Ambitious joint venture between New York and Havana at risk as State Department remains unwilling to grant immunity from seizure for Cuban loans
Fights at the top cast doubt on the venerable gallery's future
Montreal museum returns painting amid growing calls to fund provenance research and return disputed works
Thinking Broadly at LACMA
Will the Canadian collector showcase his expansive modern art collection?
European Union “green” guidelines create new conundrums for museums and artists
The East German intelligence service confiscated hundreds of items in the 1970s and 1980s, which are now being returned to their rightful owners and their heirs
A collection of paintings is stored in a basement in Washington, DC. The artists are serving—or have served—in the US Army
Around 450 paintings made by artists working for the Third Reich are now in Washington, DC. They are unlikely to be returned to Germany
The Bush administration and its supporters now have their guns trained on social policy
Everything for the armchair art lover, at the flick of a switch
Picasso’s granddaughter is preparing the catalogue raisonné of the artist’s sculpture, with funding from the Gagosian Gallery
The artist will be played by Andy Garcia
Cornell's influence is traced to a breadth of modern art and poetry
The agents who had investigated stolen art will now work on cases related to terrorism and fraud
After 57 years in the studio’s vaults, the result of an unlikely collaboration is revealed to the public
Archaeologists say the artefacts are likely to have been smuggled out of Iraq
The Art Newspaper speaks to the director of the Metropolitan about the historical significance of the Iraq Museum's plunder and how disasters of its kind can be dealt with
We take stock of the mania for commemoration that has overtaken New York and Washington, DC
Time to stop being ashamed of those Conquistadores, and to think about the Spanish-speaking population today
The Acropolis museum is under construction, and the design for the permanent exhibition is in preparation
Is this the predicted 'chilling effect' on international loans?
Iraq’s history is our history too
As “Frida” hits the screens, the cult painter’s art–and spin-offs–are in high demand
Book Review: Whose Pharaohs?
This year’s Columbia University School of the Arts 2002 MFA Thesis Exhibition as zeitgeist for current trends
But only with continued funding from cosmetics tycoon Ronald Lauder
How apocalyptic crises in the twentieth century - the endgame - permeated the familiar and the practical