The artist says leaders at the National Portrait Gallery suggested removing her painting of a non-binary transgender person posing as the Statue of Liberty
The Frick veteran is particularly excited about all the new conservation spaces, created as part of the museum’s recent Selldorf-designed expansion
President Lee Jae Myung’s victory in June has been followed by homecomings for two high-profile arts figures in the country, while the Busan Biennale has also announced its curators for 2026
The 5,000 year old Yorkshire cairn is thought to be older than Stonehenge
The State Department says that Unesco membership does not square with its “America-first” outlook
The Mexica city’s founding is celebrated with new commemorations, reinforcing a nationalist focus on Indigenous identity
A painting by Antoine Watteau valued at £6m was among those granted an export licence after no museum buyer was found, however items including the Second World War notebooks of Alan Turing were saved
The late monarch's wedding and coronation dresses will form part of a 200-piece exhibition at the King's Gallery, opening in Spring 2026
At a recent community meeting discussing the future of Embarcadero Plaza, officials’ comments appeared to seal the fate of its historic Brutalist sculpture
The Fundación Cervieri Monsuárez, located in the ritzy village of José Ignacio, organises exhibitions year round in an effort to transform the area into a hub for Latin America art
The Irish Museum of Modern Art says it halted a screening of “The Angelic Conversation” to check legislation but will now continue showing it
Jennifer Saunders will begin her new post in September
The museum in the occupied West Bank is adapting to regional violence by focusing on digital exhibitions, international shows and works by contemporary Gazan artists
More than a dozen Department of Homeland Security vehicles swarmed the parking lot of the National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture
The development, which was due to address the genocide waged against Aboriginal Tasmanians by British colonists, has lost out to government-backed sports venue
Peñico opened to the public earlier this week, following eight years of research led by the archaeologist Ruth Shady
Questions still linger about the future of the most significant collection of works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera
The Museum of the Present examines the legacy of the Italian island’s century-long fight against organised crime
PhotoIreland, the organiser of Ireland’s longest-running photography festival, has set up its first permanent exhibition space
The beloved 1937 complex, which hosted millions of visitors on the National Park’s North Ridge, has fallen victim to the ongoing Dragon Bravo Fire
Robert Louis Brandon Edwards has been working to convert a vehicle that carried Black Americans north during the Great Migration
Staying open can mean coping with security service raids, harassment, verbal attacks by lawmakers and an exodus of staff
Momin, who has a long-standing relationship with the Whitney Museum and previously led the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle, will start her role in September
Up to 550 jobs could be axed at the charity as part of a bid to save £26m, despite rising visitor numbers
The gift from the John and Susan Horseman Collection will expand access to Native art across the US
Researchers and conservators have found one-size-fits-all standards to be both ineffective and inefficient—and now they're looking for better ways to preserve works
Arthur Brand worked with police to return the items to the Netherlands’ National Archives after they were found in an attic
The French president made the comments yesterday at a ceremony attended by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer
Motorhane has been created as part of a European Union-backed effort to bring the arts to neglected regions
Syria is set to receive $5m including for Palmyra, while a further $9m has been earmarked to address the impact of climate change on heritage, mainly in Africa