The right-wing politician, who appeared on the TV programme I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!, replaces Oliver Dowden
Police appealing for information after five items, including a pair of Sèvres vases and a clock with a bronze figure of Apollo, were taken from Uppark on the South Downs
In an extraordinary scene, reminiscent of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Vincent’s skull was held aloft and moved in 1905
At the ceremony in London, the Ethiopian ambassador renewed calls for museums to return Maqdala objects
Major restoration on Girl reading a Letter at an Open Window shows a large studded goblet later covered by a green curtain
Dresden exhibition will include Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window along with key international loans and works by other Dutch Golden Age artists
Long assumed to be Vincent’s final painting, this foreboding scene is also full of life
Catalogue raisonné rejects unusual part-painting, part-sketch, as expert says the “colonial” nature of the composition is not the artist’s style
Arrested in Dubai, the story of Mafia suspect Raffaele Imperiale confirms long-suspected links between the drugs trade and art theft
Before the discovery of the more than 50 painted blocks, “the richness of Mannaean civilisation had not been appreciated”, expert says
One has been always been hidden away in private collections and will fetch a fortune when it emerges; the other was destroyed by an American bomb
In an exclusive interview with The Art Newspaper, a very well-informed anonymous source tells us how museums are protecting their collections as militants sweep the country
From a brothel garden to Nazi leader Hermann Göring’s fake—all part of the sunflower story
Busby auction house confirms it has "negotiated a settlement" after Ethiopian officials requested the return of items stolen by British troops in a brutal 1868 battle
Monet asked how the artist who made this exuberant masterpiece could possibly be unhappy—and a century later it became the most expensive work at auction
The story of Le Pont de Trinquetaille—with the young female mudlark and the ruffians from the red-light district
National cultural institutions and English Heritage will receive £100m, making up half the losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic
When the gallery reopens on 8 July, visitors will have to book tickets in advance, and will be asked to wear face masks and stay two metres apart
“Tall, dark, rather handsome”, his description of Gauguin in Breton garb
Vincent describes his artist friend as having the “instincts of a wild beast”
The museum is expected to reopen in July or August
The Hollywood star, who died last week aged 103, became famous for his portrayal of the "tortured artist"
Our pick of the gifts and purchases to enter international museum collections in 2019
Why stories—from the mutilated ear to the eventual suicide—can distort our view of the art
Although Tory announcement calls it the “largest cultural capital programme in a century”, pledge is only quarter of Labour’s £1bn culture fund
Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats commit to stopping Brexit and protecting arts funding through the National Lottery
One of the works was looted by the Nazis from Jewish collector Jacques Goudstikker, but is now being sold by his heir after restitution
Speculation remains over whether Salvator Mundi will appear
The Praemium Imperiale Award will be presented in Tokyo in October
All the evidence suggests it was the artist who fired the fatal shot