In 2017 Spring Masters will be reincarnated as one of two hotly anticipated TEFAF New York fairs. It’s hard not to see this year's event as a soft launch
It’s annoying that we can’t sketch knickers at the V&A, but more annoying that footfall takes precedence over engagement
The Mexican artist on the importance of artistic process and the arts charity he has set up in Mexico
The nominees range from small local museums, to a 100-acre outdoor museum and one of the UK's biggest institutions
Trustees serve a vital purpose in the culture sector, but only if politicians avoid the temptation to meddle...
If you want to see Maria Eichhorn's solo show at Chisenhale Gallery – you can't. Believe it or not, it's more than a gimmick
Désiré Feuerle is the latest person to move his art collection underground
Exhibitions about the Italian Renaissance have never been more popular, but is the difficulty of securing loans leading to some very diffuse shows?
Large, long windows and a flat roof for sunbathing: is it any wonder that Britain's early experiments with modernist architecture were by the sea?
The LA museum has acquired its first home – what does this unusual architectural acquisition mean for the city?
Peter Murray and Gillian Darley debate whether London's changing skyline is leaching the city's history
An enormous project to preserve, study and replicate the cave temples of Dunhuang lies behind the Getty's latest exhibition
Restoration work will take years, and some monuments will never be rebuilt – but progress is being made
Bekki Perriman's project for Brighton Festival tells a different story about life on the streets
Veronese's preparatory sketch for Venice Triumphant (c. 1581) has a long history here
The word has become a catchall term for environmentally-conscious art. It's more specific than that
Your chance to win 'The Fitzwilliam Museum: A History', by Lucilla Burn
Goldsmith and Khan clearly aren't museum buffs – and that could be a real problem
A recent court case involving Wikimedia in Sweden has taken the art world by surprise
The galleries haven't changed that much, but the city itself has, and not for the better
The Association for Asian Studies chose Seattle for its annual conference this year, and with good reason
'I began wasting my god-given talent drawing pictures of sexy women the way I liked ‘em'. An exhibition of R. Crumb's work invites us all to become voyeurs
Monet and chums were doing something genuinely revolutionary when they stepped out into their gardens
Let's hope the disgruntled students at Columbia University don't take their protests against Moore's work to these extremes...