"The Bavarian state criminal police said that they had arrested four men suspected of carrying out the theft after a monthslong investigation ... turned up a trace of DNA on an unspecified item at the scene." Bad news though: Some of the coins have been melted down. - The New York Times
One gallerist said that "the tents were built over ground-level plywood rather than on above-ground risers, like one would see at other art fairs. Another gallerist ... alleged that the gallery walls weren’t flush with the floors either, calling the entire thing 'a recipe for disaster.'" - Hyperallergic
"Since February, the Manhattan DA, Alvin Bragg, has returned 29 antiquities from White collection’s to Greece, 12 to Turkey, four to Iraq, two to China and one to Yemen. collecting has been described as naive or careless." - The Guardian (UK)
“We weren’t really trying to develop the world’s whitest paint. We wanted to help with climate change, and now it’s more of a crisis, and getting worse. We wanted to see if it was possible to help save energy while cooling down the Earth.” - Artnet
"On Thursday, the final tapestry in the set of 13 Gideon tapestries (at Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire) was unveiled on the wall of the long gallery, the culmination of a painstaking effort to clean and handstitch the huge pieces one at a time, at a cost of £1.7m." - The Guardian
Heavy monsoon rains this summer have swollen the Yamuna River in Agra right up to the Taj's walls. There might be slight damage to the mausoleum's white marble, but the moisture is strengthening the building's wooden foundation and support rafters, which had been weakened by a prolonged drought. - Bloomberg CityLab
"Even as Cecilie Hollberg highlights her achievements at Italy's second-most-visited museum" — it's the home of Michelangelo's David — "since arriving in 2015, rumors circulate that Italy's far-right-led government intends to revoke the museum's independence once more," exactly as happened to Hollberg and the Galleria in 2019. - AP
"A Swiss teenager is the latest offender to start carving her name into the ancient amphitheatre. The 17-year-old was caught in the act, with a local tour guide managing to video her scratching the letter N into the wall of the famous landmark." - The Independent (UK)
What feels different about ecocritical art is that the very topic it engages with proposes widespread ruin and demands that action be immediately taken to counteract such an apocalypse. - Art Review
The antiquities were lent for a 2019 Hanukkah event at the White House but, due to a "bureaucratic difficulty," were never displayed. They were supposed to be returned to Israel within weeks but never were, partly due to the pandemic, and have now been located at Trump's Florida residence. - The Forward (Haaretz)
The demolition of the 300-year-old minaret of a mosque in southern Iraq last week to make way for a road extension has drawn outrage from locals and heritage authorities. - The Art Newspaper
"The furry pooch, named A.I.C.C.A. (or Artificially Intelligent Critical Canine) has been trained on a corpus of visual art and art writing. … Using its black-lens eye, it assesses physical artworks, before working with OpenAI's GPT model to generate a concise piece of art criticism" which is ejected you-know-where. - Artnet
"The transport secretary has granted a development consent order for a scheme to widen roads and dig a two-mile tunnel near the ancient site. The project, which was initially costed at £1.7bn, is designed to speed up journey times on the A303, a major link to south-west England." - The Guardian
Investigators from the Manhattan District Attorney’s office have carted away 71 looted artifacts from Shelby White’s home in the past two years, though they have not suggested that she or her husband knowingly bought stolen antiquities. In fact, investigators would later thank White, 84, for her cooperation. - The New York Times
We're not talking about the Bund or other Nazi sympathizers in the U.S. - of course they liked it. But its use "was widespread and fashionable, first infused with a sense of vaguely whimsical 'exoticism,' and then perfect for the developing Art Deco aesthetic." - Slate