Exploring Now You See Us, which celebrates the output of Vanessa Bell, Mary Beale and many more, plus conversations about Dia’s legacy and the ’visual linguist‘ Wong
Conversation with Michael Govan throws light on what motivated Donald Judd and Dan Flavin
Rosemarie Castoro’s Trap A Zoid arrangement was last seen in New York in the 1970s
Andre rose to prominence in the New York art world of the 1960s to become a totemic—and controversial—figure renowned for his material-driven sculptures
Hugely influential art dealer whose galleries in Los Angeles and New York launched Minimalism and Land Art in the US
The American artist’s work spanned many formats and materials, and was informed by his early desire to become a writer
Her memoir, entitled The Girl Who Loved Artists, is yet to be published
Robert Ryman exhibition shared with MoMA, New York, will also travel to Madrid, San Fransisco, and Minneapolis
Grappling with questions of authenticity, museum 'decommissions' some works from the Panza Collection
It is the first large-scale US exhibition of the German artist's work
“In defining art's formal limits, he was the most radical painter of his time,” says art historian Robert Storr
We once asked the artist for his thoughts on Minimalism; he called our questions “trivial, superficial, puerile, misdirected, irrelevant, egregious, distracted, dull, feeble, breathless, gossip-mongering, smarmy and lizard-like”
New shows at commercial galleries, from emerging names to rediscovered talents
Thinking Broadly at LACMA
Newly released documents uncover a heated argument and the search for spares
Ryman has been painting white on white for more than 50 years. He talks about how his paintings work and which shade of white he uses
The show will open at Tate Modern later this month
This exhibition incorporates paintings and works on paper
The conservation departments of both museums are collaborating on the study, analysis, and treatment of a badly damaged painting
Meanwhile, Paul McCarthy and Pierre Molinier provide a little titillation
Lisson’s historical show unites major international artists
Beyeler, doyen of Basel dealers, has taken over the Kunstmuseum and the Kunsthalle to accommodate this event
The exhibition, in which psychological unrest is registered through the body, will appear next in Frankfurt
The Drill Hall Gallery is showing works by Mark Rothko and Frank Stella, among others