
Gareth Harris
Gareth Harris is the Chief Contributing Editor of The Art Newspaper
Nechtschein-Modigliani does retain moral rights over the artist's work, however
The estate of the artist is one of the most contested in the art world
The Jameel Prize show at the Victoria and Albert Museum looks for the best in Islamic or Islamic-inspired art
A former girlfriend of Jean-Michel Basquiat is to exhibit works from her personal archive, including a series of black-and-white nude portraits of the artist, who died in 1988
Galleries test the market for innovation, but there is also a wealth of Modernism on show
The empire builders are changing the rules
A gift of 375 film works, with conditions
Considering why artistic responses to the AIDS crisis are relevant today
Gonzalo Orquín received a letter from the Vicariate of Rome
Warnings that the French government's proposed VAT hikes will undermine the country's standing in the global art market
The upcoming exhibition will feature around 50 works by 22 artists
Beuys show can go on
Next Summer's exhibition focuses on the boundaries between the mainstream and the marginal
Basel's best kept secrets, told by artists, curators, dealers and connoisseurs
Museum closes a cultural gulf
Nations are taking contrasting approaches to the region’s continuing political and social chaos
A little-known copy of Leonardo’s The Last Supper by Marco d’Oggiono will get a thorough clean
From Liechtenstein to Lisbon, these collectors discuss their interests and methods
The Italian artist has selected his own works to fill the entire space
The Dutch advisory committee on the assessment of restitution applications has rejected a claim for two sculptures by the 15th-century German artist Tilman Riemenschneider
The rates for use tax and sales tax has increased to 7.5%
Paris museum is on a mission to collect Latin American art—and a show of colonial-era paintings is the overture
The artist is implicated in scheme, allegedly allowing fakes to circulate
Tony Blair will not feature heavily in this exhibition - rather, those whose lives were shaped and destroyed by the conflict
The modern and contemporary design fair's profile is rising
The family is objecting to the "extravagant" scheme
The importance of meditation, mirages and tuning out.
Kenny Scharf, Marilyn Minter, David LaChapelle and Julian Opie have all painted Antonio, and Takashi Murakami is in his sights
The show largely sidesteps Tony Blair’s controversial role in the conflict