Francis Towne’s long road to recognition
Towne's watercolours aren't as ground-breaking as they were once made out to be, but they are definitely good enough to merit a revival
Towne's watercolours aren't as ground-breaking as they were once made out to be, but they are definitely good enough to merit a revival
Not-so-radical street art and the Cerne Abbas giant censored at the Palace of Westminster
Were this week's sales a true reflection of the market, minus the smoke and mirrors of third-party guarantees?
Art News Daily : 3 February
Rakewell ponders why an airport would install an artist in residence
Julia Margaret Cameron's photographs are some of the most hauntingly original of the 19th century.
With several art fairs staged every week, are such events damaging to the more traditional art trade, or do they allow greater public engagement with art?
'For students of arms and armour, Meyrick was the first and greatest of those giants on whose shoulders we stand.'
The Bardo Museum in Carthage still bears the scars of last year's terrorist attack. The best way to support it is to visit
Several museums have plugged gaps in their collections this month, while others have received some extraordinarily generous gifts
Join Apollo's editor Thomas Marks for a discussion about a hugely important, but frequently overlooked, part of art history
A statue of Cecil Rhodes will stand at Oriel College, Oxford, in place despite calls for its removal, but debates about ‘erasing history’ rumble on
Art News Daily : 28 January
Thousands of artworks are hidden away in Edinburgh's Granton Stores. We got an exclusive tour...
Harry Styles turns to painting, the new British Museum director's penchant for Prince, and why Arts Council initiatives sound like second-rate action films
The current show at Marian Goodman gallery is a blast, and White Cube has come up with a winner, too
What the Arts Council England owes its outgoing Chairman
In the space of five years, Australia has seen five prime ministers, with wildly different attitudes to art and culture
Hundreds attended events in support of Ashraf Fayadh, who faces the death sentence in Saudi Arabia
'I’ve always been interested in artists who stretch the formal limits of technology'