[ad_1] So Inigo Philbrick, the art market’s golden boy-turned-convicted fraudster, left jail in January this year, after less than four years into...
[ad_1] Van Gogh’s Wheatfield (June 1888), which is among the artist’s finest Arles landscapes, has just gone on display at the Rijksmuseum....
[ad_1] Mark Rothko’s celebrated Seagram Murals are on the move again. Five of the abstract works will go on show at Tate...
[ad_1] The final known painting by the Baroque bad boy Caravaggio is heading to the National Gallery in London for a small...
[ad_1] The London-born art historian Penelope Curtis has made the intriguing switch from running museums to writing novels. This month, the former...
[ad_1] A unique 19th-century Māori feather cloak, created from thousands of green parrot feathers woven into a grass fabric, has been conserved...
[ad_1] A wine label often displays information dictated by legislation or regional requirements. However, this space on a bottle has infinite possibilities...
[ad_1] Naomi Klein’s 2007 book The Shock Doctrine opens with an evocative quotation from César Aira’s novella Cumpleaños: “Any change is a...
[ad_1] Pre-pandemic, the Lenbachhaus in Munich approached Tate with an idea: why not share the crown jewels from each other’s collections in...
[ad_1] A thought-provoking exhibition of work by the late photojournalist Tim Hetherington at London’s Imperial War Museum [ad_2]