Articles

Article date: Thursday, July 27, 2023

Astrup Fearnley Museet Oslo is Celebrating its Thirtieth Anniversary

Astrup Fearnley Museet is celebrating its thirtieth anniversary in 2023. To mark this significant milestone, the museum is undertaking an extensive exhibition titled Before Tomorrow featuring works from the Astrup Fearnley Collection, which will fill the museum’s two buildings designed by Renzo Piano.

Hunter Biden Sold Art To Democratic Donor
Article date: Thursday, July 27, 2023

Hunter Biden Sold Art To Democratic Donor

In 2021, when a New York art gallery debuted paintings by Hunter Biden with asking prices as high as $500,000, the White House said that buyers’ identities were known only to the gallery, not to Hunter Biden himself. Internal documents from Georges Bergès Gallery show Biden sold $1.3 million worth of art. Of that amount, a single buyer bought 11 Biden artworks for $875,000. The identity of the $875,000 buyer is unclear, Business Insider reported.

Beeple’s HUMAN ONE on View for the First Time in a US Museum
Article date: Thursday, July 27, 2023

Beeple’s HUMAN ONE on View for the First Time in a US Museum

On view for the first time in a US museum, HUMAN ONE’s explorer asks viewers to look closely at the worlds they encounter. The explorer walks through imagined landscapes ranging from those inspired by terrains in our own world, like alpine mountains, to those that reach deep into the worlds of dreams and popular culture to reimagine what forms landscapes can take.

Victoria Crowe's Portrait of King Charles Vandalized by Climate Activists
Article date: Thursday, July 27, 2023

Victoria Crowe's Portrait of King Charles Vandalized by Climate Activists

Climate activists from This Is Rigged have spray-painted on a portrait of King Charles, the group has claimed.

Tate and RIBA to Partner in the North of England
Article date: Thursday, July 27, 2023

Tate and RIBA to Partner in the North of England

Tate Liverpool and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) are forming a new partnership on Liverpool’s historic waterfront. Tate Liverpool + RIBA North will see the art gallery join RIBA’s national architecture centre from 27 October 2023 to coincide with the temporary closure period of the museum’s building for its redevelopment, which is due to be completed in autumn 2025.

Tupac Shakur's Crown Ring Soars to $1 Million at Sotheby's
Article date: Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Tupac Shakur's Crown Ring Soars to $1 Million at Sotheby's

Tupac Shakur’s Gold, Ruby, and Diamond Crown Ring, Designed and Commissioned by Tupac Shakur in 1996 soared to $1,016,000, marking the most valuable Hip Hop artifact ever sold at auction*, and the only Hip Hop artifact to surpass $1 million. The ring was sold following a determined battle between bidders and achieved more than triple its $300,000 high estimate.

Indian Parliamentary Panel Proposes Dedicated Squad for Recovering Antiques
Article date: Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Indian Parliamentary Panel Proposes Dedicated Squad for Recovering Antiques

The Indian Parliamentary Standing Committee on Transport, Tourism, and Culture presented its “Three Hundred Forty Eighth Report” addressing the issue of “Heritage Theft – The Illegal Trade in Indian Antiquities and the Challenges of Retrieving and Safeguarding Our Tangible Cultural Heritage” in both Houses of Parliament.

What do photographs tell? Albert Dieckmann's Pictures from Occupied Eastern Europe 1941/42
Article date: Tuesday, July 25, 2023

What do photographs tell? Albert Dieckmann's Pictures from Occupied Eastern Europe 1941/42

Photographs play a central role in the memory of World War II. As a supposedly objective source, they were and are reproduced in books, films, documentaries and exhibitions and continue to shape visual memory to this day. This also applies to the war against the Soviet Union, in which the Germans committed unprecedented crimes against prisoners of war and the civilian population after the invasion on June 22, 1941.

Colours of Emotion: The Enduring Legacy of Tyeb Mehta’s Artistic Brilliance
Article date: Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Colours of Emotion: The Enduring Legacy of Tyeb Mehta’s Artistic Brilliance

Tyeb Mehta’s virtuosity radiates through the identity of his protagonists; through the sense of universality, they exude. Unrestrained, they straddle seamlessly through the realms of faith, culture, nationality, geography and political ideology. Their place of origin is indeed a mystery since they exist solely in the space of human emotions recognised by all yet vanquished by none.

