The architect rejected nationalistic solutions in favour of collaged restoration
A landmark report shows how attacks on heritage can cause “psychosocial, economic, and other types of harm”—but laws need to go further
Blue Shield workers have been able to access and gather evidence in destroyed cultural buildings and heritage sites in Ukraine. What have they found?
The 2023 event focuses on marginalised voices for the first time, with more than half of participants from Africa or the African diaspora
Different methods of protecting heritage during times of war are explored with mixed success in this challenging read
The museum—set inside a Buckinghamshire country house—has opened its largest ever gallery, called the Intelligence Factory, this week
Amid Russia’s savagery we must maintain a clear ethical stance when intervening to protect culture
With the culture wars in full swing, reactionary ideas on city-making are again in the ascendant, argues architecture and heritage critic Robert Bevan
Blasting of two ancient rock shelters at Juukan Gorge was authorised in 2013 by Western Australia state government
Scholars say the organisation needed to build the 12,000-year-old temple may mark the beginnings of class society and patriarchy
New exhibition and project space put spotlight on civic activism and emerging voices
Monet takes on the city at the National Gallery and it is the final week of the once-in-a-lifetime Charles I show at the Royal Academy
National Gallery exhibition, which includes Rouen cathedral paintings, reveals another side of French Impressionist
Museum's Marrakech counterpart is due to open later this month
Trial in The Hague of Islamic extremist reminds us that the destruction of built heritage and human life are often linked
Artists, architects and curators tell us about the spaces they love—and hate
Architecture critic Robert Bevan reviews Herzog & de Meuron's "literal tour de force"
The architect, who died in March, faced down her critics to leave a remarkable, if flawed, legacy
Does Unesco have the power to stop the decline of crucial heritage sites?
The extent of the destruction is uncertain in the fog of war
Western museums are feeling the pressure over restitution claims from China, Turkey and Cambodia
The number of artefacts under restitution claims is rising
The co-founder of Herzog & de Meuron architects on remodelling Messe Basel and the end of Modernity
From Macedonia to Mali, the culture of the Islamic world is in an ideological and territorial struggle
Thai army cedes ground but future of Cambodian World Heritage site remains unresolved
Five bidders competed for a Hirst painting
The artist presented as an eminent contemporary of Ruskin and Morris rather than a prefiguration of abstraction
Ian Hamilton Finlay’s exhibition at Victoria Miro complements ICA survey