks artists the questions you've always wanted to
A brush with… Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset — podcast
In the first episode of A brush with featuring an artist duo, Elmgreen and Dragset discuss their influences, and the cultural experiences that have shaped their lives and work
Adventures with Van Gogh
Adventures with Van Gogh is a weekly blog by Martin Bailey, our long-standing correspondent and expert on the artist. Published every Friday, his stories range from newsy items about this most intriguing artist to scholarly pieces based on his own meticulous investigations and discoveries.
Framing Van Gogh: why the artist preferred not to surround his works with gold
The National Gallery’s blockbuster exhibition, ‘Van Gogh: Poets & Lovers’, provides an unusual opportunity to see how the artist’s works have been framed by their owners
Diary
The art of retail—artists take over Selfridges store in London
Shoppers can browse a range of works in a special Sarabande foundation pop-up called House of Bandits
As part of a new campaign, David Hockney is encouraging the nation to get drawing
The artist's Draw! project is part of the Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture
En suite art? London exhibition opens in an Airbnb
East End show highlights the ‘commodification of the domestic’ say the organisers
Stellar work: Mercury crater named after artist Ruth Asawa
The Japanese-American sculptor is the 23rd woman to be given the honour—compared with 100 men
Elon Musk serves up disconcerting AI art
The controversial billionaire failed to spot a contemporary car in Caillebotte picture altered using artificial intelligence by Luma
Technology
News, background and analysis on the latest tech developments—artificial intelligence tools; Web3, the blockchain, NFTs; virtual and augmented reality; social media platforms—and how they affect the art market, museums, artists and curators.
Oliviero Toscani, Italian photographer known for his provocative fashion campaigns, dies aged 82
His work for brands such as Benetton sparked conversations about issues including the Aids crisis and anorexia
Immersive inspirations: three key developments from 2024
It was a big year for immersive art, with major institutions getting involved, new virtual reality kit, and a groundbreaking event in Venice
Does Trump’s return spell boom or bust for the NFT art market?
Experts are sceptical that the NFT market will ever rebound to its 2021 levels, but the crypto asset sector may still manage to take over the art world one way or the other
Palestine Museum US launches NFT collection in support of Gaza artists
The museum released a non-fungible token of a work by the Gazan artist Mohammed Alhaj to kick off the new initiative
‘It surprised me’: artist finds inspiration in what AI art gets wrong
Charlie Engman is creating a counter to the “internet nerd culture” imagery widely associated with generative art