Museum & Gallery Listings for Nov. 7-13
A selected guide to exhibitions and installations in New York City.
A 1963 Andy Warhol painting of Elvis Presley pointing a gun sold for nearly $82 million, contributing to an $852.9 million auction total.
A selected guide to exhibitions and installations in New York City.
The Manhattan murals, a modern twist on John James Audubon’s prints, have helped the Audubon Society raise awareness about birds threatened by climate change.
Palestinian artists have gotten attention for their war-inspired creations by posting them on social media networks, where thousands have “liked” or shared them.
The first major exhibition on Bartholomeus Spranger, at the Met, shows him to be a very good painter who had a knack of being in the right place at the right time.
Christopher Williams continues his exploration of photography as an art medium in his show at David Zwirner.
Despite some high prices paid for works by Mark Rothko and Jasper Johns, the week of big-money contemporary art auctions got off to a sluggish start on Tuesday evening at Sotheby’s.
The philanthropist’s collection included “masterworks” spanning 400 years. It brought $158.7 million at Sotheby’s on Monday, topping a high estimate of $121 million.
Preservation groups opposed to the Frick Collection’s plans for a six-story addition say the museum is going back on a 1973 promise to make a garden permanent.
Magazines and their images are part of everyone’s childhood experience, but that’s especially the case with artists.
A dozen years after a 500-year-old marble Adam by the Renaissance sculptor Tullio Lombardo broke into hundreds of pieces, the Metropolitan Museum of Art is poised to reintroduce it to the public.
The sculptor Thomas Houseago, who made his name with towering figures, will exhibit a single large installation which he considers his “first proper New York show.”
A “grand bargain” to help save pensions also ends a threat to the Detroit Institute of Arts, a danger with roots going back nearly a century.
Independent Projects features work by Yves Klein among its 40 solo shows, which go from art fair to exhibition over the next week.
Mr. Gordon’s show at Wallspace comprises two groups: large-scale still lifes and photographs that are enlarged details of the still lifes.
The Print Fair rewards visitors willing to poke around, but also has an increasing emphasis on gallerylike solo and theme exhibitions.
A special section highlights upcoming events and exhibitions, and surveys new developments in prominent museums.
How to wade through the crush of culture coming your way this season? Here’s a guide to 100 events that have us especially excited, in order of appearance.
“Fata Morgana,” an installation by Teresita Fernández that features hundreds of polished reflective metal discs, will take up residence in Madison Square Park next spring.
The Corning Museum of Glass library is to start unfurling about 7,000 drawings and paintings from the Whitefriars stained-glass factory; a black film poster collection is for sale.
Rita Ascione is one of the last living residents of the Lower East Side building that is now the Tenement Museum. She recently returned with her daughter, Valerie Carmody, to see her old apartment.
Picasso’s longtime biographer, John Richardson, is organizing a show focused on the importance of photography in the artist’s life and work.
A new exhibition of the artist and filmmaker’s work is at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.
Redesigned patient rooms at the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro have more space for patients and families, but some features still frustrate.
In China’s growing art market, now the second largest in the world, outsize auction results often overshadow false sales data and forged art.
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