The Gray Market Why the Art Industry Should Brace Itself for the Permanent Staycation Era (and Other Insights) After surveying the travel landscape, our columnist finds the strong Euro flavor of Art Basel 2021 is a taste of more regionalism to come. By Tim Schneider, Sep 28, 2021
Artnet News Pro Dealer Harper Levine Shares His Recipe for Building a Five-Gallery Empire. Step One: Go to the Hamptons. Step Two: Call Richard Prince Levine helped pioneer the market for high-end photo books. By Henri Neuendorf, Sep 27, 2021
Artnet News Pro Price Check! Here’s What Sold—and for How Much—at the 2021 Edition of Art Basel in Switzerland Here's what dealers claim they sold as the art market roared back to life in Basel, Switzerland last week. By Artnet News, Sep 27, 2021
Artnet News Pro Couldn’t Make It to Basel? Here Are 6 Rising-Star Artists That Were Creating Serious Buzz at the Fairs We scoured the main fair and its edgier sisters Liste and June for the most exciting up-and-coming talent. By Naomi Rea & Eileen Kinsella, Sep 26, 2021
The Art Detective The Met Eyes the Sale of Picasso’s First Cubist Sculpture as It Works to Claw Its Way Out of a $150 Million Revenue Shortfall We reveal the priciest work that the Met is considering selling. By Katya Kazakina, Sep 24, 2021
The Back Room The Back Room: A Post-American Art World? This week: Euro buying boosts Basel, the young artist with a 196-strong waitlist, the global market’s first-half rebound, and more. By Tim Schneider, Sep 24, 2021
Artnet News Pro Would You Rather Buy This Hans Hofmann Painting at Art Basel or a Drawing by His Student, Lee Krasner? We Asked an Expert to Choose Nina Del Rio, the head of Sotheby's Advisory, weighs in. By Rachel Corbett, Sep 23, 2021
Artnet News Pro Here’s What It Feels Like on the Streets of Basel, Where the Art World Elite Has Agreed to Pretend It’s Still 2019 The art industry found itself again—but at what cost? By Kate Brown, Sep 23, 2021
Wet Paint Downtown’s Newest Art Star Has a 200-Person Waitlist, Peres Projects Is Branching Out to Seoul, and More Juicy Art-World Gossip Plus, which mega-dealer just bought an $8.75 million Richard Neutra-designed home in L.A.? And which arts leader was hanging with Boris Johnson? By Annie Armstrong, Sep 22, 2021
Artnet News Pro Without Oligarchs to Fuel the Local Market, Moscow’s Contemporary Art Fair Cosmoscow Retools to Lure a Younger Collector Base Although delayed by a week, the fair and its satellite, Blazar, provided ample evidence of interest among a new class of buyers. By Nadine Khalil, Sep 22, 2021
The Intelligence Report Download the Full Fall 2021 Artnet Intelligence Report Here The action- and insight-packed issue of the Artnet Intelligence Report is here—exclusively for Arnet News Pro members. By Artnet News, Sep 21, 2021
The Gray Market Why the Wave of Climate-Crisis Art Is More Than Just Virtue-Signaling, Even If It’s Not Enough (and Other Insights) Our columnist asks who will follow the lead of artists confronting collectors with the ecological crisis at even the most commercial events. By Tim Schneider, Sep 21, 2021
Artnet News Pro Here Are the 300 Most-Searched Artists on Artnet’s Price Database in August 2021—and the Fast-Rising Talents Poised to Break in Soon See who's up, who's down, and who's up next. By Julia Halperin, Sep 21, 2021
Artnet News Pro Beyond Amoako Boafo: The Next Emerging Names You Need to Know in Accra, Ghana’s Rapidly Accelerating Art Hub The vibrant art scene that birthed breakout stars Amoako Boafo and Ibrahim Mahama has plenty more in store. By Rebecca Anne Proctor, Sep 19, 2021
The Art Detective Could the Breuer Building Become a ‘Really Ritzy Gym’? Investors Eye the Famed Property as the Whitney Weighs a Sale The clock is ticking to make a decision, and the factors at play are complex. By Katya Kazakina, Sep 19, 2021