Young Artists Rode a $712 Million Boom. Then Came the Bust.
Artists saw six-figure sales and heard promises of stardom. But with the calamitous downturn in the art market, many collectors bolted — and prices plummeted.
By Zachary Small and
Artists saw six-figure sales and heard promises of stardom. But with the calamitous downturn in the art market, many collectors bolted — and prices plummeted.
By Zachary Small and
While L.A. County grapples with homelessness, elegant new housing projects in Long Beach and Venice signal the solutions — and challenges — ahead.
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Her first solo museum exhibition, at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, is full of towering, mysterious beings. The exhibit is “all grief work,” she said.
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Why yes it was, courtesy of the Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings, who is underwriting a big outdoor art program at the ski resort he bought.
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An Undersung and Unruly Woodstock in Pictures, 30 Years On
A new photography show celebrates the 30th anniversary of Woodstock 1994, middle child to the festivals of 1969 and 1999.
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Illuminating a Trailblazing Artist Who Died Too Young
In her first American museum show, Paula Modersohn-Becker looks bracingly modern.
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The Odd Duck of Antiguan Art, in His Ecstatic, Expressionist Glory
At the Drawing Center, the revival of the polymath Antiguan artist continues with a stack of his written archive displayed alongside his expressionist paintings.
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This Enormous Artwork Turns a Palace Into a Pawnshop
Christoph Büchel’s vast installation in Venice is compelling, obsessive and sometimes hilarious.
By Scott Reyburn and
What to See in N.Y.C. Galleries in August
This week in Newly Reviewed, Walker Mimms covers the overlooked artist Ker-Xavier Roussel, Fritz Scholder’s paintings and a group show in a modest office-like space.
By Jillian SteinhauerMartha Schwendener and
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For T Magazine, Kate Guadagnino set out to identify the many people involved in creating a single object or artistic work, including a luxury handbag, a performance piece, a pizza and more.
By Sarah Bahr
P-town offers overlapping identities: one of America’s oldest art colonies, nature preserve, thriving L.G.B.T.Q. resort and historic Portuguese fishing village.
By Brett Sokol
The executive director of the Museum of the African Diaspora says the goal is to “celebrate the rich Black art landscape” of the region.
By Jori Finkel
Klaudio Rodriguez will become the executive director and chief executive of the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg, Fla.
By Annie Aguiar
Research meets poetry in Imani Jacqueline Brown’s exploration of oil extraction and its consequences for her native New Orleans — and for the planet.
By Siddhartha Mitter
Framing artwork is just the first step. Figuring out how (and where) to hang it takes some doing.
By Tim McKeough
We asked the experts for some shortcuts — because “budgets don’t always allow for a professional framer.”
By Tim McKeough
The packages were sent to a woman whose work had led to the heralded recovery of the Kyrenia, and to new insights into classical Greek seafaring. But their ancient contents were a problem.
By Graham Bowley and Seamus Hughes
When the Democratic National Convention kicks off on Aug. 19, an array of art tied to the election season will greet visitors and Chicagoans alike.
By Laura van Straaten
Her residency and exhibition at the University of Chicago highlights vanessa german’s determination to tap into the power of love and art to heal traumas — including her own.
By Aruna D’Souza
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