Economic and political challenges threaten London’s art marketThe Frieze art fairs return as global sales fall and costs rise, but organisers have plans to increase attractivenessArtist Lawrence Lek is using AI to explore whether robots can sufferThe winner of the Frieze Artist award 2024 has created a ‘carebot’ with emotional problemsCollector Kiran Nadar on Indian art and building museums Her 15,000 artworks range from the Bombay Progressives to Olafur Eliasson and Anish Kapoor Gallerist Maureen Paley: ‘I want to keep things to a more intimate scale’The New Yorker has witnessed London’s art market grow from quiet origins into a high-octane scene over the past 40 yearsPaul Anthony Smith on finding photos and piercing paintingsThe Jamaican-born artist uses a technique called picotage to makes his work shimmerArtists Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings: ‘We felt that anything we saw in art history, we could also do’The couple’s commission for Art on the Underground is an ambitious mosaic in St James’s Park stationMore from this SeriesRestrictive EU law could benefit London’s Asian art scene Art from ancient to new is being sold in galleries, auction houses and Frieze Masters this autumnCurator Pablo José Ramírez: ‘Art history doesn’t belong exclusively to the western world’His new section at Frieze London brings together Indigenous and diaspora artists, with a focus on clayFrieze Focus places emerging artists centre stageThe section features helium-propelled penguins and alabaster creaturesPartners in life and art for 60 yearsA show at Gainsborough’s House in Suffolk explores the work of Cedric Morris and Arthur Lett-HainesWhat to see in London during Frieze Week 2024
Economic and political challenges threaten London’s art marketThe Frieze art fairs return as global sales fall and costs rise, but organisers have plans to increase attractivenessArtist Lawrence Lek is using AI to explore whether robots can sufferThe winner of the Frieze Artist award 2024 has created a ‘carebot’ with emotional problemsCollector Kiran Nadar on Indian art and building museums Her 15,000 artworks range from the Bombay Progressives to Olafur Eliasson and Anish Kapoor Gallerist Maureen Paley: ‘I want to keep things to a more intimate scale’The New Yorker has witnessed London’s art market grow from quiet origins into a high-octane scene over the past 40 yearsPaul Anthony Smith on finding photos and piercing paintingsThe Jamaican-born artist uses a technique called picotage to makes his work shimmerArtists Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings: ‘We felt that anything we saw in art history, we could also do’The couple’s commission for Art on the Underground is an ambitious mosaic in St James’s Park stationMore from this SeriesRestrictive EU law could benefit London’s Asian art scene Art from ancient to new is being sold in galleries, auction houses and Frieze Masters this autumnCurator Pablo José Ramírez: ‘Art history doesn’t belong exclusively to the western world’His new section at Frieze London brings together Indigenous and diaspora artists, with a focus on clayFrieze Focus places emerging artists centre stageThe section features helium-propelled penguins and alabaster creaturesPartners in life and art for 60 yearsA show at Gainsborough’s House in Suffolk explores the work of Cedric Morris and Arthur Lett-HainesWhat to see in London during Frieze Week 2024