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The Art Newspaper newsletter

Lead

Sculptor finds alleged copies of his work in corporate collection

NEWPORT BEACH. The California-based sculptor Don Wakefield recently discovered what seemed to be one of his large-scale, granite sculptures in a private corporate collection in Newport Beach, California. The problem is that he didn't make the work. Wakefield says the sculpture, which stands outside Seven Corporate Plaza, is a copy of Untitled, a unique abstract piece he and an artist friend, Joseph “Chick” Glickman, designed and created together in 1992. The 6ft by 4ft original is installed in the home of Glickman's son in Chicago, Illinois... READ MORE

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articles

Precious musical manuscript stolen from Santiago de Compostela

Codex Calixtinus contains many compositions for plainsong chant

Art goes back to school

The artist and author of Maus returns to his old high school for his first public mural project

In awe of Twombly

The Tate curator who organised the current exhibition “Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters” looks back on the artist’s life and work

Moscow art dealer opens contemporary art centre in Tver

Marat Guelman plans to expand to around a dozen other regions

Dutch government refuses to back down over huge budget cuts

Cultural funding to be slashed by one quarter; performing arts worst hit

Culture ministry condemned over running of archaeological sites

Report finds multiple failings in maintenance, security and management

London's National Maritime Museum opens new wing

Extension named after controversial Israeli shipping magnate who was major funder

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video

Simon Lamuniere's last Art Unlimited

Simon Lamuniere talks about his final outing as curator for Art Basel's Art Unlimited which provides a platform for large scale installations and specially commissioned projects. We also look at Nari Ward's work which sees him gathering sneakers from the streets of Harlem, and Kendell Geers' brick piece which challenged visitors to think about the trails they left behind them. With interviews by Jean Wainwright..

Markus Schinwald's cut off vision

Markus Schinwald forces visitors to consider the significance of human legs in body language through the use of suspended walls constructed within the Austrian Pavilion at the 2011 Venice Biennale. With long queues patiently waiting outside, the Pavilion proved one of the highlights during the opening week of the Biennale.

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what's on

The Great American Hall of Wonders

video pictureBADEN-BADEN. Samuel Morse is remembered as the inventor of the telegraph and the code that bears his name. That he was a professional artist is less well known, yet it was while sailing back from Paris where he been working on Gallery of the Louvre, 1831-34, that Morse had the idea that a message might be transmitted by an electric current along a wire. According to Claire Perry, the guest curator of “The Great American Hall of Wonders” at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC, Morse epitomised the 19th-century American aptitude for invention...

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jobs

Exhibitions Manager,
National Gallery of Victoria

The National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) is Australia’s oldest and pre-eminent public art gallery and possesses what is generally acknowledged as the most outstanding collection of fine art in the region and one that ranks with major collections throughout the world.

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