Museum and Gallery Listings for Jan. 10-16
A guide to the visual arts in New York City and selected regional institutions.
The Metropolitan Museum is dotted with paintings that have been left incomplete, giving viewers hints into the impulses behind the genius of Degas, Bassano, Greuze, Rembrandt and others.
A guide to the visual arts in New York City and selected regional institutions.
In his show “New Sculpture,” at the Gagosian Gallery, Richard Serra continues along the road that emerged from the hugely successful “Torqued Ellipses” of the ’90s, but also circles back to his earlier oeuvre.
“Devotion,” an exhibition at New York University’s 80WSE, shows a surprising range in the work by Bob Mizer, known for his erotic photographs of men.
The artist R. Luke DuBois takes a data-mining approach to his work, drawing on Google searches and surveillance technology for video and graphics pieces.
The Morgan Library & Museum has long been known for its extraordinary collection of drawings.
The Museum of Modern Art unveiled a sweeping redesign of its Midtown building and reaffirmed its intention to demolish the former American Folk Art Museum.
Ingeborg Berggreen-Merkel, head of a task force on Nazi-looted art, says revealing a timetable would create pressure.
The photographer Larry Clark, whose portraits can command thousands of dollars, is selling some of his smaller prints for $100 each.
An exhibition in Berlin follows the trajectory of the graphic artist Herbert Bayer, who in the 1930s created Nazi propaganda, though he claimed to be apolitical.
A fresh chapter for the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles will begin with a nest egg and a new director.
Mr. Littleton, whose work has been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, founded what is considered to be the nation’s first college-level course in his field.
Artists on both sides of the border in the Rio Grande Valley are using their work to call attention to immigration issues and a rise in drug violence in the region.
Unfettered optimism was the unofficial religion of the United States in the early 20th century, but the photographer Lewis Hine declined to buy in.
Keith L. Sachs and his wife, Katherine, have promised much of their art collection to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, including works by Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Brice Marden and Gerhard Richter.
Documents and artifacts from Luis F. Emilio, a white officer from Massachusetts who led a black regiment during the Civil War, are going on sale.
Artists explore gang violence and the politics of immigration on the Mexican border.
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, presents an ambitious and revealing exhibition.
In China’s growing art market, now the second largest in the world, outsize auction results often overshadow false sales data and forged art.
Never mind the record auction prices for art: there are overlooked pockets of the art world still within the realm of affordability to collectors. With news about galleries, museum exhibitions, previews and more.
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