Lévy Gorvy Dayan pioneers stand-alone strategy with sale of a single work
New York gallery responds to client needs by offering a $10m-plus de Kooning painting in attention-grabbing move
Comment | Why should artists stay in cities like London and New York when financial pressures are making it harder than ever?
Josh Kline’s viral essay highlights how creative people lose gumption in the face of financial burden, but we should all strive for community instead of competing for the wealthy’s attention
Workers at the Guggenheim in New York vote to authorise a strike
The vote comes as museum administrators and members of UAW Local 2110 seek to reach a new collective bargaining agreement that addresses healthcare costs and inflation
World Monuments Fund spotlights ten heritage sites for the US’s 250th
The organisation’s new Irreplaceable America programme nods to the importance of the Watts Towers, Black Mountain College and the entire city of New Orleans
Latin American commercial art space to launch in London this October
Founded by the Brazilian collector Flavia Nespatti, Antesala in Fitzrovia will combine selling shows of Latin American artists with an advisory and public programme
Hew Locke, Oscar Murillo among artists who will take part in Skulptur Projekte Münster 2027
The ten-yearly exhibition will include locations outside the city centre that are undergoing transformation
Pre-Hispanic archaeological discovery in western Mexico features ‘unprecedented’ characteristics
Unique decorative and architectural elements may point to a previously unknown group in present-day Veracruz
New York’s Swiss Institute buys permanent home on the Bowery
The nonprofit, which has moved around the Upper West Side, Tribeca and points in between since its founding 40 years ago, will open at 250 Bowery next spring
Humans, hybrid creatures and ancient mythology: artist Koen Vanmechelen on the inspirations behind his Venice exhibition
The sculpture project at Palazzo Rota Ivancich aims to turn our notions of human supremacy on their head
UK government leaving museums vulnerable with ‘hands-off approach’, parliamentary report says
The Public Accounts Committee scrutinises the Department for Culture, Media and Sport in its report, accusing the government department of a ‘lack of leadership’
