THE LATEST ARTICLES
NEWSLETTERS
frieze art fair london
Marion Maneker October 13, 2024
Despite an art market downturn, London put on a great week of business that reminded everyone why Frieze has been a pillar of the global art circuit for more than two decades. Herewith, a tale of Sotheby’s, Christie’s, Degas, Hockney, Odundo, Whitten, and more.
frieze london 2024 andy warhol
Marion Maneker October 8, 2024
News and notes from the British art fair circuit surrounding Frieze: the biggest sales, the debate over activity in the private market, attendance anxiety, and the battle with Paris.
ruth asawa
Marion Maneker October 6, 2024
A quick look at the numbers from New York’s midseason contemporary art sales suggests the market is improving slowly but surely. More money was spent in this year’s sales relative to last year, and the indicators were broadly healthy—even if the sales provided little in the way of excitement.
patrick drahi
Marion Maneker October 2, 2024
A 280-year-old company can withstand a lot more than bad press, but it’s undeniably been a rough month for Sotheby’s amid an art market slump, employee jitters, and feverish speculation surrounding fresh Emirati cash. Does Patrick Drahi have a plan, beyond muddling through?


Lalanne at market
Marion Maneker September 29, 2024
In the white-hot market for the hybrid sculpture-furniture works by the late husband-and-wife team known as Les Lalanne, nothing is as it seems. Camels are couches, hippos are bars, and the prices always seem to be going higher and higher. This fall, after an opulent show in a Venice palazzo, the auctions may give us even more to talk about.
patrick drahi
Marion Maneker September 25, 2024
As the world’s largest auction house prepares to move into its new flagship HQ, in the former Whitney, questions abound as to what its new Emirati investors want, whether Patrick Drahi can retain control, and which employees will be sent packing to Siberia (i.e., Long Island City).
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
Marion Maneker September 22, 2024
A wealth of new offerings at Christie’s and Sotheby’s aim to rouse the art market from its recent somnolence, with a spate of attractively priced major works in the mid-range. Is the market on the verge of a real rebound, or merely enjoying the artificial uplift of a manufactured narrative?
Hans Neuendorf
Marion Maneker September 18, 2024
A new financial report reveals declining revenues at the art market information company, and a latticework of insider deals and loans propping it up. With its largest single shareholder calling for a change of leadership, how long can the Neuendorf family hang on?


joshua roth
Marion Maneker September 16, 2024
Athletes, actors, and authors all have agents. So why don’t artists? That’s the question that UTA tried to answer with its Fine Arts division. Now, the agency has put that initiative on pause.
Jean-Léon Gérôme, L’Eminence Grise paris 1874 impressionism
Marion Maneker September 10, 2024
From an exhibition featuring the young Impressionists in their rebel heyday to a show dissecting modern Black representation in the art world, here’s what I’m looking forward to seeing this fall.
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