Art & Exhibitions The Prado Will Show a Newly Discovered Caravaggio That Nearly Went to Auction for a Pittance Eagle-eyed observers at the museum identified the painting as possibly being a work by the Baroque master. By Artnet News, May 6, 2024
Law & Politics Artist Mary Miss Wins Injunction Preventing Removal of Her Des Moines Work The work has been spared destruction until the case can be decided. By Adam Schrader, May 6, 2024
Art World Texas’s Oldest Tiffany Stained-Glass Windows Get a New Lease of Life The windows were created just three years after the Tiffany Glass Company was founded. By Artnet News, May 6, 2024
Art & Exhibitions Kosovar Artist Petrit Halilaj’s Whimsical Met Roof Installation Belies a Dark History The works are enlargements of drawings on children's desks in schools that survived the Kosovo War. By Adam Schrader, May 6, 2024
Art & Exhibitions ‘Lost’ Photos of Andy Warhol and Robert Indiana Go on View in London William John Kennedy had special access to the artists at the birth of their careers. By Brian Boucher, May 6, 2024
Pop Culture Art Behind the Meme: An Infamous Botched Restoration A Spanish pensioner botched a church restoration, producing a world of memes. By Richard Whiddington, May 6, 2024
Collectibles John Lennon’s Guitar, Rediscovered After Decades Languishing in an Attic, Heads to Auction The Framus Hootenanny could become the priciest Beatles guitar. By Vittoria Benzine, May 6, 2024
Archaeology & History Stunningly Preserved Ancient Roman Glassware Turns Up in a French Burial Site The glass artifacts date from when the town was the Roman settlement known as Nemausus. By Verity Babbs, May 6, 2024
Art World Art Bites: Why Don’t We Ever Talk About the Other Matisse? Henri’s daughter was his muse, cataloguer, and a war-time resistance fighter. By Verity Babbs, May 6, 2024
Artists Why Hayv Kahraman’s Women Won’t Let You See Them The artist's largest institutional show to date at the ICA San Francisco confronts the legacy of colonialism in botany. By Katie White, May 5, 2024
Archaeology & History Remnants of a Legendary Typeface Have Been Rescued From the River Thames Doves Type was thrown into the water a century ago, following a dispute between its creators. By Holly Black, May 5, 2024
Archaeology & History The Hunt: An Imperial Family’s FabergĂ© Eggs, Still at Large Fabergé’s bejeweled Easter eggs became a symbol of Russian autocracy. Then came the revolution. By Tim Brinkhof, May 5, 2024
Art & Exhibitions 22 Rising Artists Designed Tarot Cards for This Copenhagen Show From the Fool to the World, an artist was tapped to imagine each phase of the fool's journey. By Vittoria Benzine, May 5, 2024
Art World Art Bites: What Sparked Rudy Giuliani’s Quest to Close the Brooklyn Museum? Chris Ofili’s controversial image of the Virgin Mary caused quite the stir. By Tim Brinkhof, May 5, 2024
Artists Frank Stella, American Artist Who Moved from Proto-Minimalism to Extreme Abstraction, Dies at 87 "What you see is what you see," he famously said of his work. By Andrew Russeth, May 4, 2024