Georgina Adam

Georgina Adam is the former Art Market editor of The Art Newspaper, where she is now editor-at-large. She is a contributor to the Financial Times Life & Arts Section, lectures at Sotheby's and Christie’s institutes in London and regularly participates in panels about the art market

Centre Pompidou could pop up in Shanghai, in city’s West Bund ‘cultural corridor’

Paris contemporary art centre in negotiations to open space after setback ten years ago

Centre Pompidou to pop up in Shanghai

Paris Modern art museum in negotiations to open space in West Bund cultural district

Anatole Shagalov embroiled in legal cases that reveal problems of buying art with loans

Buyers using works as collateral and allegedly defaulting on payment becoming increasingly common in "frothy market"

Battle over Kiefer’s Beijing show escalates as curator rejects dealers’ objections

Organisers say Western galleries are attempting to protect their interests in the Chinese market

The art market in 2017: perplexing times for pundits worldwide

Uncertainty is the name of the game, made unpredictable by international politics and an economic downturn in the Gulf

Turmoil at Honolulu’s Bishop Museum

Fears abound for the collection-rich, cash-poor Hawaiian institution

Experts shed light on Modigliani's murky market with new research project

Fakes and squabbles have long-obscured scholarship, but a catalogue raisonné may now be in the pipeline

Art takes second place as selfies steal the shows

Instagram-friendly works can give a huge publicity boost to artists and exhibitions

Fairsnews

Why shopping malls are making space for high-end art

Hong Kong, Shanghai, Paris, Bicester—the retail trend is all about boosting “dwell time”

Biggest ever Giacometti survey show opens in Shanghai

Artist’s foundation teams up with museum founder Budi Tek to bring 250 works to China

Football outscores culture as Qatar spending slumps

Museum layoffs and project suspensions gather pace in Qatar as oil revenue collapse continues

Bangladesh puts exposure before sales to get itself on art market map

The non-commercial Dhaka Art Summit is helping to raise the international profile of South Asian artists

In the beginning: women kickstart South Asia scene

Female artists, collectors, curators and philanthropists are playing a leading role in developing the arts scene in South Asia

Artnews

Art in shopping malls: it’s all product after all

Art has long been hitched to luxury goods, but it is now becoming a more democratic—or commercial—concept as malls begin to incorporate exhibition space

Artnews

Wildenstein can’t be forced to recognise disputed Monet

French court will not intervene over work that was championed by BBC’s Fake or Fortune

Artnews

Owner of purported Monet loses case in French court

Work featured on BBC’s Fake or Fortune programme in 2011

Five predictions for the art market in 2016

Lay-offs at auction houses, terrorism in Europe and luxury art experiences for all

2015's biggest art market developments and what they mean

From the contraction of the Chinese economy to the death of zombie formalism

When did auctions become ‘curated’ sales?

Whether a new concept or just another way to sell art, themed shows are bringing in business

Five galleries to close in Singapore's Gillman Barracks

<span style="color: #222222; background-color: #ffffff;">Low footfall and lack of infrastructure blamed for departures in May <br> </span>

March 2015archive

Regulation guidelines are an ‘impossible dream’

Some think the trade was more concerned about the risk of losing sales than its reputation, observed our editor-at-large in 2015

Musée des Confluences in Lyons pays tribute to city’s great collector Émile Guimet

Guimet's collection will be displayed in a new museum, which has 2.2 million objects and space for temporary shows

Jeff Koonsarchive

Koons’s new deal with David Zwirner gallery

An exhibition of his work will be held next May - but what of Gagosian?

Tatearchive

Tate to launch two new acquisitions committees

The globalisation of Tate's collection continues

Art fairsarchive

Fair or foul: more art fairs and bigger brand galleries, but is the model sustainable?

Many galleries acknowledge that supply is a problem, with artists under pressure to produce more work

Art marketarchive

What Chinese collectors are really buying

While ancient art and ceramics remain popular, Contemporary Chinese art is taking off at home, and buyers outside the mainland are slowly looking toward Western art