British abstract painting remains in demand at home
Though its popularity abroad has waned, British art of the 1940s and ’50s is still highly sought after at home
 
					Though its popularity abroad has waned, British art of the 1940s and ’50s is still highly sought after at home
 
					The much-anticipated fair returns to Paris for ‘a second inaugural edition’ with a whole new section and a greater emphasis on public programming
 
					The art world is changing fast, but fostering a new generation of young collectors remains a challenge for the market to overcome
 
					The Homo Faber art fair featured a bounty of contemporary crafts, but were the finer details in danger of getting lost with so much on display?
 
					From penitent saint to salacious sinner, the biblical figure has worn a number of different guises in art through the ages
 
					Picasso, Lichtenstein, Emin and others have all designed plates, but treating them only as art objects ruins the fun
 
					A collage series by Håkon Bleken in Nidaros Cathedral meditates on Christian imagery as well as the traumas of Norwegian history
 
					The museum is set to close in 2025, leaving a hole in the city’s arts scene and adding to growing disquiet about its general direction
 
					The sculptor’s witty animal-like sculptures are dotted around the grounds of his house in the Cotswolds – and they feel right at home there
 
					Curator Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev explains how the artist’s Venus of the Rags embodies the innovative spirit of the Italian movement
 
					At its peak, the Mughal empire brought together scholars and artists of different languages and faiths to create art fit for kings
 
					The learned institution has always been important to art historians, but a major new refurbishment will give it a higher profile
 
					Berthe Weill was as devoted to young artists as she was to the cause of modern art – and her efforts are now receiving belated recognition
 
					Scenes of rowdy bars and tipsy revellers in the 20th century show a world that is both alien and comfortingly familiar
 
					Sarah Moss returns to a Pre-Raphaelite painting that made a lasting impression on her when she was a teenager
 
					The artist has pursued her interest in light, motion and myth across drawing, sculpture and performance for six decades, but it's her openness to new ideas that really defines her work
 
					In a show at the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin, the American artist keeps pushing at the boundaries of abstract art
 
					An insider account by a former head of Sotheby’s in the UK recounts how London’s post-war art market took off in the 1950s and has kept on reinventing itself
 
					Cedric Morris and Arthur Lett-Haines turned their backs on the London art world to create an art school with an outsize legacy
 
					It suits us to think of the movement as unpopular, but the passing of time makes it harder to see why the first Impressionist Exhibition of 1874 made such a stir
 
					Printing is found throughout art history – and often in the places you least expect it, as Jennifer L. Roberts demonstrates in her highly original new book
 
					An exhibition of photographs, posters and protest objects shows the absurd side of the Cold War as well as the terror