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The photographer’s full body of work, spanning five decades, is being exhibited for the first time at Paris’s Palais Galliera
New private museum lands in Gibraltar; Goodman Gallery opens in game reserve
In an exuberant show, the Ashmolean Museum displays 100 16th- and 17th-century drawings
From a T-shirt by Bella Freud to vinyl records in aid of War Child
Sales fell to three-year low of $65bn last year, Art Basel and UBS Art Market Report shows
Funded by India’s Jindal steel family, the new project draws on the history and thriving economy of Karnataka state
Bard Graduate Center’s extensive show evokes the artist’s canny business mind too
The mill has been working since 1947. But this remote Scottish weaver still casts a spell today
The fine art photographer on why Warren Buffett is his hero, not wanting to retire and his fascination with wildlife
How visual art — and our own bodies — help us communicate what needs to be heard
Carla Gutiérrez’s film uses Frida Kahlo’s own words, taken from her diaries, as a narrative
London Modern art auction slimmed down; rediscovered Bolivian artist in the limelight; steady sales at Dubai and Los Angeles fairs
How to lift the spirits this month
The Turkish artist’s work, currently on show at London’s Serpentine, uses artificial intelligence to create hallucinatory dreamscapes
‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism’ draws connections between European and African-American movements
The artist’s diverse oeuvre and flamboyant lifestyle sometimes obscured her true talent
The V&A’s fight to stop the Met in New York from buying a 12th-century carving reflects how countries try to prevent cultural heritage going abroad
The family-owned business has risen swiftly, mixing exclusivity with an expansive vision of the good life. John Gapper goes in search of its secrets
The painter made it big in a man’s world, but fails to leave a lasting impression
A stand in the Tefaf art fair’s new Focus section features responses to classical ceramics by Callum Innes and Gloria Cortina
The art and antiques fair arrives as debates rage over the role of AI in authentication, who can own cultural heritage and more
Its collections range from Ming furniture to Japanese silverware — and visitors can even sit on the chairs
Machine learning can be the difference between a charming picture and a masterpiece worth millions
Emil Nolde was condemned by the Nazis despite being among their supporters
Eric Turquin has found a Fragonard, a Chardin and even a possible Caravaggio
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