When a pair of collectors purchased a painting abroad, they could see that it portrayed the burning of Richmond on April 3, 1865, even though it was not so identified. They set about to prove just that...
The Rockwell Museum of Western Art's last special exhibition of 2005 will give viewers the opportunity to experience the still-evolving, dynamic Inuit culture.
For the first time, The Baltimore Museum of Art will display the more than 25 wool trade blankets in its textile collection in "Woven Rainbows: American Indian Trade Blankets."
Green Valley Auctions, Inc pulled together more than 10,000 pieces for its 11th annual Fall Glass & Lighting Auction, an annual pilgrimage for many collectors.
With pre-Katrina commitments to consignors weighing heavily on New Orleans' two large auction galleries, both are planning upcoming sales but in different locales.
"We had lots of positive energy and that's what it takes for this show," said Lynn Ryan, executive director of the Bedford Historical Society, of its fall antiques show.
Rescued from an upstate New York attic, a cache of almost 200 posters advertising Buffalo Bill's early Wild West shows, brought serious money at Paul Royka's auction last month.
A magnesite sculptural relief by Isamu Noguchi sold at more than six times the high presale estimate at the Sollo/Rago Twentieth Century Modern auction.
The two-day "Atlantique City Holiday Megafair: The Largest Indoor Antique & Collectibles Show In The World," offers everything from the "sublime to the ridiculous."
A rare Byrdcliffe chiffonier, circa 1904, with painted panels by Hermann Dudley Murphy recently established a record price at auction when it sold for $207,000.
The Brooklyn Museum of Art may not come first to mind when you think of an important public collection of Modern Art but the institution has a long tradition of acquiring Modern art.