We use cookies for a number of reasons, such as keeping FT Sites reliable and secure, personalising content and ads, providing social media features and to analyse how our Sites are used.
Your guide to a disrupted world
Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
The London-based fair returns after three years with ambitious plans for global growth, says its chief executive
Artists at this year’s fair are taking a minimal approach to engaging with ecological issues and the natural world
The sale of an aureus, marking the murder of Julius Caesar, has put the spotlight on small change
New exhibition highlights the attraction of Dürer, Brueghel and others to a rising generation
Old Masters sit alongside contemporary works and gemstones in a collection unphased by common orthodoxies
How dealers of older art are responding to digital ways of working
This year’s event sees some 35 specialist dealers showcasing everything from Old Masters to applied arts
An exhibition of the diverse work of isolated artists that are impossible to pigeonhole
The lives and work of once obscure 17th-century women artists are explored in a new exhibition
Two centuries after the discovery of a buried hoard of ancient chess pieces on the Isle of Lewis, another one has resurfaced
The French collector is sending 250 of his best works to auction
From the Salon du Dessin to the Pushkin Museum, the event spans the history of the draughtsman’s art
From famous owners to historical significance, the stories behind works of art are becoming increasingly valuable
The collector, curator and patron on the appeal of buying works by contemporary artists
Taipei has sustained centuries-old Chinese traditions of collecting and connoisseurship — upheld today by patrons like Robert Tsao
Museum and exhibitions have turned a spotlight on the relatively few historical women artists across Europe
In the Royal Academy’s new show of historical artefacts, Pacific Islanders re-engage with their past in order to navigate their future.
Specialist dealer Gisèle Croës is bringing objects that range from c1500BC to the 18th century to the fair for the first time
The demand for sculpture is growing as the supply of Old Master paintings declines
An exhibition of Dutch 17th-century group portraits is a canny way to show off the range of objects at the fair
A ‘gem of a collection’, lovingly created over many years, comes up for sale
The Hollywood agent on why he’s selling the sculpture and ceramics he spent 40 years assembling
A Canadian dealer brings some of the finest examples of art from the Pacific Northwest to Frieze Masters
The Florence art fair has had a sleek makeover but it hasn’t sold its soul
A forthcoming sale illuminates the late artist’s personality
International Edition