The Roundup: Michael Jackson Auction Drama, a Russian Artist Freed, Banksy’s ‘Zoo Period’

Podcast co-hosts Kate Brown and Ben Davis are joined by Artnet's Art and Pop Culture Editor Min Chen.

From left: Freed Russian artist Alexandra Skochilenko, Photo: Olga Maltseva / AFP via Getty Images; Michael Jackson, Neverland Royal Theater Entrance – Self Portrait (1993). Photo courtesy of King’s Auctions; Banksy's rhinoceros street art. Photo: Adrian Dennis/ AFP via Getty Images.


We are back this week with our monthly roundup, where we talk through some of the big stories that are making waves in the art world. Today co-hosts Kate Brown and Ben Davis are joined by Artnet’s art and pop culture editor, Min Chen.

Min commissions and edits a lot of our news coverage including a couple of the stories that we’re going to be talking about today. It’s August, and despite the fact that this is supposed to be the month where art and culture tends to gear down and the professional art world goes to Greece or the Hamptons, increasingly with every passing summer it seems that the news doesn’t stop at all, and in fact sometimes actually ramps up.

This week we’re going to discuss the abruptly halted auction of artworks allegedly made by Michael Jackson, the art stories on both sides of a prisoner exchange that occurred this month between Russia and the West, and finally the artist who just can’t quit: Banksy. He dropped nine animal-themed art pieces this month around London and many are wondering if the world’s most famous street artist has slightly lost his touch. Tune in to find out.

Kate Brown

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