Continuity in Architecture
In his latest article, Herbert Muschamp calls for American architects to learn to reconcile history and change as do the many international architects who have achieved success in the US.
In his latest article, Herbert Muschamp calls for American architects to learn to reconcile history and change as do the many international architects who have achieved success in the US.
Bernard Arnault's LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton has sold its controlling stake in the Phillips auction house. Sources claim that Arnault believes the auction business will remain unprofitable for a long time.
Started by a small group of gallerists in 1994 as the Gramercy Art Fair, the Armory Show is hardly the grand old man of art exhibitions. But with sturdier walls, carpeted floors, and better food, the 170-gallery exhibition appears to have come of age.
Five paintings, including a valuable oil on copper by Flemish master Jan Brueghel, were stolen from the Stockholm international antiques fair over the weekend.
Curators, in particular new-media curators, increasingly consider “sound” art a genre all its own. While modern music has been out of favor for several decades, “sound” art seems to have given new life to music that isn't necessarily musical.
The acquisition of one of the world's foremost collections of Islamic art adds to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art's already strong collection.
The Guggenheim Foundation has acquired Internet art by Mark Napier and John F. Simon Jr. But just what does it mean to collect something that exists everywhere and nowhere?
More than just a continent—or even a state of mind—Africa is everywhere, suggests “The Short Century,” curated by Okwui Enwezor, now on view at P.S. 1.
A painting valued at $1 million that mysteriously appeared last month in a postal center in Topeka, Kansas, has been authenticated as the Chagall that was stolen off the walls of the Jewish Museum in Manhattan in June.
Art critic Jerry Saltz has called for the resignation of Guggenheim director Thomas Krens. Writing in his weekly column for the Village Voice, Saltz dubbed Krens's well-known plans to transform the museum into an international franchise a “shell game.” Should Krens “go out with Enron”?
The five photographers nominated for the Citicorp Private Bank prize, among them Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Thomas Ruff, and Iranian Shirana Shahbazi, all share a self-conscious style, argues Adrian Searle.
With over three thousand tapes, Electronic Arts Intermix is the premier distributor of video art. With the Museum of Modern Art's upcoming exhibition “The First Decade: Video from the E.A.I. Archives,” the thirty-year-old institution is ready to receive its due.