Fine Arts Paris and beyond – what’s in store in the French capital this month
The fair underscores its links with the museum world in its third edition. Plus highlights from Paris Photo and Also Known as Africa
The fair underscores its links with the museum world in its third edition. Plus highlights from Paris Photo and Also Known as Africa
The poet, translator and musician was also a passionate observer – and recorder – of the visual world
Destroyed during the Pacific War and restored in 1992, the castle was the pride of Okinawa. Now a fire has left it in ruins again
The artist talks about the wide-ranging references in his neon installations and other works – from modernist music to yoga
A selection of studies and sketches shows how the definition of drawing has happily ballooned in recent decades
The painter’s monumental and often melancholy hunting scenes are well worth another look
From Tiffany vases to Fabergé gold, this year’s stateside edition of the fair is full of connections to the Armory’s rich history
The Zimbabwean artist discusses his film ‘We Live in Silence’, screened at the opening of Goodman Gallery’s new London premises
A new display in the museum pays tribute to one of its best and most charming ambassadors
A biography of one of the country’s earliest professional woman painters is a fitting if belated tribute
The versatile artist talks about her love of printmaking – and being in it for the long haul
The Blondie singer made her mark on the New York art scene, as her memoir reveals
Art news daily: 25 October
This pupil of Rembrandt has often been mistaken for other artists, but is there an unity to be found in his many styles?
Tai Shani, Oscar Murillo, Helen Cammock and Lawrence Abu Hamdan can be found in playful, reflective or forensic mode in Margate
As the greatest sculptor of the Spanish Renaissance, Alonso Berruguete deserves to be better understood
The artist Taus Makhacheva is fascinated by the subversive side of an art form that found great favour in the USSR
Art news daily: 23 October
Things rarely turn out well for the characters in the satirist’s so-called ‘progress’ pieces – rather, they capture the chaos of 18th-century life
A thought-provoking study considers what makes medieval European sculpture so memorable