In the last year alone, the explosive success of NFTs (non-fungible tokens) has left many in the contemporary artworld baffled to say the least. But is crypto-art really ushering a new age of creativity or does it simply lack substance?
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The Thief Collector: new documentary explores the 1985 theft of De Kooning painting
A documentary was premiered last week at the South by Southwest film festival exploring the puzzling theft of Willem de Kooning’s Woman-Ochre (1955) painting from the University of Arizona, Tuscon. The film, which is directed by Allison Otto, proposes that the couple may have stolen the work not for money, but simply because they loved the painting.
Continue readingLost Canova masterpiece found in English garden valued at £5-8 million
A long-lost masterpiece by Antonio Canova (1757-1822), found in 2002 when it was sold at a garden centre auction for £5,200, is now worth between a staggering £5 million and £8million. 200 years a after its completion, the sculpture will be put up for auction again this summer at Christie’s.
Continue reading$30 million estimate for Met’s deaccessioned Picasso sculpture
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has announced that they will be deaccessioning a bronze sculpture in their collection, which will be sold at Christie’s this May. Whilst the estimate of the work is only available upon request, it is anticipated that it could fetch around $30 million, which would make it by far the highest valued object the museum has ever sold.
Continue readingThousands of Timbuktu’s ancient manuscripts digitised for virtual gallery
For the very first time, tens of thousands of Timbuktu’s ancient manuscripts have been captured in a virtual gallery called ‘Mali Magic’. Collectively the documents represent centuries of African and Islamic scholarship, as well as remarkable manuscript artwork.
Continue readingErnest Shackleton’s missing shipwreck discovered after more than a century
The abandoned vessel of legendary explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton (1874-1922) was one of the greatest undiscovered shipwrecks in recent history. Lost for 107 years, the Endurance had sunk 3,008 meters beneath the Antarctic Sea. A team of scientists finally found the wreck, looking just as it did the day it vanished over a century ago.
Continue readingSotheby’s anticipated NFT sale suddenly withdrawn by consignor
“Punk It!”, the first evening sale at Sotheby’s dedicated exclusively to CryptoPunk NFTs (non-fungible tokens), was mysteriously withdrawn at the request of the consignor. As the crowd enthusiastically gathered in New York, and the sale’s live-stream opened to viewers around the world, the seller tweeted “nvm [never mind], decided to hodl”.
Continue readingEurope’s first NFT advisory service to open in East London
On 23 March, Europe’s first NFT advisory service and physical gallery – Quantus Gallery – will open its doors to the public. The gallery, which will display its collection for sale on Samsung TV screens, aims to guide collectors through the tricky process of identifying good investments in the NFT art world.
Continue readingLooking “history straight in the eye”: Belgium takes significant step in the restitution of Congolese objects
Last week, Belgium handed over a list of 84,000 artifacts of Congolese origin to the Democratic Republic of Congo, the first step in the process of restitution of objects from the colonial period. The items are held in the AfricaMuseum in Tervuren, an institution with one of the largest collections of African objects in the world which was established at the end of the nineteenth century.
Continue readingLondon archaeologists floored by largest Roman mosaic found in 50 years
Archaeologists from the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) have unearthed the largest Roman mosaic to be found in the city in more than half a century. The discovery was made around a month ago on the building site for a new development in Southwark, just in view of the iconic Shard.
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