Almost 42 years after Jean-Michel Basquiat’s first exhibition in Los Angeles, Gagosian is staging a new exhibition featuring work that Basquiat produced in Los Angeles.
At Large
Roberta Smith, co-chief art critic of the New York Times, announced that after over 32 years and 4,500 reviews and essays, she is retiring.
From Saratoga Springs, New York, to Como, Italy, these 10 residencies provide for inspirational settings for artists around the world.
A pro-Palestine group defaced a portrait of Arthur James Balfour at Trinity College.
Kansas City Chiefs’ tight end Taylor Swift squeeze Travis Kelce will finance the documentary Basquiat: King Pleasure, Riken Yamamoto wins the Pritzker Prize, and more news.
Flaco, who escaped the Central Park Zoo in 2023, and died on February 23, spent the past year roosting freely in locations around the Park.
At the Neue Galerie, Klimt's pastoral scenes exude the same life as his portraits.
When fashion icon Iris Apfel died at 102, she left a legacy of artful living.
Elton John said goodby to his Atlanta home through a series of eight sales.
Major Miami art collector and patron, Rosa de la Cruz, who founded one of the first art galleries in Miami, died on February 25 at the age of 81.
A work by Austrian Expressionist artist Egon Schiele is currently the subject of a battle between the Art Institute of Chicago and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office.
Brice Marden’s large-scale painting, Event, is expected to bring in over $30 million when it goes up for auction in May, setting a new record for the artist, and more news from the week.
While renovating the childhood home of Paul Cézanne in Aix-en-Provence, restorers found a mural by the artist, which will be celebrated in 2025.
These rock formations and their carvings have been found to date back a staggering 8,200 years ago.
On Presidents Day, here’s a look at some of the works that President Joe Biden and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden chose to decorate the White House.



















