Catherine Hickley
Catherine Hickley is the Museums & Heritage Editor of The Art Newspaper
Police are investigating a burglary in the latest incident of crime at festival
Kunstmuseum Bern has taken possession of first works from controversial collection of Nazi-era art due to go on show in November
The former British Museum chief, appointed as founding director in 2015, will steer the project to completion
Owner says Andreas Achenbach’s Sicilian Landscape was bought in a “normal gallery transaction”
City aims to keep Documenta experience alive in five-year hiatus between shows
“Unity seesaw” is to be unveiled in 2019 in front of the city palace
Preserved by Saxon elders and plundered by Stalin’s Red Army, textiles return to view for first time since Second World War
American Numismatic Society purchased the coins with aim of tracing original owner
Building in Unter den Linden expected to open mid-2018
German government researchers say another 150 works in the collection may have been looted
The duo’s Scapegoating Pictures are part of an exhibition marking 500th anniversary of the Reformation
German baking company agrees settlement with heirs of Emma Budge in fourth restitution in a year
Research into post-war seizures of art in East Germany could spark international restitution claims
New barrier at East Side Gallery heritage site will keep tourists back
The proto-scientific craft has long been misconstrued as merely an attempt to produce gold
The Bright Stone of Honour and the Tomb of Marceau will go on show in Cologne this week
Wilhelm Hack Museum acquires The Judgement of Paris from heir
Spanning 3000 years, the exhibition covers the Egyptian origins of alchemy to its influence on contemporary artists such as Koons
Canadian “Big Maple Leaf”, weighing 100kg, is the largest and purest gold coin in the world
The Mosse Art Research Initiative aims to recover thousands of missing works
Etruscan warrior figure was consigned to London dealer who contacted British Museum
British architect David Chipperfield’s proposal to restore the Haus der Kunst sparks furore
Auction house removes image from online version after German journalist spots error
Four art works from the controversial collection have now been returned to the families of their original owners
Bern to focus on “degenerate” art while Bonn focuses on Nazi looting in show that will move on to Berlin
Public authority loses appeal to remove from display the works of Erich Klahn, which feature swastikas and other Third Reich symbols
With backing from Wim Wenders, first presentation of “Gold Projections” coincides with Berlin Film Festival
Manaf Halbouni’s "Monument" to Aleppo comprises three wrecked buses by the city’s Frauenkirche
German food company makes restitution to heir of Jewish dealer Jacques Goudstikker
The software billionaire gives us a tour of the Barberini Museum in Potsdam