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Asia’s premier art hub gets a modest but focused real-life event next month
The Canadian dealer is marking 25 years since his bold arrival on the London scene with a celebratory survey
This Apple TV+ series is an impressive history of LGBTQ representation
Six sculptures installed as part of an Art in Public Places programme affirm the city’s new-found cultural clout
Nada’s Miami fair acts as a barometer, reflecting the challenges facing small and midsize galleries
With the 46th edition opening this week in Paris, the Fiac director discusses their impending move and the changes to come
As a six-decade survey opens at London’s Whitechapel Gallery, the Brazilian artist looks back on a many-faceted career
The new Frieze Masters co-curator specialises in projects that pose eastern against western ways of seeing
With Old Masters, contemporary art and even restored Victorian public lavatories, the island is ‘a secret hiding in plain view’
The artists who took figurative painting in radically different directions are celebrated in this audacious exhibition in Dublin
The artist’s playful paintings are the subject of a new monograph and Hong Kong show
The artist, famous for his painting of Barack Obama, has taken a new path — to the South Pacific
Organisers and partipicants at the Venice Biennale are finding new ways to document the event for future generations
In the spaces between the Arsenale and Giardini, a new programme of live works is coming to the city
The sector focuses on large-scale works — here, some of its brightest stars discuss their practice
Works by 18 artists have sprung up across California’s Coachella Valley as part of an ambitious biennial
Plus: Mary Boone prison sentence means galleries must close; Bonhams takes African art to New York; Frank Stella’s collection at Christie’s
The curator of Frieze LA’s talks programme on the link between art and sound
Big names are still a safe bet for galleries at fairs, but embracing new markets might prove a canny move
She now co-represents the estate of renowned German photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher
The photographer stood ‘in the shadow of a great tree’, her husband Henri Cartier-Bresson, but a Paris exhibition aims to change that
Chief curator Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro attempts to shake up the biennial model
The French President last year pledged to repatriate African pieces in his country’s public museums. What repercussions could this policy have?
This year’s special exhibition features Pierre-Jean Chalençon’s spectacular array of works relating to the Emperor
The Scandinavian duo have been making a mark with public art that is at once witty, poignant and potent
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