Tate Britain
Tate restores colour and depth to John Nash painting
The picture is on display in Tate Britain's show Aftermath: Art in the Wake of World War One
Andrew Lloyd Webber to lend works to Tate Britain’s Edward Burne-Jones show
The musical impresario, who has long collected Victorian artists, is understood to be anonymously lending half a dozen works by the Pre-Raphaelite
Three to see: London
Rodin takes on the Parthenon sculptures at the British Museum while James Cook sets sail for the British Library
The struggle behind Tate Modern's birth
Recently opened Tate archives reveal wrangling over division of British and international art in early 1990s
Tate Modern hit with protests over cleaner dispute
There has been controversy at the gallery over the sponsor for the Picasso 1932 exhibition
Three to see: London
From Tacita Dean's double-header, including films of David Hockney and fermenting pears, to a Tate Modern takeover by Joan Jonas
Polish art world calls on national museum to stage 'major international show' against fascism
An open letter to Krakow institution asks for exhibition to counter rise of the right in Poland
Why visitor numbers at two of London’s major museums have plunged
Fewer blockbusters the National Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery meant UK audiences stayed away
Tate Britain to explore Van Gogh's links to UK in major new show
The Art Newspaper's senior correspondent Martin Bailey is the co-curator of the exhibition
Three to see: London
From a huge light show across the city to the final week of Rachel Whiteread's retrospective
Rasheed Araeen says British museums are failing to tell full story of 'multiracial' country
Tate rejected artist's project detailing “most inclusive history of art in post-war Britain”
Video: The Art Newspaper meets Alex Farquharson
The director of Tate Britain reveals his plans for a major rehang and picks his favourite works in the collection
A rehang, a mega-show and 1.5m visitors: Tate Britain director’s vision
Alex Farquharson reveals the global, social concept behind planned redisplay of museum’s collection, covering 500 years of British art
The art world's highs and lows of 2017
Curators, museum directors and artists respond to the year's events
Anthea Hamilton becomes first black woman to be awarded Tate Britain commission
The London-born artist follows Cerith Wyn Evans and Pablo Bronstein taking up the Duveen Galleries commission
London lights up for Christmas
As Christmas tree season begins, we look at some of the most artistic decorations to be found in the capital
Former Tate Britain director Penelope Curtis remaps Lisbon's Gulbenkian
Freed from Tate's "tough agenda" of blockbuster shows, sculpture scholar is opening up Portuguese museum's Islamic collections
Sotheby’s expect First World War painting by Nevinson to make £1m
Last sold 50 years ago, A Dawn depicts French troops marching to trenches through Flanders in 1914
Tate Britain banks on David Hockney retrospective to pull in the crowds
More than 150 works will be on display, from those executed early in his career to some whose paint is still wet
London’s big growth spurt: Major galleries are reaching for the skies with £500m-worth of building projects
As the Tate and British Museum extensions reach their full height, institutions say business plans stack up
Phyllida Barlow: the artist working with the Tate collection to interrogate the essential nature of sculpture
Since retiring from teaching at the Slade school after 40 years, the sculptor has found her large, site-specific works in great demand—not least at Tate Britain
Tate finds 370-year-old bullet hole in Charles I statue
The sculpture was famously attacked by Parliamentarians shortly after the outbreak of the English Civil War
Room with a view tops off Tate Britain’s revamp
Penelope Curtis, the gallery’s director, aims to accentuate the strengths of the collection and the building
Tate borrows £55m for building projects
Renovations and expansions at both London Tates have been costly, and loans were required to bridge gaps in cashflow
Purposeful destruction: Smashing art at the Tate Britain
Tate Britain traces the driving forces and ideologies behind a 500-year history of iconoclasm
Art and the appetite for destruction: Histories of British Iconoclasm on now at Tate Britain
Tate Britain examines the history of those who have targeted art, from Henry VIII to the present
Hundreds of national museum workers on zero-hours contracts
Questions raised about the ethics of employment terms usually associated with discount stores and fast-food chains
Artist Interview: Gary Hume opens the doors of perception at the Tate
A pair of Hume’s swing doors mark the start of his Tate Britain show. But what lies beyond?