Nicole Eisenman, who is showing new works this week, on the “weird and wonderful” inspiration the city provides
Satellite fair organisers are planning increasingly inventive projects to make their events stand out from the pack
Real-estate price hikes have hastened the development of a northern gallery hub
Curatorial projects, faster ferries and the "specific charms" of Randall's Island await visitors
Asian galleries sold well at this year’s event
The industry is putting on a brave face in the wake of another devastating attack on a European city
Local collectors were scarce at SP-Arte as the country heads further into recession
Co-founder Sandy Angus says that the event will reconvene next year
Local collectors were scarce as the country heads into a deep recession
The Armory Show and New York’s satellite fairs prove US market is holding up
Hong Kong, Shanghai, Paris, Bicester—the retail trend is all about boosting “dwell time”
Site of 2014 terrorist attack to reopen to public; director not deterred by this week’s massacre
Pi Li, the museum's Sigg senior curator, tells us the story behind some of the pieces now on show in Hong Kong
There's more to so-called "shanzhai" than slavish imitation
Seven artists and collectives on tight deadline for New York show in November
What to see—and where to wind down—during a hectic week
As her solo show opens in Hong Kong, the British artist tells us about marrying a stone in France
Forward-looking galleries are using everything from projector screens to specially commissioned soundtracks to engage a new generation of collectors, spending as much as £50,000 on a single project—but can tech really bring in more cheques?
Scholars now believe Symphony in White is one of 50 rolled-up canvases that vanished after artist's bankruptcy
Domenichino’s Madonna della Rosa (before 1627) makes rare public appearance at Chatsworth House
First Bourgogne Tribal Art Show sets out stall in milieu that doesn’t alienate country dwellers
As Tefaf Maastricht prepares to open its doors, Bendor Grosvenor debunks the myth that the market is dying
From Danish deck chairs to Ancient Egyptian art, we select some of the highlights at Tefaf this month
As far as a painting’s hammer price is concerned, other, less noble considerations matter a great deal more than the picture’s intrinsic quality
Many Tefaf-goers are likely to visit the artist’s Dutch survey, a key part of the Bosch quincentenary celebrations. Stefan Fischer, the author of Taschen’s new book on Bosch, unveils the meaning of his grotesques