Commercial photography in New York City
Louisa Buck’s choice of London contemporary galleries
And bounty of decorative arts including Chinese porcelain and Mendini furniture
The art fair is 63% non-German this year
We speak to galleries and artists that have responded to this Tate factor
As the SOFA fair of contemporary decorative arts comes to New York, we talk to a leading dealer in the field
Victoria Miro is moving to a nice area and Gagosian is heading for Heddon Street
Shows include the first retrospective of images by Hiro at Pace/MacGill and Todd Eberle's computer portraits
Abbot and Holder, Colnaghi, Maas Gallery, Lumley Cazalett Contemporary Applied Arts, Fine Art Society, David Black, Bloomsbury Workshop, Whitford Fine Art
Also on show are pastel landscapes at Artemis and high-tech furniture at Barry Friedman
Giles Waterfield, former director of the Dulwich Picture Gallery, looks at this witty and non-judgemental enterprise, one of many visual art developments already around the future Tate Gallery of Modern Art
Carolyn Sergeant's energised flower studies and Peter Coke's seashell constructions will also receive exposure this month
Maurizio Cattelan kicks out at English football, Paolini frames “the author” at the Lisson Gallery and Halley sticks to paint
Frank Gehry plants a horse’s head in a Richard Meier space
Impressionist painters on the Seine at Wildenstein, the Gilded Age glows at Vance Jordan, exoticism at Mark Murray plus fine furniture and Picasso’s lino cuts
Shifting between figuration and abstraction with the St Ives school, Kitty North's residence-cum-gallery, Andrew Gifford's textured surfaces and Warhol's studio re-imagined
In 1998 we reflected on Sotheby's and Christie's recent move to sell cutting edge contemporary art as being a watershed moment
Talley Dunn of Gerald Peters Gallery states with pride that “The art community as a whole is growing”
Exploring Basel commercial galleries; from Classic Modernists to new contemporaries
While women Abstract Expressionists come to Long Island, chilling still-lifes plus true confessions in Soho
Commercial galleries with common goals banding together
Tinseltown tunes into art as money and movies draw New York dealers, creating new collectors out of Hollywood royalty - though no one will kiss and tell
Third biannual of strongly supported contemporary decorative arts
Works kept by the artist are to be exhibited in a commercial gallery for the first time
This month, the New York gallery celebrates its sesquicentennial with an exhibition on its most famous paintings and clients
Also, Richard Hains's logo-mania and Robert Malaval's regurgitations
Also showing are Rauschenberg, Richard Long and Ryman