Tate Britain Confronts the Aftershocks of World War I
The museum’s newest exhibition explores how British, German and French artists struggle to comprehend bloody conflict
New Clues Emerge in Search for Stolen Caravaggio
The nativity scene taken from Sicilian chapel in 1969 may have ended up in Switzerland
Expert Says He’s Found New Clues Into Location of Long-Lost Frida Kahlo Painting
‘La Mesa Herida’ was last seen in Poland in 1955
X-Rays Show That Van Gogh’s Sunflowers Will One Day Wilt
A new analysis shows that half of the canvas held in Amsterdam is painted with pigments that darken with exposure to UV light
Tape-Removing Gel May Be a Game Changer for Art Restoration
The newly developed hydrogel helps dissolve tape adhesive, one of the stickiest challenges for art conservation and restoration experts
A New Exhibit Gives Charles White’s Art and Activism the Attention They Deserve
A century after his birth, an overlooked figure in the Black Renaissance is on the rise again
Exhibition Shows How Iran’s Present and Past Merge Through Art
The new show at LACMA features 125 works of art from more than 50 artists, some of whom couldn’t make it to the opening because of the travel ban
Digital Forensics Reconstructs Seven Lost Masterpieces
Artwork by Van Gogh, Klimt, Monet and more have been painstakingly remade by Factum Arte for a new television series
Exhibition to Bring Winslow Homer’s Long-Lost Camera—and Photography—Into Focus
After four years of research, the new medium’s impact on Homer’s art will be explored this summer at Bowdoin College Museum of Art
Kalamazoo Removes Sculpture Depicting Armed White Settler Towering Over a Native American
“Fountain of the Pioneers” has been controversial since it was erected in 1940
Now You Too Can Eat Off of Judy Chicago’s Famous Feminist Dinnerware
Reproductions of four plate designs from “The Dinner Party” are available for the first time
“Lost” Feminist Dinner Set Goes on Public Display for the First Time
The 50-plate “Famous Women Dinner Set” by Bloomsbury Group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant includes portraits of the well-known and the overlooked
400-Year-Old Painting by Dutch Master Found in Iowa Storage Room
Otto van Veen’s “Apollo and Venus” was likely hidden away by the Des Moines Women’s Club for showing too much skin
Two Artists in Search of Missing History
A new exhibition makes a powerful statement about the oversights of American history and America’s art history
Never Realized 17th-Century Fresco Will Be Digitally Recreated at French Château
The masterpiece was originally planned by the great French painter Charles Le Brun
15th-Century Pot of Gold (and Silver) Found in the Netherlands
Archaeologists say the coins can shed light on a little-known period of Dutch history
Sunshine Sheds Light on 17th-Century Mystery Painting At Hearst Castle
Two bright-eyed guides found an abbreviation and inscription leading to Spanish painter Bartolomé Pérez de la Dehesa
Peek into the Colorful History of the World’s Largest Pigment Collection
An Atlas of Rare & Familiar Colour combs through the rainbow that makes up the Forbes Pigment Collection
Earliest Images of Breast Cancer Found in Renaissance Paintings
The signs of illness in the paintings illustrate that breast cancer is not just a modern malady
Howardena Pindell Gets Her First Major Museum Survey
The multidisciplinary artist and activist reshaped what art could be
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