Featuring a 900-year-old missal looted during the Second World War
Show in Florence aims to bring "the complexity of the Italian art world” to an international audience
Timing of mega-exhibition organised by Germano Celant is coincidental but timely
The Spanish outpost has agreed a second renewable deal with France’s Pompidou
Arts funder grilled by Scottish parliament over controversial cuts in £99m grants programme
Show of more than 500 works ranges from Giorgio de Chirico to Gruppo 7
New exhibition in Venice puts challenging work that risked offending “stuffy visitors” in context
Park Hill Art Space will include artists' studios and a research institute
Ahead of its reopening and 50th anniversary celebrations, the institution's director looks back
London gallery celebrates 50th anniversary and reopens with Andreas Gurksy retrospective
Galleria Borghese celebrates the 20th anniversary of its reopening with a show that brings together the artist’s entire career
London-based firm Wright & Wright Architects to redevelop 16th-century home for Czech private collection
Royal Academy of Arts exhibition explores the history of drawing the human figure and how artists depict it today
The Art Newspaper team assesses the art world's fortunes in a turbulent year
Fire-resistant museum was closed for three days
At 63, she is the oldest artist to receive the Tate's prestigious £25,000 award
Italian city's botanical garden inspired the concept behind the roving biennial
Controversy provides "opportunity for conversation", museum says
The British artist has unveiled Sixty Minute Spectrum (2017), a new light installation incorporating the London gallery’s distinctive roof
After years in limbo, EMST has received government approval to open fully in former brewery
Codex Leicester will go on show in Florence for the first time in almost four decades
Against the odds, Spain's US-branded museum has drawn more than 20 million visitors since it opened in 1997
As the Guggenheim Bilbao turns 20, we look back at some of the cities that considered, but abandoned, their own branch of New York's Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
From Modigliani’s "indecent" nudes to two shows exploring very different relationships
More than 100,000 Soviet and Eastern European objects find new home in former Armory
From Pussy Riot's immersive penal colony installation to a final chance to see Francis Kéré’s Serpentine Pavilion
Improvements are well documented, but rules are still inadequately enforced
From the British Museum's Lion Man to Matisse's studio studies at the Royal Academy
Cambridge house-museum and its art influenced the student Nicholas Serota to switch from economics to art history
Roman museum aims to become the primary reference for scholarship on the artist