The Bastide du Jas de Bouffan is also celebrated in a major Cezanne exhibition at the Musée Granet
In a digital age, painting may seem quaint, but its appeal endures, among artists, scholars and collectors
Painters have learnt by copying works in the museum for centuries. Now a group of high-profile contemporary artists have been invited to create entirely new works
The Los Angeles show aims to make the emojis of the past more accessible
100 years since the artist’s birth, there are exhibitions, commissions—and even an actual birthday party
Award-garlanded, commission-rich and lavishly praised, Selldorf is the art world’s go-to architect
Jimmy Donaldson, who has nearly 400 million followers on the video-streaming platform, shot a viral video in Giza, which may be helping to educate a new audience
Visitors have streamed back after Covid-19, but the influx has been a double-edged sword, forcing some institutions to consider their long-term sustainability
In the year that copyright on the French artist’s work expires, an exhibition at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris aims to provide new insights into his life and career
The UK institution is slashing 7% of its workforce as "real-terms decline" in public funds and declining visitor numbers continue to bite
The notorious death camp, in which hundreds of thousands perished, is only now getting a proper museum space to ensure the dark chapter in Europe’s history is not forgotten
The British artist has published a new book of detailed photographs of her hero’s work
‘Women in Revolt!’ heads to Manchester, Tracey Emin makes the Independent Women 2025 Influence List and EmpowerHER ‘25 creates a space where “women's voices in art could truly be seen and heard”
Cultural collaborations have become more centred outside European countries, leaving bodies such as Paris’s Institut du Monde Arabe adrift
The latest stage of the Paris museum's revamp will end on 2 March
This year's edition of the distinguished event features more than 650 works by nearly 200 artists that build upon its legacy of creating connections between non-Western communities
The exhibition at the Frist Art Museum includes works by the likes of Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Paul Gauguin
From delicate cleaning to forklifts, the unseen, but crucial, investment often goes unnoticed
With local authorities in crisis and Tate running a deficit, leaders of British organisations hope for much-needed capital investment
The country has too many churches in areas with too few people—and too little money to maintain them
France’s culture budgets have long been sacrosanct but concerns are raised about generous public arts funding in the wake of political turmoil
The exhibitions to visit in London, New York, Tokyo, Paris and São Paulo
We round-up the biggest shows opening each month
The artist's 36-minute film, ‘Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version (2019–24)’, is currently on show at Gagosian
A new show examines what the term means and celebrates foundational Black liberation movements
The northern belfry’s mighty bells—the oldest having survived the French Revolution—have been restored in Normandy and reinstalled in the bell chamber, from where they will once again ring out
Over four years, and often perched on scaffolding, Axelle Ponsonnet has documented the project's progress behind the scenes
Faith, politics and emotion have fused in the rebuilding of the Paris cathedral partially destroyed by a fire in 2019
Years in the making, plans for the department were shelved a decade ago; now it is due to open in 2027
Ahead of the announcement of the 2024 Film London Jarman Award winner on 25 November, Whitechapel gallery will show entries by all six shortlisted artists