Travel Europe through art at new Fine Arts exhibition
‘La Mangia, Siena’ (1927) by John Taylor Adams, American (1887–1953), etching on wove paper. Gift of Thomas B. Brumbaugh, professor of fine arts,
‘La Mangia, Siena’ (1927) by John Taylor Adams, American (1887–1953), etching on wove paper. Gift of Thomas B. Brumbaugh, professor of fine arts,
Before Frieze set up its swinging shop in London’s Regent’s Park, before Art Basel transposed its staid Swiss self onto Miami Beach, art
Henry Moore’s Stringed Figure (1939), in the booth of London’s Offer Waterman, at TEFAF Spring 2017. MAXIMILÍANO DURÓN/ARTNEWS The storied TEFAF, whose acronym
Around 1922, in his apartment at Nice, right along France’s balmy Mediterranean shore, Henri Matisse began to paint a series of odalisques —
Booth Shot of Ulrich Fielder featuring the Gerrit Rietveld Z Chairs. Courtesy of Ulrich Fielder Gallery There I was. In the booths of
The fine art market continues to boom. It seems that every day, another auction record is set for “the highest price ever paid.”
View of The European Fine Art Fair in Maastricht, Holland. (Photo credit: S. Karabell) S. Karabell The Art Market Report, issued by The
Artworks on sale at Maastricht’s TEFAF art fair The TEFAF in Maastricht is a pilgrimage site for wealthy art lovers from all over
Analysis In a thriving international art business, there was a marked shift to private transactions. Artnet News March 4, 2017 Auctioneer Jussi Pylkkanen
Axel Vervoordt Gallery took over a historic room on the second floor of the Armory for TEFAF New York in 2016. Courtesy of