Throne chairs have acted as seats of power for centuries – but their form and meaning has evolved
Growing disparity among dealers and gallerists is an unhealthy trend for the market as a whole
Your chance to win ‘America's Cool Modernism: O'Keeffe to Hopper’ by Katherine Bourgignon
Historic England has given its official stamp of approval to 17 postmodern buildings
The 90-year-old polymath’s artistic output is being celebrated in his native Ireland
This rare plaster cast of Jean-Léon Gérôme’s popular ’Hoop Dancer’ is inspired by ancient Greek Tanagra figurines
Norman Rosenthal, Rebecca Salter, Nick Goss and Sarah Turner share their views on what sets the RA apart
The RA’s Secretary and Chief Executive traces the history of the institution’s redevelopment
The Danish artist and former geologist has died at the age of 79
The luxury brand Montblanc recently launched the 27th edition of its cultural patronage awards
Drawings and daguerreotypes on view at the Ducal Palace reveal the variety of Ruskin’s engagement with Venice
It’s time to stop using the art form to justify the attention-seeking antics of figures such as Shia LaBeouf and Kanye West
Four reliquaries by Fra Angelico have been reunited for the first time since the 19th century
Chris Ofili’s notorious ‘The Holy Virgin Mary’ goes to MoMA and the Baltimore Museum of Art updates its contemporary art collection
Despite setting a host of new auction records, the first Rockefeller Collection sale was an underwhelming event
The Sudanese artist’s singular vision is equally inspired by African and European culture
The American Impressionist’s singular body of work is as hard to classify as ever
How artists over the past century have tried to preserve, renew and reinvent the English countryside
Scotland’s most ambitious biennial sets out to disorient – and largely succeeds
Your chance to win ‘Rodin and the art of ancient Greece’ by Celeste Farge, Bénédicte Garnier and Ian Jenkins (Thames & Hudson)
The photographer’s austere images hint at natural disasters, nuclear horrors, and man-made monsters
The market for British prints between the wars is now strengthening after decades of neglect – but many works remain affordable
A tribute to the late gallerist Hudson sets the tone for Frieze New York, and what not to miss at 1-54
Boundaries between the personal and the political are broken down in Emin’s new public artwork