Early Humans Invested in Systematic Procurement of Raw Materials Much Earlier than Previously Assumed
Article date: Monday, July 24, 2023

Early Humans Invested in Systematic Procurement of Raw Materials Much Earlier than Previously Assumed

A new study from Tel Aviv University and Tel-Hai College solves an old mystery: Where did early humans in the Hula Valley get flint to make the prehistoric tools known as handaxes? The researchers applied advanced methods of chemical analysis and AI to identify the geochemical fingerprints of handaxes from the Hula Valley's oldest prehistoric sites, Ma'ayan Barukh and Gesher Benot Ya'aqov.

Odesa: UNESCO Strongly Condemns Repeated Attacks Against Cultural Heritage
Article date: Monday, July 24, 2023

Odesa: UNESCO Strongly Condemns Repeated Attacks Against Cultural Heritage

UNESCO is deeply dismayed and condemns in the strongest terms the brazen attack carried out by the Russian forces, which hit several cultural sites in the city center of Odesa, home to the World Heritage property ‘The Historic Centre of Odesa’.

The Last Remaining Monuments Man Dies at 98
Article date: Monday, July 24, 2023

The Last Remaining Monuments Man Dies at 98

Richard M. Barancik, the last of the Monuments Men and Women of World War II, has died.

Presumed Beethoven Skull Fragments Return to Vienna
Article date: Saturday, July 22, 2023

Presumed Beethoven Skull Fragments Return to Vienna

The Medical University of Vienna has received skull fragments attributed to the composer Ludwig van Beethoven as a donation. The bone fragments, known as Seligmann fragments, will now be added to the Josephinum's rich collections.

Odesa: UNESCO Strongly Condemns Attack on World Heritage Property
Article date: Saturday, July 22, 2023

Odesa: UNESCO Strongly Condemns Attack on World Heritage Property

Further to the statement made by the UN Secretary-General, UNESCO condemns the Russian attack in the buffer zone of the World Heritage property “The Historic Centre of Odesa”, affecting buildings of cultural significance within the property.

UK Veterans and Archaeologists Uncover ‘Richest Grave this Year'
Article date: Friday, July 21, 2023

UK Veterans and Archaeologists Uncover ‘Richest Grave this Year'

Military veterans taking part in a Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) archaeological excavation of an Anglo-Saxon burial site on Salisbury Plain Training Area have uncovered the richest grave found this year.

Brasilian Inhotim Museum Opens Galeria Yayoi Kusama
Article date: Friday, July 21, 2023

Brasilian Inhotim Museum Opens Galeria Yayoi Kusama

Instituto Inhotim inaugurated its twentieth permanent gallery, dedicated to Yayoi Kusama (Matsumoto, Japan, 1929), one of the most renowned and emblematic artists working today. Galeria Yayoi Kusama features two of her works: I’m Here, But Nothing (2000) and Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity (2009). They belong to the Instituto Inhotim Collection; the former was acquired in 2008 and the latter in 2009.

Article date: Friday, July 21, 2023

Biden Administration Secures Commitments from Tech Companies on AI Safety and Security

The Biden-Harris Administration have moved with urgency to seize the tremendous promise and manage the risks posed by Artificial Intelligence (AI) and to protect Americans’ rights and safety.

Ukrainian Culture Minister Resigns Amid Controversy Over State Funds Allocation in Times of War
Article date: Friday, July 21, 2023

Ukrainian Culture Minister Resigns Amid Controversy Over State Funds Allocation in Times of War

The Ukrainian Minister of Culture, Olexander Tkatschenko, has resigned following public dissatisfaction over the handling of state funds. He cited "a wave of misunderstandings about the importance of culture in times of war" as the reason for his resignation.

A Stolen 15th-Century Letter from Christopher Columbus Heads Home to Italy
Article date: Thursday, July 20, 2023

A Stolen 15th-Century Letter from Christopher Columbus Heads Home to Italy

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Deputy Director and Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Director Patrick J. Lechleitner traveled to Rome to repatriate an original edition of a stolen 15th century Columbus letter to Italian officials on July 19. Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) had collaborated with international partners and subject matter experts since September 2011 on this multifaceted international investigation.

‘Antoni Tàpies. The Practice of Art’, Major Tàpies Retrospective at Bozar, Brussels
Article date: Thursday, July 20, 2023

‘Antoni Tàpies. The Practice of Art’, Major Tàpies Retrospective at Bozar, Brussels

Bozar looks back on the work of Antoni Tàpies (Barcelona, 1923-2012) with a retrospective that travels through time between 1944 and the 1990s.