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Mire Lee Takes On Tate’s Turbine Hall Installation

Sculptor Mire Lee, an emerging figure on the international art stage, has been chosen to undertake the prestigious Turbine Hall commission at Tate Modern. This commission places monumental, ambitious artworks within the expansive atrium of the  museum. Scheduled to be unveiled to

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The Pope Plans to Visit Venice Biennale

Pope Francis has revealed his intention to stop at the 60th Venice Biennale on April 28, during a planned one-day visit to Rome. This visit marks the first time the current Bishop of Rome will attend the prestigious biennial event. During his

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Anatolian Symbols Exhibition Opens in Brussels

“The Dance of Symbols,” an innovative exhibition merging Anatolian motifs with digital art, debuted in Belgium’s capital, Brussels. Hosted by the Embassy of Azerbaijan and Mezo Digital, the exhibition showcases Turkish motif silk scarves alongside the music and augmented reality artworks of

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Magritte Painting Expected to Fetch $63M

A painting by the surrealist master René Magritte is expected to fetch up to £50 million, or US$63 million, at Christie’s standalone sale of surrealist art in March in London. L’ami Intime (The Intimate Friend), created in 1958, depicts Magritte’s iconic bowler-hatted

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Activists Throw Soup at Monet Painting

Protestors threw soup at a painting by Monet at The Musee des Beaux-Arts Lyon. This was the most recent action taken by the same campaign organization that staged a similar prank with the Mona Lisa last month. The 1872 picture was shielded

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Art Basel Reveals Program For 2024 Basel Edition

For its 2024 edition in Basel, Art Basel will assemble 287 leading international galleries to showcase artworks of the highest quality across all media, from painting and sculpture to photography and digital works. The artists represented will span from early-twentieth-century Modern pioneers

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Debates on Nazi Looted Schiele Works

The recent orders to hand back artworks by Austrian painter Egon Schiele to the American heirs of their former Jewish owner, Fritz Gruenbaum, have ignited a legal and ethical debate surrounding the provenance of these pieces. Gruenbaum, an Austrian Jewish cabaret performer

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