As restrictions ease, institutions are reconsidering the policy introduced during the pandemic as it could be putting off last-minute visitors
Plus, Van Gogh’s self-portraits in London, and the story of when Dalí met Freud
Following questions by The Art Newspaper, tags stating the works were under interpretation were immediately removed from the website
The Courtauld exhibition will be the first ever with works from Vincent’s full career, opening on 3 February
The Lower Belvedere exhibition will explore how the Spanish artist's work was influenced by the inventor of psychoanalysis
What happened to the 1923 plan for a Grand Museum to house the collection of Helene Kröller-Müller
Vincent wanted to sell the set for under a dollar as “art for the people”—the museum will have paid several million
With shows in London, Vienna, four American cities and of course Amsterdam—I choose the highlight of the year
Early copy of The Feast of the Rose Garlands in National Gallery exhibition includes a fly on the lap of the Virgin
An artist from Siena could have travelled to Africa in the 14th century to create triptych, which is in a remote monastery in northern Ethiopia
From insects trapped in paint and Vincent's support of a brass band to the scene depicted in his final picture—plus it was suicide (not murder)
The Art Newspaper team picks apart this year’s most important developments, from demands for colonial restitution to the return of culture wars
The Kröller-Müller Museum painting will be unveiled in the Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition
Original sketch has been revealed beneath the paint, shedding light on the Dutch master's intention—but worrying deterioration of the famous picture has also been found
Exhibition 'The World of Stonehenge'—opening in February 2022—presents the site in the context of Bronze Age Europe
Vincent told his artist friend Paul Signac that the fish stood for the gendarmes who hassled him after he mutilated his ear
The Amsterdam museum will rival the Mauritshuis's 1996 exhibition by bringing together more than 23 of the Dutch master's rare paintings
The Oracle Corporation co-founder owns the painting that hung above J.F. Kennedy’s hotel bed on the morning of his assassination—and the president’s final telephone call was about Van Gogh
Newly released documents from the 1990s state: "This is an issue on which we can never win"
Plus, Fabergé in London and a rediscovered Dürer
The US family who owned it believed it was a 20th-century reproduction
But is it one exhibition or two? Surprisingly, Through Vincent’s Eyes: Van Gogh and His Sources will be quite different when it travels next year to California
For the artist who failed to sell during his lifetime, there is now a surge in the market for Vincent’s late paintings
Publication for Mona Lisa show puts the painting in category of works that are attributed to, or authorised or supervised by the Renaissance master
Annual financial accounts show extent of fall in visitor numbers at national museums
The data, published today, found 67 individuals connected to the slave trade including John Julius Angerstein who helped to establish the museum's collection
Vincent’s picture of wheatstacks is coming up at Christie’s on 11 November—yours for around $25m
Steven Naifeh, co-author of the best-selling biography, writes about the painters Vincent admired—and collects their pictures
The great Rococo painting in the Wallace Collection in London has been cleaned, revealing some mischievous details
The piece was part of the Gilbert Collection which is not bound by the same legal restrictions around deaccessioning as the London museum