Three institutions have joined forces to transform a corner of the University of Texas at Dallas into a cultural hub
Plus a peek behind the scenes with our undercover gallerist
From the British Museum thefts to the consequences in art and heritage of the Israel-Hamas war
In 2023 the bar for shows was so high it was hard to choose the best. But which one was a stinker?
Kissinger, one of the most photographed men of his time, with an instantly recognisable pair of spectacles, was a powerful graphic gift to artists including Philip Guston
The long-delayed London survey is a revelatory tour de force that charts the twists and turns of the Canadian-American artist's 50-year career
From Old Master portraits and grainy photographs to sculptures on chairs and naked performances
The Foundation for Contemporary Arts has been selling works donated by visual artists to fund those working in experimental forms and performance since 1963
The delay allowed the show's curators to travel and conduct further research about the Ku Klux Klan works, organisers say
A group of paintings and works on paper from the collection of Alan and Dorothy Press is estimated to fetch more than $50m across multiple sales in New York this spring
Some of the works from the collection, which will go on view next year, are featured in the controversial traveling retrospective devoted to Guston
Coinciding with opening of controversially postponed Guston show, these publications are vital to grasping the artist's contribution to post-war American art
Plus, a rediscovered Titian and a reliquary sculpture from Gabon
Plus, London's new Queer Britain museum and a rediscovered work by Caterina Angela Pierozzi
The changing of dates of a four-city survey, purportedly due to the artist’s Ku Klux Klan motifs, caused uproar in 2020. Now, after a curatorial rethink, the first exhibition is set to open
The sale at Sotheby's New York in May will coincide with the delayed opening of the controversial exhibition Philip Guston Now in Boston
Godfrey is taking voluntary redundancy as part of cost-cutting measures due to impact of Covid-19
Although Guston's paintings of Klansmen “remain controversial today” they are also “deeply relevant”, she says
After charges of racism levelled at his museum in 2019, Teitelbaum had to deal with the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. And then there was the Guston controversy
A monograph on Catherine Opie, an analysis of museums in the 21st century and an overview of Joseph Beuys also make the grade
From the catalogue for a controversial Guston show to a four-volume tome on Leonardo Da Vinci—and some lighter reads too
From the saga over a controversially delayed Philip Guston show to an under appreciated female Old Master whose big moment never came
It was tempting to simply put “everything and everyone” in the bad-year column. But even this most challenging of years was not entirely terrible
Turbulent year draws to a close with sector wracked by pandemic lockdowns and Black Lives Matter challenges
The museums should make urgent use of the delay already caused by the pandemic rather than lurch towards lengthy postponement
Citing “unease and anxiety” about the show, the director of MFA, Boston predicts it will spur “in-depth discussions about great art”
Mark Godfrey has been disciplined after posting a long statement on his Instagram account describing postponement as "extremely patronising to viewers"
Plus, Maggi Hambling on making love with paint
“An exhibition with such strong commentary on race cannot be done by all white curators,” says NGA chief Kaywin Feldman
“The people who run our great institutions do not want trouble,” say signatories