Report commissioned by Amsterdam city council finds that she complied with Dutch regulations
But the watercolours are currently at the centre of a closely watched restitution lawsuit
Paris court decision ends legal saga that began in 1991, when the artist died without an heir
Despite controversy over public art project in Calgary, Derek Michael Besant has been commissioned to create a similar work in Ottawa
Leader of powerful Hindu organisation has threatened nationwide protests if long-awaited ruling "goes against Hindus' faith"
Belinda Neumann-Donnelly claims the work could have made an extra $15m if Hubert Neumann had not tried to block its sale
"This may raise many important Holocaust issues for the French market," Christie’s says
A case of man bites dog: auction house turns the tables on Greek government after it was forced to withdraw the figure from New York sale in May
An Israeli art historian has spent 20 years trawling the country’s archives for Palestinian cultural property
Object was returned to consigner not museum from where it was looted at the end of Second World War
There appear to be no winners in what the Arts Council refers to as an “extremely unusual” case
Dmitry Rybolovlev's $450m windfall from Salvator Mundi sale undermined fraud allegation, report says, but criminal cases against Bouvier in Europe are ongoing
Laurent and Olivier Kraemer charged with organised fraud and money laundering in ongoing investigation over so-called "fake Boulles"
It is business as usual, says the organisation’s director, as its founder, Ziyavudin Magomedov, remains in custody awaiting trial on racketeering charges
Lacy Doyle hid millions of dollars in inheritance in a Swiss bank account, US Attorney says
The legal tussle escalated recently with a controversial Barbie doll modelled on the Mexican artist and feminist icon’s image
The forthcoming Court of Arbitration for Art could cut costs and time, add anonymity
The court has ordered that Ezra Chowaiki forfeit over $16.6m as well as works by Picasso, Calder, Chagall and Degas
New York law firm warns galleries that legislation could mean new compliance and reporting regime
While artists and museums embrace futuristic tools, legal experts point to a number of pitfalls with cutting-edge work
Steven Tananbaum has paid $13m for three sculptures over a five-year period but still has not received any of the works
A New York State judge’s decision keeps a claim on Seated Man with a Cane alive
The heirs' attorney describes ruling as step closer to recovering "largest mass-theft in history," but Richard Nagy plans to appeal
Foundation denies allegations that it manipulates the authentication process to inflate the value of its holdings
A new law bans government-funded oil portraits of officials, but most paintings have been paid for privately for years
Meanwhile, much of the country’s art is stuck in limbo and its own efforts to recover cultural property have stalled
The complex saga started in June 2015 when the Beijing-based businessman Zhang Chang bought a work by Francis Bacon at Christie’s
A citizen is facing potential jail time over a mural referencing Trump’s 2005 Access Hollywood tape
The social media giant was found to be at fault for closing a schoolteacher’s account but his claims for €20,000 in damages were dismissed
Itzhak Zarug and his business partner Moez Ben Hazaz found guilty of fabricating provenance of three works