No Slump for Most US Museums
A survey of museums conducted last month by the US Association of Art Museum Directors reveals that four out of five report current attendance to be the same or higher than it was before September 11.
A survey of museums conducted last month by the US Association of Art Museum Directors reveals that four out of five report current attendance to be the same or higher than it was before September 11.
“Vermeer and the Delft School” at the Metropolitan Museum in New York was the most highly viewed show last year. The show also topped the league table in London.
Christie's auction house enjoyed a record-breaking £73 million in business last week and has broken six records for sales of individual artists, including Andreas Gursky, Thomas Demand, Glenn Brown, and Pierre Soulages.
The president and council of the Venice Biennale resigned last week, making it more likely Robert Hughes will be named its curator for 2003.
Three important paintings by Francis Bacon have been sold for almost £2 million at auction.
Ivan Massow, former chairman of London's Institute of Contemporary Art, was fired from his position on Monday following his public denunciations of British art-world figures such as Nicholas Serota, director of the Tate Gallery, and artist Tracey Emin.
The biggest Andy Warhol exhibition ever organized opened today at Tate Modern, where advance bookings were being sold so fast in January that it is expected to be the gallery's biggest draw ever.
A big philosophical question always hovers over the National Black Fine Art Show: are race-based exhibitions a good idea?
Two years ago, the estate of Francis Bacon sued the Marlborough gallery for allegedly defrauding it of millions of dollars by systematically undervaluing the late painter's work. Both parties, however, have decided to avoid a bruising and expensive legal battle.
Several trustees have given works to the Museum of Modern Art to honor chief curator Kirk Varnedoe's departure.
Italy's ultra-conservative undersecretary of State for culture, Vittorio Sgarbi, has announced that Time art critic Robert Hughes is his favorite candidate to curate the 2003 Venice Biennale.
The National Gallery of Ireland opened its new Millennium Wing last week. The soaring sixty-foot ceilings and white stone walls demonstrate Dublin's transformation into a European capital.