Censorship
Hindu mobs ransack library and attack Sanscrit scholar
An Oxford University Press book on a nationalist hero has been withdrawn from the Indian market
Jewellery at D’Offay, censorship at South London Gallery and Jane Simpson at Gagosian
What's on in London: A Martian adventure
Anti-American slogans by artists are painted over, allegedly for fear of alienating a US sponsor
An act of censorship or tact?
Supreme Court justices consider whether decency test for NEA grants is unconstitutional
Instead of raising hopes that they might deal a decisive slap in the face to Congressional limits on artistic expression, the justices gave no clear indication of where they were heading in the case
Interview with Mark Stephens on censorship: a lawyer’s view
The co-founder of Stephens Innocent law firm discusses the limits of art
The arguments for and against Unidroit
Our second Art Law Supplement examines cultural property export regulations; the legal loopholes in their international enforcement and the latest proposed solution: the controversial 1995 Unidroit Convention on Stolen and Illegally Exported Cultural Objects. We also deal with art and artists on the edge of society, in articles on censorship and the creations of the mentally ill
Copyright and censorship in Chapmanworld: how far can they go?
Despite the dilemmas posed by their work, Jake and Dinos Chapman's first major exhibition in a public gallery is opening in London
Here we go again: books of Mapplethorpe photographs banned from sale at the V&A and Harrods
The episode had overtones of "An American were-wolf in London"
As the catalogue comes to Britain, James Hall slates “The Play of the Unmentionable”, the anti-censorship installation created by Joseph Kosuth at the Brooklyn Museum
Kosuth "keeps the ball rolling while not rocking the boat”
Jane Kallir mounts timely investigation into censorship of modern art
Exhibition gives historical context to denunciation of Mapplethorpe and Serrano
An art historian stands accused of criminal libel; a conviction would affect the future freedom of critics
Professor James Beck of Columbia University is standing trial in Italy