On View Hallelujah! Jenny Holzer, Tacita Dean, and Others Pay Tribute to Leonard Cohen in Montreal In an emotional show at the Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, 20 artists reflect on the singer's legacy By Julia Halperin, Nov 13, 2017
Art World Art Flippers and Private Museums Could Suffer Under the Republican Tax Plan The proposal has set off alarm bells in certain corners of the art world. By Eileen Kinsella & Julia Halperin, Nov 3, 2017
Art & Exhibitions Blockbuster Alert: The Whitney Is Planning New York’s First Warhol Retrospective in Almost 30 Years It's Warhol as you've never seen him before. By Julia Halperin, Nov 3, 2017
Law & Politics The Vast Majority of Antiquities Sold Online Are Probably Looted or Fake, a New Report Says Illicit antiquities are now available on Snapchat. By Julia Halperin, Nov 1, 2017
Art World Museums Around the World Will Now Text Artworks Directly to Your Phone as SFMOMA’s ‘Send Me’ Goes Global The Tate in London and the Auckland Art Gallery in New Zealand are working to adapt the program to their own collections. By Julia Halperin, Oct 19, 2017
Art World Is the Museum of Ice Cream the Future of Culture? If Museums Aren’t Careful, It Might Be, Says a New Study The Culture Track study suggests that the public's understanding of what defines "culture" is changing rapidly. By Julia Halperin, Oct 18, 2017
Politics Museums Are Angry About Trump’s Withdrawal From UNESCO—But What Does It Really Mean? Experts say museums will not experience major upheaval, but they do fear that the Trump administration's decision will diminish UNESCO's influence. By Julia Halperin & Eileen Kinsella, Oct 13, 2017
Politics US Government Withdraws From UNESCO, With Profound Implications for Cultural Institutions The Trump administration cited "anti-Israel bias" as a primary reason for its decision to withdraw from the organization the US helped found. By Julia Halperin, Oct 12, 2017
Art World Rabble-Rousing Artist Judith Bernstein Joins Paul Kasmin Gallery With Anti-Trump Show The feminist artist is unveiling Trump-inspired protest paintings across New York. By Julia Halperin, Oct 11, 2017
Art Fairs Political Art Is Out in Force at Frieze. The Question Is: Does Anyone Actually Buy It? Art that deals with the refugee crisis, Trump, and police brutality can be found at the fair. But it's a tough sell. By Julia Halperin, Oct 6, 2017
People Cicero Would Have Loved Art Fairs, and Other Ancient Insights on the Art Market From World-Famous Classicist Mary Beard The Cambridge scholar has teamed up with mega-gallery Hauser & Wirth at Frieze. By Julia Halperin, Oct 4, 2017
Art Fairs Does Sex Sell When the Work Is Made by Women? Explicit Feminist Art Tests the Waters at Frieze "Obscene" art by women from the '70s and '80s has been censored and blacklisted for decades. Now, it's taking center stage at an unlikely venue. By Julia Halperin, Oct 3, 2017
Art & Exhibitions Sotheby’s Gives Its First-Ever Prize Recognizing Curatorial Ambition to the Nasher and MCA Chicago Jurors couldn't decide on one winner—so they split the award in two. By Julia Halperin, Sep 28, 2017
Politics Need a Protest Thong? Marilyn Minter Has Opened an Unusual Pop-Up Store to Arm the Resistance The products are available at a pop-up gift shop at the Brooklyn Museum courtesy Marilyn Minter and Andrianna Campbell. By Julia Halperin, Sep 27, 2017
On View Matthew Brannon on His 10-Year Quest to Understand the Vietnam War Through Art His latest exhibition is one small part of an epic research project. By Julia Halperin, Sep 25, 2017