People Rudolf Zwirner Helped Invent Today’s Art Market. Now He Thinks the Pandemic Could Bring the Business to a New Golden Age The father of David Zwirner is a pivotal figure in the history of the market. By Kate Brown, Mar 7, 2021
People The Art World at Home: Dealer Rachel Lehmann Is Showing Ashley Bickerton Works and Daydreaming About an Extra Day in the Week We caught up with the New York art dealer ahead of the opening of her gallery's latest show. By Artnet News, Mar 5, 2021
People Meet Artist Kandis Williams, Whose Poetic Work Has a Sharp, Cerebral, and Radically Political Edge Williams weaves through histories and unearths long ignored narratives. By Janelle Zara, Mar 4, 2021
People Art Historian Sarah Lewis on Why Black Artists Have Been ‘Over-Exhibited and Under-Theorized’ Lewis has literally changed the curriculum via the Vision & Justice Project. By Folasade Ologundudu, Feb 26, 2021
People Art Historian Darby English on Why the New Black Renaissance Might Actually Represent a Step Backwards English is the author of "To Describe a Life" and "How to See a Work of Art in Total Darkness." By Folasade Ologundudu, Feb 26, 2021
People The Baltimore Museum Walked Back Plans to Sell Art to Fund Equity Initiatives. Now, It’s Raised $1.5 Million the Old-Fashioned Way The museum's divisive director Christopher Bedford explains how its new strategy is not so different from the old one. By Brian Boucher, Feb 25, 2021
People How Facebook Curator Jessica Shaefer Uses Art to Bring Empathy Into the Social Network’s Tech-Driven Universe Learn what it's like to run an art program at one of the world's top tech companies. By Maria Vogel, Feb 24, 2021
People The Art World at Home: Carpenters Workshop Gallery Co-Founder Loïc Le Gaillard Is Signing New Artists and Watching ‘Succession’ We caught up with the gallerist about his business life, home life, and everything in between. By Artnet News, Feb 23, 2021
People ‘Approach Every Black Artist as a World-Maker’: Art Historian Bridget R. Cooks on the Need for an Expansive Definition of Blackness Cooks is the award-winning author of "Exhibiting Blackness." By Folasade Ologundudu, Feb 23, 2021
People Italian Sculptor Arturo Di Modica, Whose Charging Bull Sculpture Became a Symbol of an Unbridled Wall Street, Has Died at 80 The artist was working on major projects right up until his death. By Sarah Cascone, Feb 22, 2021
People What I Buy and Why: Hotelier Rami Fustok on the Jeff Koons He Wishes He’d Bought, and the $400,000 Romero Britto He Did A rocking horse by Britto is the most expensive artwork in the entrepreneur's collection. By Katie White, Feb 22, 2021
People ‘I Set the Standard for Myself’: How Jiab Prachakul Went From Self-Taught Painter to Sought-After Star—All Before Her First Solo Show The artist's first solo show is on view now at San Francisco's Friends Indeed Gallery. By Sarah Cascone, Feb 19, 2021
People Decades Ago, Richard J. Powell Was Among Only a Handful of Scholars Dedicated to Black Art History. Here’s How He Has Seen the Field Change Part of a series of interviews with art historians engaging with Black cultural history. By Folasade Ologundudu, Feb 17, 2021
People Newfields Director Charles Venable Has Resigned After Posting a Job Ad That Sparked Allegations of Racism The museum came under fire for describing its "traditional core, white art audience.” By Sarah Cascone, Feb 17, 2021
People Studio Visit: Textile Artist Sagarika Sundaram on Working in Silence and Seeking Out Felts From Around the Globe The New York-based artist spoke to Artnet about her mammoth wooly works. By Noor Brara, Feb 16, 2021