The latest Hiscox Online Art Trade Report finds that this booming asset class benefitted from a late-summer surge
Hitting the block at Sotheby's next month, Diego y yo (Diego and I), painted in 1949, could become the most valuable Latin American work ever sold at auction
Director says the fair is now looking at a number of cities for its third base as question marks hang over Miami
Sales at the French fair were generally healthy, but David Zwirner felt it lacked "the vibrancy of Frieze"
Both foreign and domestic art galleries benefit from the discount
As Fiac opens its doors this week, gallerists reflect on the importance of participating in the French fair
Experts fear country could become "gateway to Europe for illicit cultural property", while new asset seizure powers—which include art—are being introduced to help criminal investigations into unexplained wealth
Asian bidders set the pace again as several works sell for ten times their lower estimate at the auction house's 20th century and contemporary art evening sale. But are these prices sustainable?
As British painters in their 20s and 30s are commanding huge sums for their work, how does the market frenzy affect their career in the longer term?
The first NFT to be sold at auction in Europe sells for £800,000, while collectors compete for emerging women artists, leaving more established names on the shelf
Led by Yuki Terase and Amy Cappellazzo, the company aims to have firm footing in both Western and Asian markets.
Western liberal democracies have long called the shots when deciding what is “good” art. But that could be about to change
Asian collectors were behind much of the high bidding for hot emerging artists including Jadé Fadojutimi, Ewa Juszkiewicz and Flora Yukhnovich
Currently the executive director of Hyundai gallery, Lee says there is a “long history of collecting culture” in the South Korean capital
With Frieze preparing a new Seoul fair, and a growing roster of galleries, the city could steal Hong Kong’s crown
Twenty galleries from Africa are among 47 exhibitors at the fair in London this week, with some taking advantage of the UK's newly relaxed pandemic travel rules
A previous painting called Girl with Balloon was shredded live at a Sotheby's auction three years ago, the resulting work, Love is in the Bin, has now sold
The auction house—which estimates the painting at $30m—helped broker a deal between the seller and the descendants of two Jewish families who had it in the Nazi era
As work heads back to auction at Sotheby's, the provenance of the street artist’s Girl with Balloon is being questioned
Buying a work and donating another to a museum sounds like a win-win—but who really benefits?
Some European gallerists say they may not participate in future London fairs because of how "extremely complicated" it has become
The Norwegian collector tells us what he has bought and why
The 850 items, spanning six centuries, is being offered by the booksellers Peter Harrington
Millennial buyers boosted sales for Western artists, whose works accounted for $114m out of $185m
The London gallery, now run by Martin Clist and Charis Tyndall, is marking five decades with an exhibition of Greek black glaze pottery opening this week
When the fair went online-only during the pandemic last year, a planned section dedicated to queer and non-binary artists was cancelled
The conviction of the father-and-son duo, Des and Gary Pickersgill, for the thefts of around £1.7m from an elderly widow's home, brings renewed focus on the threat of antique “knockers”
The information sharing community hopes to launch with 300 members and has been founded by a group of galleries including Sadie Coles, Blum & Poe, Stevenson and Carlos/Ishikawa
14 galleries are taking part in the three month pop up
No.9 Cork Street, which will provide opportunities for pop-up exhibitions, opens as the celebrated Mayfair gallery hub gains a new lease of life