Two decades after one of the most controversial exhibitions of recent times, Arnold Lehman, the former director of the Brooklyn Museum, reveals all in a new book
To mark the London museum’s big birthday, we have searched our archive for our favourite articles on the institution, from a critic's take on the café’s cuisine to an interview with Tate’s former director Nicholas Serota ahead of the Switch House’s opening in 2016
Political upheaval across the region presents challenges—and opportunities—for artists and collectors
In this 1994 interview, he reveals how he likes art to be displayed, such as natural lighting for Impressionists
By far the most comprehensive artistic testimony were paintings in what immediately became known as the East Side Gallery
From Frank Thiel's Stadt to Tacita Dean's Palast, some of the best works about the Wall and life in Berlin after reunification
East German area became a space of possibilities, not unlike inner-city New York or east London before they were gentrified
Despite not being rich, the city has a large percentage of professional creatives and a booming gallery scene
This archive article, taken from our feature looking back at the fall of the Berlin Wall 25 years later, shows how German culture remained linked when politics broke down
“I feel that at the time of the Medici they had my kind of rapport with their artists”
The country possesses more than 32,000 churches, 6,000 chapels and 87 cathedrals. Their dual administration has caused serious problems of management and conservation
Donald Judd's studio secrets spilled, multi-tasking gallerists and Glenn Lowry's statement sans collar suit
From the fair's director Marc Spiegler playing football on the beach to the collector Jorge Pérez getting a lift from rapper Wyclef Jean, some of our favourite images from the archive
We look back at our very first set of daily papers in 2004
Studio materials and working archive are the focus of a 300-piece exhibition at the NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale
From Cecil Beaton to Annie Leibovitz and from Pietro Annigoni to Lucian Freud, a broad spectrum of image-makers have portrayed the Queen
On the 25th anniversary of German reunification, we republish our first ever front-page story, in which East Berlin museums chief Günter Schade defends his record and reveals how East German museums sold in order to buy
Jacob, Lord Rothschild, is one of the great benefactors of the English museum scene in both time and money
The founding object of conceptualism was probably “by a German baroness”, but this debate is rarely aired
Nations are taking contrasting approaches to the region’s continuing political and social chaos
From Macedonia to Mali, the culture of the Islamic world is in an ideological and territorial struggle
The story of the royal portrait that has most deeply embedded itself in British consciousness and was adopted all over the Commonwealth
Artists have used the walls of Cairo, Damascus and Tripoli to document the uprisings
Zahi Hawass faces major challenges over looting
What is the critical and market sentiment around the artists who made headlines at the Royal Academy, in London, 13 years ago?
The artist reveals that his cavernous upstate New York studio includes a Formula 1 racing car that had "drifted in", and is packed with art following the recent cancellation of two exhibitions in Europe: "It's not good"
An Art Newspaper investigation reveals that, nine years after the controversial Royal Academy show, US collectors and institutions had acquired many of the pieces shown at "Sensation" in 1997
An Art Newspaper investigation tracks the ownership history of art from Charles Saatchi's collection shown at the Royal Academy in 1997
The acquisitions have not been ostentatious, with a significant portion of them being historic royal portraits, bequests or donations
A landmark account of George IV’s decorations and furnishings at Windsor Castle, by Hugh Roberts, who was closely involved in the restoration of many of those interiors following the 1992 fire