Law & Politics Ireland Has Been Giving Creative Workers $1,400 a Month in an Economic Experiment That Will Soon Shape National Policy 2,000 Irish artists are receiving weekly checks of $350 as part of the three-year program. By Taylor Dafoe, Mar 30, 2023
Law & Politics The Italian Museum That Owns Leonardo’s ‘Vitruvian Man’ Has Successfully Sued to Stop Production of a 1,000-Piece Puzzle Based on the Work An Italian court has blocked the puzzle company from producing and selling the product. By Taylor Dafoe, Mar 30, 2023
Law & Politics The Producers of Art-World Satire ‘The Square’ Apologize to Artist Lola Arias for Using Her Name in the Film Without Her Consent The movie said Lola Arias made the titular artwork. She demanded the production company set the record straight. By Sarah Cascone, Mar 29, 2023
Law & Politics A Judge Has Dismissed Far-Right Efforts to Remove a Miriam Cahn Painting of Russian War Crimes From the Palais de Tokyo Lawyers for the art center believe local extremists have been influenced by ideologies “blown in from across the Atlantic." By Devorah Lauter, Mar 28, 2023
Law & Politics The World’s Most Valuable Coin, Previously Sold With Falsified Provenance, Has Finally Been Returned to Greece A dealer was arrested this year for selling the ancient coin with falsified provenance documentation in 2020. By Taylor Dafoe, Mar 24, 2023
Law & Politics A U.S. Court Has Handed a Legal Victory to Digital Artist Kevin McCoy in an Ownership Challenge Over the First-Ever NFT The judge called the lawsuit an attempt to 'exploit' questions of open ownership. By Eileen Kinsella, Mar 22, 2023
Law & Politics A Series of Norman Rockwell Illustrations That Once Hung in the White House Is at the Center of a Legal Battle Between Family Members Rockwell gifted the artworks to FDR’s press secretary in 1943. But who officially owned them after that is the subject of debate. By Taylor Dafoe, Mar 17, 2023
Law & Politics The New York Art World Had High Hopes for Black Wall Street Gallery. Allegations Against Its Founder Have Soured Those Dreams Artists accuse owner Ricco Wright of failing to pay them nearly $100,000 for the sales of their work. By Zachary Small, Mar 16, 2023
Law & Politics A U.S. Judge Dealt a Partial Victory to Sotheby’s in a Long-Running Fraud Case Brought by Russian Billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev The judge urged both sides to avoid an 'expensive, risky, and potentially embarrassing' trial. By Eileen Kinsella, Mar 3, 2023
Law & Politics The Joan Mitchell Foundation Claims Louis Vuitton Infringed the American Artist’s Copyright by Including Her Paintings in Advertisements The late Abstract Expressionist's work is currently on view at the luxury brand's foundation in Paris. By Jo Lawson-Tancred, Feb 22, 2023
Law & Politics The Musée d’Orsay Has Been Ordered to Restitute Paintings by Cézanne, Renoir, and Gauguin That Were Stolen During World War II The artworks are to be returned to the heirs of their one-time owner, Ambroise Vollard. By Taylor Dafoe, Feb 17, 2023
Law & Politics A Class Action Lawsuit Against a Popular A.I. Art Generator Alleges the App Collects Its Users’ Biometric Information Without Their Permission The complaint says Lensa A.I. illegally extracts users’ facial data to train its models. By Taylor Dafoe, Feb 16, 2023
Law & Politics Five Archaeological Museums in Greece Have Closed in Protest of a New Law That Puts Them Under Government Control Critics say the new legislation could also threaten the country's efforts to repatriate the Parthenon Marbles. By Artnet News, Feb 15, 2023
Law & Politics The Pentagon Has Reversed a Trump-Era Ban on the Release of Art Made by Guantánamo Bay Detainees Under the new policy, outgoing prisoners are allowed to take “a practicable quantity of their art” with them. By Taylor Dafoe, Feb 8, 2023
Law & Politics Hermès Wins Its Lawsuit Against the Digital Artist Who Made ‘MetaBirkins,’ Setting a Precedent for NFT Copyright Cases Mason Rothschild’s attorney called it a 'terrible day for artists.' By Eileen Kinsella, Feb 8, 2023