Getty conservators research new methods of protecting museum works from pests
Clarence House is full of treasures
Collectors fear changes to export regulations after British departure
Looting, conflict and mining have caused terrible destruction
Timothy Schroder named curator for the collection, and will start work on the Somerset House displays
In Britain, official papers are revealed after thirty years. The Art Newspaper was ready and waiting to see what was—and what might have been
Seven hundred year-old painting was dismissed as nineteenth-century
This is in marked contrast to Russia’s tough line against any restitution of works of art taken from Nazi Germany
Record giving approached £1bn across the continent
Includes a selection of masterpieces of Spanish sculpture
The crypt of the baroque Frauenkirche was reopened last month, with an altar by Anish Kapoor
Income from tickets represented about double the average weekly level of voluntary contributions.
The Becket casket and Guercino are just two works of art saved for Britain with money from a Hong Kong lawyer
£250,000 needed to restore the greatest English medieval altarpiece
Sotheby’s were successful; the National Trust furious
Controversial stately sell-off
A successful show, with record attendance of 409,000 visitors
After much controversy surrounding the archives release, Sir Alan Bowness releases part of the archive to Tate
It will be the first time that an institution has allowed the story of its acquisitions to be subjected to such intense inquiry
A major survey that leaves interpretation of his achievements to the visitor
V&A tackles Britain head-on
Unless a small Suffolk church can raise £168,000 to conserve one of the earliest English paintings, it may have to sell it
A commercial company has logged 34,000 looted objects so far
Detailed study of the V&A's Raphael cartoons suggests he painted them as independent works of art
Next month the Belgian city of Ghent is mounting a high-tech search for a panel of Van Eyck's masterpiece missing since 1934
Peace was celebrated in Europe fifty years ago. As The Art Newspaper reaches its fiftieth issue this month, we look at the art of a war-torn world
As the Red Army pushed back the Nazi invaders in 1944, a pair of Soviet art historians compiled a list of masterpieces from Europe’s museums to be brought back to Moscow
The Yorkshire furniture tycoon is one of the most important art and antique collectors in Britain today, but his name is almost unknown
The Art Newspaper has tracked down twenty-four of the drawings looted by Hitler and sold by the prince whose ancestors had donated them to their local museum