Two surveys supported by the National Endowment for the Arts show that in-person art activities remain below pre-Covid levels, while many Americans continue to experience culture virtually
Author Archives: artNews
Two surveys supported by the National Endowment for the Arts show that in-person art activities remain below pre-Covid levels, while many Americans continue to experience culture virtually
Curators of an exhibition at the island’s Candie Museum believe the subject has been misattributed and may actually be the Bay of St Peter Port
The fair’s sophomore edition brings together 154 leading galleries at the Grand Palais Éphémère
They will each take the spotlight at a South Kensington museum next summer
Doug Aitken is creating a series of large-scale works will be moored off the coast of St Barts

Louvre puts the spotlight on the treasury of Notre Dame
From October 19, 2023, to February 19, 2024, the Louvre presents the exhibition “The treasury of Notre Dame Cathedral from its origins to Viollet-Le-Duc”
Source: Louvre · Image: Cathédrale Notre-Dame Trésor. Photo by Alexander Baranov from Montpellier, France. License Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic. Retrieved from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris_(75004)_Cath%C3%A9drale_Notre-Dame_Tr%C3%A9sor_03.jpg
The temporary exhibition rooms in the Richelieu wing host a show devoted to the treasury of Notre Dame Cathedral, from its beginnings to its high point during the Second Empire, (1852–1870) thanks to Viollet-Le-Duc’s efforts. The cathedral treasury had to be entirely reassembled following the French Revolution. Today it is famous for the remarkable relics it contains, notably the Crown of Thorns and a fragment of the True Cross originally held in the treasury of the Sainte-Chapelle but transferred to new reliquaries at Notre Dame under Napoleon I (1804–1814). The cathedral treasury is also famous for splendid masterworks of French precious metalworking collected in the nineteenth century, in particular ones designed by Viollet-Le-Duc during the Second Empire, providing extraordinary testimony to the history of Notre Dame as well as the history of France.
For the first time, however, the exhibition also seeks to go back in time, exploring the history of the treasury prior to the French Revolution. Inventories, historic accounts, paintings, illuminated manuscripts, prints and other illustrated documents, along with several surviving pieces, will trace part of the long story of Notre Dame’s treasury starting from the Merovingian era. It offers a glimpse of a lavishness that rivalled even the dazzling objects made for Notre Dame in the nineteenth century.
Featuring roughly one hundred items, the exhibition thereby tells the story of the treasury of the cathedral of Paris and its resurrection in the nineteenth century, all set in the context of its age-old history. Curators: Jannic Durand, honorary director of the Department of Decorative Arts, Musée du Louvre; Anne Dion-Tenenbaum, Michèle Bimbenet-Privat and Florian Meunier, curators in the Department of Decorative Arts, Musée du Louvre.
Pace will feature a work by the Berlin-based sculptor at Paris + and stage a solo show of her work in Los Angeles in 2024
The No Fakes Act has been proposed by four US Senators and garnered support from organisations representing creative industries
Steve Bell’s unpublished drawing of the Israeli prime minister shows him performing surgery on his own stomach, which has drawn parallels with the antisemitic ‘pound of flesh’ trope

