Art World Art Industry News: Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Fabled ‘Dissent Collar’ Is Headed to the Smithsonian + Other Stories Plus, two collectors transform a Marcel Breuer-designed home into an artist residency, and powerful art advisors join forces. By Artnet News, Mar 31, 2022
Museums & Institutions MoMA Swiftly Reinstalled One of Its Galleries to Feature Works by Artists Born in Present-Day Ukraine The show is titled "In Solidarity." By Artnet News, Mar 30, 2022
Art World Art Industry News: Golden Lion in Hand, Artist Cecilia Vicuña Lands a Turbine Hall Commission in London + Other Stories Plus, Amsterdam’s Hermitage Museum is getting a new name, and MoMA opens a gallery dedicated to Ukrainian artists. By Artnet News, Mar 30, 2022
Politics ‘I Am Afraid. But I Can’t Stop’: Despite Fear of Reprisal, Russian and Belarusian Artists Have Found Ways to Stand Against the War in Ukraine With metaphors, pseudonyms, or from exile, dissenting artists are finding ways to resist. By Paula Erizanu, Mar 30, 2022
Art World Art Industry News: Roman Abramovich, the Putin-Tied Art Collector Involved in Ukraine Talks, May Have Been Poisoned + Other Stories Plus, MGM Resorts goes on an art-buying spree after selling off its Picassos, and a French town re-illuminates its Claude Lévêque sculpture. By Artnet News, Mar 29, 2022
Art World Art Industry News: Ukraine Is Recruiting Artists to Create and Sell NFTs to Fund Humanitarian Aid + Other Stories Plus, Christie's is selling the world's largest white diamond, and French museums rally to send supplies to their colleagues in Ukraine. By Artnet News, Mar 28, 2022
Art World From a Record-Setting Warhol Marilyn to the Death of Art Patron Budi Tek: The Best and Worst of the Art World This Week Catch up on this week's news, fast. By Artnet News, Mar 25, 2022
The Back Room The Back Room: End of an Era This week: Russian patrons’ long retreat, Mary Boone’s nonprofit penance, Yves Klein’s proto-NFT, and much more. By Tim Schneider, Mar 25, 2022
The Art Angle ‘Assimilating Is Very Dehumanizing’: How Afghanistan’s Artists Are Making Their Way in Exile Shamayel Shalizi is one of nine artists featured in the exhibition "Before Silence: Afghan Artists In Exile." By Artnet News, Mar 25, 2022
Art World Art Industry News: Damien Hirst, the World’s Richest Artist, Claimed Almost $2 Million From a Government Relief Fund + Other Stories Plus, the Venice Biennale names this year's jury, and our art critic has a new book. By Artnet News, Mar 24, 2022
Archaeology & History Archaeologists in Egypt Have Uncovered Five 4,000-Year-Old Tombs Belonging to Inner Members of the Pharaonic Circle The walls of the tombs are lined with hieroglyphs depicting sacred animals, urns, and symbols of the afterlife. By Artnet News, Mar 23, 2022
Politics A Mariupol Museum Dedicated to One of Ukraine’s Most Important Realist Painters Has Reportedly Been Destroyed by Russian Airstrikes The museum is the latest cultural casualty of the Russian invasion. By Sarah Cascone, Mar 23, 2022
Art World Art Industry News: A Step-by-Step Guide to How Russian Oligarch Art Collectors Are Evading Sanctions + Other Stories Plus, the Smithsonian lists potential sites for the new Latinx and women's history museums, and Sotheby's brings Burning Man to the U.K. By Artnet News, Mar 23, 2022
Studio Visit To Prepare for Her Pavilion in Venice, Hong Kong Artist Angela Su Is Re-Watching a Documentary About the Ukrainian Revolution Each week leading up to the 59th Venice Biennale in April, Artnet News brings you into the studio of an artist as they prepare for acclaimed exhibitions in and around the Giardini. By Vivienne Chow, Mar 23, 2022
Politics Russia’s War on Ukraine Raises Alarm Bells in Other Former Soviet Nations—Here Is How Their Cultural Sectors Are Mobilizing The current invasion of Ukraine has reignited a “collective trauma” of Soviet occupation for those living in the shadow of Russia. By Kate Brown, Mar 22, 2022