The saving of St Mary-le-Strand
Pedestrianisation means that one of London's finest churches is now the centre of attention again
Pedestrianisation means that one of London's finest churches is now the centre of attention again
The fair returns to Manhattan with a strong focus on designers, women artists, new discoveries and forgotten stories
After decades of globalisation, the centre of gravity is shifting back to the Big Apple
Drawings, prints and collages were important to the artist’s process – and the market now values them accordingly
After scaling down during the pandemic, the fair is welcoming new international exhibitors while maintaining links closer to home
A new report shows that most practitioners are still working for love rather than fair pay
The Menil Collection in Houston looks at the groundbreaking work of a curator who brought a new generation of American artists into museums
Three hundred years after the composer moved into his London townhouse, what does the art collection he amassed there tell us about his music?
From votive offerings to anatomical models, wax is the perfect material for blurring the boundaries between art and life
When Simon Pettet moved into Dennis Severs’ House in Spitalfields he began to channel the 18th century in the 1980s
The Art Gallery of New South Wales’s extension is too populist and commercially minded for some – but it is full of possibilities
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo’s sculpture garden in Piedmont is also home to the family rosé
The American artist’s melancholy approach is part of a much punchier tradition says Elisa Germán, co-curator of a show at Harvard Art Museums
The artist who has long campaigned for the recognition of Native American artists is changing how we look at the art of the United States
Diane Smyth considers the state of private and public photography collections in the UK
A catalogue of the museum’s unrivalled collection of silver and gold is a thing of beauty
From the May 2023 issue of Apollo. Preview and subscribe here. Nestled in the wealthy 16th arrondissement of Paris, a small park marks the life of one of the 20th century’s best-known Egyptologists. The Jardin Christiane Desroches-Noblecourt – not so far from where its namesake grew up – commemorates a woman whose life was formidable […]
A show about the many variations and chequered history of the fabric even lets visitors see what’s worn under the kilt
The painter who never stopped seeing her subjects as individuals described her works as ‘pictures of people’ rather than ‘portraits’
The Musée Jacquemart-André shows that the painter was always open to new influences