There was much more to 2024 than Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian making a scene stealing comeback. Here are the highlights (and some low points) in the year in which the art world said farewell to several influential artists, flocked to the Venice Biennale, experienced the fall-out from the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and braced itself, or cheered, Donald Trump's imminent return to the White House.
Scattered across it are sketches and technical drawings for a civic building, a grand folly designed by her husband László, for the wealthy patron whose home they now share.
Urs Fischer who won GNMH AWARD. @chaosursfischer. #ursfischer. #installation#museum#gallery#modernart#artfair#contemporaryart#painting#art#artbasel#exhibition#biennale#############. ###GNMHAward#GNMHTheory#kimjunghwi.
Celebrated artist Adip Dutta is showcasing a series of his works from different phases of his working years at the ongoing Bengal Biennale’s Archaeology of the Present: Traces and Transformations section at The Red Bari, Kolkata.
In September, the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford launched a campaign to raise the funds needed to buy The Crucifixion (1420s), a small gold-ground panel by Fra Angelico.
Painter Anthony Cudahy doesn’t think he’s “made it,” but some would say otherwise.
The artist Frieda Toranzo Jaeger’s Jewish grandfather fled Nazi Germany to escape the Holocaust and settled in Mexico.