Catherine Hickley
Catherine Hickley is the Museums & Heritage Editor of The Art Newspaper
The artists' collaboration—first as teacher and student, then as a couple—is explored in a new exhibition at the Lenbachhaus in Munich
The report calls for a new panel to advise the minister on repatriations and a new provenance research centre
Three works are to be sold at Christie’s in Paris this month; further sales to follow
Plans include a show about ivory and a “critical approach” to colonial legacies
Missing for 75 years, the large marble head, one of the artist's best-known works, was uncovered by chance during construction work at Kunsthaus Dahlem
Head of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, Hermann Parzinger, responds to an expert panel’s call to dismantle Germany’s biggest arts body
His collection of works by Warhol, Twombly, Beuys and Kiefer is on long-term loan to the Berlin museums
From Berghain's lockdown exhibition to the Brücke Museum's Vivian Suter display, here's what to see in the reigning contemporary art hub this week
Human remains in museums have attracted widespread criticism
Art dealer Philipp Hainhofer's 16th-century "friendship book" contains inscriptions from Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II and Cosimo de’ Medici
Film aims to show “surveillance, ideological brainwashing, and brute determination used to control every aspect of society” by China’s leaders
As the world grapples with the Covid-19 pandemic, public campaigns around another virus are explored in an exhibition at the Folkwang Museum in Essen
Exhibition will recall the “intense and wonderful” 1990s fashion scene with photographs by Juergen Teller, Corinne Day and Karl Lagerfeld
As the Black Lives Matter movement goes global, museums face renewed demands to restitute artefacts plundered from Africa
“Studio Berlin” offers a way to circumvent the toughest door policy in the world and see works by Olafur Eliasson, Wolfgang Tillmans and Anne Imhof
Government plans to buy 150 works to help overcome the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic
Family of Gustav Arens also receive French government compensation for a Tintoretto painting and a Dutch landscape
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas voices “relief” at release of Hella Mewis, an arts manager living in Baghdad who works to promote young Iraqi artists
Hella Mewis, who works to promote young Iraqi artists, was abducted yesterday by unidentified men in the centre of the city
The vessels, containing 2,600-year-old mummified internal organs, are due to be sold in Munich tomorrow
Twenty-six objects looted from Abomey Palace to return to Benin, Omar Tall’s sword to be transferred to Senegal
Hermann Parzinger, the president of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, says he hopes the organisation will no longer exist in five years
Former concentration camps are being increasingly drawn into culture wars by “normal-looking” people challenging guides and disrupting tours
With 2,000 employees, the foundation is the biggest arts employer in Germany
The view of Dresden's Zwinger moat had been returned to the heirs of Max Emden and will now be offered for sale in London on 28 July
The 360-degree work by the Iranian architect Yadegar Asisi will be displayed in a rotunda on the banks of the Seine
Move means the venue can continue to operate as Berlin’s main contemporary art museum
Sculpture by Latvian artist Aigars Bikse is in a prominent spot in front of the National Museum of Art
Exhibition of Berlin city history is to be among the first to open
Exhibited from today at Dresden’s Kupferstich-Kabinett, the picture of an old man is the only undisputed drawing by the Dutch Old Master that survives