Art Fairs Art Basel’s Parent Company Unloads Its Art Düsseldorf Stake to Two Executives With a Vast Portfolio of Asian Art Fairs The owners of Taipei Dangdai and other major Asian fairs are expanding into Europe. By Eileen Kinsella, May 29, 2019
Analysis A Buyer’s Guide to the Whitney Biennial: What You Need to Know About the Exhibition’s Brightest Rising Stars We highlight nine artists in the 2019 Whitney Biennial, including the oldest and the youngest in the show. By Caroline Goldstein & Eileen Kinsella, May 22, 2019
Market Hauser & Wirth Hoovers Up Yet Another Superstar Artist, Poaching John Chamberlain’s Estate From Gagosian After a bruising auction season, the artist's family calls the move the start of a "new chapter." By Eileen Kinsella, May 21, 2019
Auctions Who Won Auction Week? Here Are 15 Key Takeaways From New York’s Eyebrow-Singeing $2 Billion Spring Art Sales From the most expensive work to the biggest flop, here are our parting observations from last week's auction marathon. By Tim Schneider & Eileen Kinsella, May 20, 2019
Market What Does the $89 Million Sale of a Prime Robert Rauschenberg at Christie’s Mean for the Artist’s Long-Quiet Market? For decades, Robert Rauschenberg's market lagged behind that of his peers. By Eileen Kinsella, May 16, 2019
Auctions Jeff Koons’s Bunny Sets a New Record for a Living Artist in Christie’s Half-Billion-Dollar Postwar and Contemporary Art Sale Koons's 'Rabbit' was part of a blue-chip collection of work belonging to the late publishing magnate S.I. Newhouse. By Eileen Kinsella, May 15, 2019
People A Young New York Artist’s Death Devastated a Community. Now Friends Say It Was All a Cruel Performance—and She’s Still Alive For more than two weeks, a young New York artist has been missing. What's really going on? By Eileen Kinsella, May 14, 2019
People Basquiat, the Comic Book: See the Rise of Art Star Jean-Michel Basquiat in a New Graphic Novel Basquiat's dramatic life story has inspired films, a Broadway musical, and now a graphic novel. By Eileen Kinsella, May 14, 2019
Auctions Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Sale Soars to $400 Million, Fueled by Treasures Once Owned by Condé Nast’s S.I. Newhouse A Cézanne picture that was famously stolen and recovered in 1999 led the way at $52 million. By Eileen Kinsella, May 13, 2019
Politics In the Heart of the Whitney Biennial, Artists Are Working to Expose Board Member Warren Kanders’s Link to Possible War Crimes Forensic Architecture's 'Triple Chaser,' as the video in the just-opened show is called, tracks Kanders's ties to munitions used in crisis zones. By Eileen Kinsella, May 13, 2019
Law & Politics A High-Profile Impressionist Art Collector Says Wildenstein Sold Him a ‘Clever Fake’ Bonnard—and Now the Courts Will Decide The collector bought the painting from the gallery more than thirty years ago. By Eileen Kinsella, May 10, 2019
Law & Politics Art-World Scammer Anna Delvey Has Been Sentenced to Four to Twelve Years in Prison The sentence comes after a dramatic, 22-day trial, during which she was found guilty on nearly all counts. By Eileen Kinsella, May 9, 2019
Auctions Here’s What to Expect at the $1.3 Billion Spring Auctions in New York, From a $58 Million Koons to a Once-Lost Cézanne All the highlights from the Impressionist, modern, and contemporary art auctions in New York next week. By Eileen Kinsella, May 9, 2019
People See 10 Outlandish Paintings of ‘Socialite Scammer’ Anna Delvey by the New York Post Photographer Who Followed Her Every Move The artist says Delvey laughed when she saw the works. By Eileen Kinsella, May 8, 2019
Art Fairs TEFAF’s Spring New York Edition Kicks Off With Eight-Figure Prices, Packed Stands, and a Live Dubuffet Sculpture Performer Although champagne ran out early, sales stayed solid. By Eileen Kinsella, May 2, 2019