- October 30, 2006 | The Art Review
- The Allure of the Garret
“Americans in Paris” recalls the years when, if you wanted to paint, you moved to Montmartre.
- October 23, 2006 | The Art Review
- Bossa Nova on the Concourse
The Bronx Museum dedicates its shiny new home by taking a trip to sixties Rio.
- October 9, 2006 | The Art Review
- At the Bull's-Eye
Picasso, the devouring father who gave birth to so much American art.
- October 2, 2006 | The Art Review
- Earth in the Balance
In “Ecotopia,” we face up to our cold war against nature—and our deep unease about its potential result.
- September 25, 2006 | The Art Review
- Buy Low, Sell Very High
The dealer who brought us Van Gogh, Cézanne, Gauguin, and Picasso, revealed at the Metropolitan.
- September 11, 2006
- The Reign From Spain
The Whitney recalls a moment when there was Picasso and then everyone else.
- September 11, 2006
- Season of Change
Chelsea—now with a shiny new Frank Gehry tower—heads into a white-hot fall.
- September 11, 2006
- You Don’t Know Paree
Cafés, flaneurs, artists in garrets: “Americans in Paris” shows us why that romantic image refuses to fade away.
- August 7, 2006 | Feature
- The $135 Million Question
Is the Neue Galerie’s new Klimt worth all that gold?
- August 7, 2006 | The Art Review
- It’s the Little Things
In petite portraits of princes and princesses—and even of himself— Liotard found depths of personality.