The week in art news – Carl Andre (1935–2024)
Plus: V&A and British Museum lend Asante regalia to Ghana for the first time | Temple to Ram inaugurated on site of Mughal-era mosque in Ayodhya
Plus: V&A and British Museum lend Asante regalia to Ghana for the first time | Temple to Ram inaugurated on site of Mughal-era mosque in Ayodhya
The Court of Appeal's recent ruling in a copyright case has caused a good deal of excitement, but its relevance to reproductions of artworks remains to be seen
Plus: Poland withdraws its Biennale submission | swingeing cuts to UK arts budgets by local councils cuts continue | and Ian Wardropper to retire as Frick director
Henning Hoesch is a winemaker with a habit of making distinctions that extends to his collection of Old Master drawings
The westward spread of modernist design between the wars was shaped by the migrant experience
After a period of mediocre post-pandemic growth, what will the next year bring? Apollo’s columnist peers through the mists to make some predictions
Three exhibitions in the Engadin Valley explore how the Swiss mountains have inspired some of the painter’s most playful work
The Mayfair institution contains scores of paintings of dogs who had jobs and some rather more pampered pets
Far from being a toy, the Uppark doll’s house was designed as an instruction manual in three-dimensional form
Created by a Spanish missionary and Indigenous authors and artists in the 16th century, the Florentine Codex is an intellectual feat – and now available to all
The art market is one of Britain’s economic successes, but politicians of all stripes are unsupportive of the sector
<i>One Woman Show</i> is a novel about a socialite’s progress through the 20th century, told in the style of wall labels you might find at the Met
Digital Benin
This impressive exhibition takes us through the very long history of a literary genre, but overlooks the part played by artists and illustrators
New research and restoration offers fresh insights into the work of the Flemish masters
This show at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis captures the inventiveness of Eastern European artists during the Cold War
Plus: The Frick Pittsburgh has postponed an exhibition of Islamic art, and the rest of the week’s top stories
Plus: Robert Irwin (1928–2023), Italy appoints right-wing journalist as Venice Biennale director and the rest of the week’s top stories
The custodian of the largest collection of occult objects in Europe explains the enduring appeal of all things supernatural
A reissue of the architectural critic’s guide to new buildings in the capital is just as fresh as it was 60 years ago