More stories below from this week (click on bolded words for more information):
- KAWS painting of ‘The Simpsons’ sells at Sotheby’s for $14.7 million after being estimated at $1 million.
- What sold at Art Basel in Hong Kong.
- The artists everyone was talking about during Art Basel in Hong Kong.
- A KAWS for concern and Asian market analysis—on the ground on Hong Kong.
- How collector demand impacts an artwork’s value.
- The online art market grew 9.8% in 2018—and other key takeaways from the 2019 Hiscox Report.
- Brazilian dealers try to preserve a sense of normalcy at SP Arte amid the country’s political storm.
- 10 fairgoers share their highlights of Milan’s international art fair.
- Deep in the west of Texas, the first Marfa Invitational art fair.
- 5 standout New York exhibitions to see this April.
- 10 must-see artists at AIPAD’s photography show.
- This new gallery in SF wants to cultivate the next generation of tech collectors.
- Hauser & Wirth adds art star Glenn Ligon to its increasingly gargantuan roster.
- Gagosian expands in Beverly Hills by going halfsies with a new Italian restaurant.
- Can a computer authenticate disputed artworks?
- Can the art world kick its addiction to tobacco sponsorship?
- The Shed opens with an inclusive mission in an exclusive part of New York.
- Museums offer ‘Slow Art Day’ to celebrate the pleasure of patient looking.
- The 2nd Honolulu Biennial showcases solidarity and resistance in the Pacific Rim.
- The unknown artists who made radical art on the fringes of 1960s Japan.
- How Takashi Murakami got his start as an artist.
- Craig KR & TILT bring the “Fundamentals” of graffiti to France.
- Artist Antony Gormley’s new VR art project takes you to the moon.
- Antonio Asis, an Argentine artist known for his illusionistic and lively geometric compositions, has died.
- Salvador Dalí’s side project illustrating books which included the Bible.
- Sculptor Augusta Savage’s towering impact on the Harlem renaissance.
- Christo to wrap the Arc de Triomphe in Paris in silver-blue fabric.
- Daniel Libeskind’s colourful sculptures protest climate change.
- Frida Kahlo’s garden is still thriving—six decades after her death.
- Having a messy studio can help you as an artist.
- Rita Ackermann’s opposing impulses of creation and destruction.
- How Judith beheading Holofernes became art history’s favorite icon of female rage.
- The origins of art—Kristen Sanders interviewed by Owen Duffy.
- Tracing the legacy of Asger Jorn, ‘Vandal’ of the vanguard.
- Anni Albers on how to be an artist.
- The complex legacy of Soviet architecture.