Art Fairs Dealers Have Long Had a Love-Hate Relationship With Art Fairs. Here’s Why They Are Growing Fonder Lately While still a huge lift, fairs are more important than ever, dealers say. By Eileen Kinsella, Sep 20, 2022
Collecting What I Buy and Why: Museum Impresario Kiran Nadar on Championing Indian Artists on the Global Stage The Kiran Nadar Museum of Art is home to some 8,000 works of art. By Eileen Kinsella, Sep 19, 2022
Art World Six Women-Led Galleries Will Now Represent Painter Rochelle Feinstein, Following Their Globe-Spanning Joint Exhibition This Year The artist has welcomed the support calling it a 'one for all and all for one' approach By Eileen Kinsella, Sep 13, 2022
Art Fairs Collectors Were Decisive at the VIP Opening of the Armory Show, With Early Six-Figure Sales and a Focus on Latinx Art Here's what sold on the VIP preview day of The Armory Show. By Eileen Kinsella, Sep 9, 2022
Law & Politics The New York Attorney General Ramps Up Its Investigation of Sotheby’s, Accusing the Auction House of Helping More Clients Evade Taxes The attorney general is narrowing in on "resale certificates" that have special tax benefits. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 29, 2022
Auctions The Eclectic Collection of the Late Joseph Hotung, a Member of One of Hong Kong’s Most Prominent Families, Could Fetch $50 Million at Sotheby’s The collection ranges from Chinese antiquities to Impressionist masterpieces By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 28, 2022
Auctions The Late Billionaire Collector Paul Allen’s Art Could Fetch More Than $1 Billion at Christie’s, Becoming the Biggest Single-Owner Sale in History The proceeds of the massive collection will go to philanthropic causes, as directed by Allen. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 26, 2022
Auctions Simon de Pury’s Daring New Auction Venture Is a Bona Fide Success, With All 16 Lots by Women Artists Sold All of the hammer proceeds go to the artist and their gallery. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 25, 2022
Art World See the Freshly Commissioned Artworks That Meta Is Unveiling at Its Sprawling New Headquarters in New York’s Moynihan Station Many of the five site-specific artworks mark the individual artists' largest projects to date. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 24, 2022
Museums & Institutions The Museum of the Bible Has Returned an Ancient Byzantine Manuscript to Greek Monastery as It Tries to Shake Its Shadowy Reputation The museum says it has put important safeguards in place surround new acquisitions in recent years. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 24, 2022
The Appraisal Roy Lichtenstein’s Art Has the Most Pop in the Private Market. With a Special Sale in the Hamptons, Do His Public Prices Have Room to Grow? The artist is famous for his Ben-Day dot portraits of women—but some market players are hoping to broaden his appeal. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 16, 2022
Artnet News Pro Why Are Art Investors Suddenly Ravenous for Dinosaurs? A Q&A With Nicolai Frahm, a Collector With Scientists on Speed Dial The advisor shares what he has learned from a decade of collecting in the field. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 12, 2022
Auctions Andy Warhol Made Some Very Unusual Paintings When He Was in Art School. Now His Family May Be Trying to Bring Them to Auction Warhol made the works while studying at the Carnegie Institute in the 1940s. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 11, 2022
Law & Politics For Years, Art Dealer Georges Lotfi Helped Investigators Root Out Antiquities Traffickers. Now Prosecutors Are Hunting for Him Investigators say the tipster became too assured of his own self-importance. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 9, 2022
NFTs OpenSea Just Gave $100,000 to the Buzzy DAO Friends With Benefits to Take Over Its Homepage With ‘Phygital’ Art Commissions The hip DAO is also set to make a splash in the phygital realm this week with the inaugural FWB Fest. By Eileen Kinsella, Aug 9, 2022