filter_list Showing 8 results for "Bucharest" close Clear
dashboard All 8 article news 3museum exhibitions 3gavel restitution 1trending_up market 1
date_range Range Today This Week This Month All
Subscribe

Advocates Try to Save Brutalist Fountain in San Francisco, José Aparicio Painting Returns to Prado Museum: Morning Links for April 30, 2026

This ARTnews Morning Links roundup covers multiple art-world stories from April 30, 2026. A new Banksy sculpture appeared in London's Waterloo Place, depicting a suited man marching off a plinth with a flag covering his face, though Banksy had not confirmed the work. Italian Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli ordered inspectors to the Venice Biennale headquarters amid intensifying scrutiny over Russia's participation, following internal emails suggesting sanctions were circumvented. Obituaries note the deaths of German 'total artist' Timm Ulrichs at 86 and Japanese sculptor Shigeo Toya at 78. A José Aparicio painting, 'The Year of the Famine in Madrid' (1818), returned to the Prado Museum after 150 years. In San Francisco, a group called Friends of the Plaza filed an appeal to block dismantling of the Vaillancourt Fountain. A feature in Cultured Magazine explores Bucharest's ambitions as a global arts hub through the Romanian Art Dealers fair.

kazimir malevich mnac bucharest yaniv cohen dispute 1234747568

Yaniv Cohen, a Bucharest-based Israeli businessman, is threatening to sue the art publication e-flux and Ukrainian American art historian Konstantin Akinsha for defamation over an article questioning the authenticity of three paintings attributed to Kazimir Malevich. The works—'Suprematist Composition in Color' (ca. 1915), 'Cubo-Futurist Composition' (ca. 1912–13), and 'Linear Suprematism' (ca. 1916)—are currently on view at the National Museum of Contemporary Art (MNAC) in Bucharest as part of the exhibition 'Kazimir Malevich: Outliving History.' Akinsha accused MNAC of lacking expertise and challenged the provenance of the previously unseen works, prompting Cohen to demand the article's removal and an apology via a letter from the Tel Aviv–based law firm Rosen-Ben Gal.

Lia & Dan Perjovschi: DRAFT for a Joint Retrospective

The ARCUB Cultural Center in Bucharest has announced a major joint retrospective for Lia and Dan Perjovschi, scheduled to run from April 3 to July 26, 2026. Titled "DRAFT for a Joint Retrospective," the exhibition marks 40 years of artistic practice for the duo, who are among Romania's most influential contemporary artists. The show will span three levels of the Hanul Gabroveni, juxtaposing Dan’s satirical, politically charged drawings with Lia’s research-based conceptual archives and installations.

arsmonitor florin mitroi 2732797

Bucharest-based gallery Arsmonitor is presenting the second installment of a four-part curatorial program dedicated to Romanian artist Florin Mitroi (1938–2002). Titled "Florin Mitroi: Ch.II: Autumn," the exhibition is curated by Erwin Kessler and is anchored by the recent rediscovery of over 600 previously unseen works—files, notebooks, drawings, and pieces on wood and metal—that had been forgotten in storage for nearly two decades. The show frames these recovered materials as foundational, expanding the known oeuvre of an artist who exhibited only a small fraction of his production and later regretted even those works. The program, structured around the four seasons, includes chapters titled "Winter," "Autumn," "Summer" (planned for 2027), and "Spring," aligning with the season of Mitroi's death.

Are These Lost Malevich Masterpieces—or $190 Million Fakes?

An exhibition at the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Bucharest (MNAC) features three purportedly long-lost paintings by Kazimir Malevich, valued between $160 million and $190 million. The works, loaned by Israeli businessman Yaniv Cohen, were allegedly stored under the mattress of his grandmother-in-law, Eva Levando, for decades. However, Ukrainian-American art historian Konstantin Akinsha has publicly questioned their authenticity, citing incomplete provenance and a lack of consensus from international experts. The museum has faced criticism for including the paintings without additional scholarly analysis in the show "Kazimir Malevich: Outliving History," curated by Mariana Dragu and sponsored by a dental clinic owned by Cohen.

giulia cretulescu fiber art sexy 1234743086

Giulia Crețulescu creates fiber art from synthetic fabric sourced from a Ford automotive factory near her hometown of Craiova, Romania. Her work features geometric, torso-sized wall-mounted shapes with bondage-like straps and repurposed industrial seatbelts, blending found and handmade elements. After completing a PhD in graphic arts in Bucharest, she turned to sewing to resist the speed of digital design, producing non-functional, armor-like abstractions. Her recent exhibition at Fragment Gallery in New York showcased her unique approach, which also incorporates inspiration from motorcycle gear and medieval armor.

The Shape of Today - Romanian Contemporary Art

Ans Azura is hosting a major auction in Bucharest titled "The Shape of Today," featuring a curated selection of Romanian contemporary and modern art. The sale spans generations, from historical avant-garde masters like Marcel Iancu and Victor Brauner to global contemporary stars like Adrian Ghenie. The collection explores how Romanian artists have navigated identity, language, and resistance through various political and cultural shifts over the last century.

Sotheby’s to Hold Auction in Diriyah Featuring over 60 Artworks

A priceless 2,500-year-old golden helmet and three golden bracelets from Romania's Dacia civilization, stolen from the Drents Museum in the Netherlands in January 2025, were returned to Romania on Tuesday. The artifacts arrived at Bucharest Henri Coanda International Airport under guard and were displayed at Bucharest's National History Museum, flanked by armed security. The recovery followed 14 months of investigations, diplomatic tensions, and an ongoing trial of three suspects; one bracelet remains missing but Dutch authorities vow to continue the search.