Readings Art Sorting great art from the overexposed When a work of art is considered great, we may stop thinking about it for ourselves
Art Glasgow’s palace of dreams The novelist Andrew O’Hagan spent long hours at Kelvingrove, Glasgow as a teenage truant. Its treasures taught him things that school never could
Art Authors on Museums Cabinets of wonder To Oxford’s tourists, the Pitt Rivers Museum is the place with the shrunken skulls. For Frank Cottrell Boyce, it has been a refuge and an eye-opener
Art Xu Bing’s cultural evolution Xu Bing’s ambitions could have been dashed by Maoism, but his skill saved him
Exhibitions From the Hague – 15 treats The Frick gives New Yorkers a rare chance to peek into the Golden Age
Cover Story A one-man art market Andy Warhol is an art-world colossus whose work accounts for one-sixth of contemporary-art sales. How did that happen, and is he really worth it?