BlogDiary
Frieze Week treats from Sarabande's new gallery space to Damien Hirst's sweet Saatchi memories
NewsArt market
Keeping it in the family: Charles Saatchi’s daughter to open huge London gallery
Phoebe Saatchi Yates has collaborated with her husband and father to launch 10,000 sq ft Mayfair gallery focused on “unknown” artists
NewsExhibitions
Saatchi Gallery exhibits London’s graduate artists deprived of degree shows
The exhibition forms part of the education programme at the collector’s gallery which has now ‘transitioned into a charity’
ArchiveBooks
Books: Two books explore newer ways of seeing the world (and art) with varying degrees of success
Where Ossian Ward provides a handy guide, Charles Saatchi fails to impress
ArchiveTracey Emin
Saatchi to sell Tracey Emin’s bed
Collector hopes for a king-sized return
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
On the eve of his gallery’s 20th anniversary and its complete reinstallation with paintings, Charles Saatchi answers questions on the record for the first time ever
“I primarily buy art to show it off”
ArchiveYoung British Artists
Do the Young British Artists remain a 'sensation'?
The debate regarding the relevancy of the Young British Artists as they enter middle age
ArchiveSaatchi Gallery
Charles Saatchi, the comeback king: New Chelsea gallery a definitive success
Attendance figures for the the Saatchi Gallery exceed their 1 million visitor goal
ArchiveSotheby's
Post-war and contemporary auction report: Charles Saatchi strikes gold
Saatchi sells two Kippenberger paintings
ArchiveCollectors
Saatchi purchase makes collector Howard Faber think again
$6m from sale of Chinese paintings, including a Zeng Fanzhi, encourages him to review his remaining collection
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi’s art to go on rotating display at Hermitage
Works on loan from the British collector will go on display in a room named after him; Tate to send Turner Prize retrospective to Moscow
ArchiveCollectors
1.3 billion Chinese people, but still not many substantial collectors of Chinese contemporary art
Here are the best known: one Swiss, one Chinese, one Belgian, three American and one British
ArchiveArtist interview
Interview with Sean Scully: Bringing sex to the minimalist grid
After 25 years, the Irish artist is still going strong, subjecting his paintings to “tough love” and steering away from nostalgia
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi rents out his art
Charges range from £7,000 a year for five works to £20,000 for twenty works
ArchiveCollectors
Revealed: where the Sensation art is now
We name the collectors who have bought works from the show
ArchiveAmerican art
Is there an ongoing American Renaissance in contemporary art?
Spotlight shifts from German artists to their US counterparts as Saatchi, Rubells and others mount exhibitions of their work
ArchiveDamien Hirst
Damien Hirst in talks to replace rotting shark
The 1991 work, bought by Steve Cohen from Charles Saatchi for £6.5m, has deteriorated because of the way it was made
ArchiveArt market
Renewed interest in American art marks the beginning of the so-called 'American Renaissance'
Galleries across the world are featuring growing numbers of pieces by American artists
ArchiveSaatchi Gallery
Saatchi evicted from County Hall
The British collector has lost the case over his lease on the riverfront space
ArchiveSaatchi Gallery
Charles Saatchi to move his gallery to Chelsea
The announcement comes as the collector and his Japanese landlord face one another in court
ArchiveArt fairs
Top collectors descend on Zoo as the satellite fair opens its doors a day ahead of Frieze
Saatchi and Branson among first to race round fair
ArchiveMomart fire
Artists sue Momart for £20 million
Solicitors say premises were “a disaster waiting to happen”
ArchiveArt market
Rumoured sale of Damien Hirst's formaldehyde tiger shark to US billionaire Steve Cohen confirmed by Saatchi Collection
Scepticism surrounds the supposed value of $12 million
ArchiveFrieze
News from London: Art pulled and art pushed, along with temper tantrums and transitions
Meanwhile, more say ta-ta to the Tate
ArchiveComment
A blow to Britart as Saatchi's collection is caught in Momart warehouse blaze
Shame on the Schadenfreudians
ArchiveChristie's
Both Christie’s and Sotheby’s walk away from their contemporary sales claiming to have bettered their rival
Sotheby’s scored a superior strike rate, but marginally lower proceeds
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi plans an alternative Turner prize, Blue Gallery opens again, and gazumping in Vauxhall
What's going on in London: Art on the move
ArchiveArtist interview
Leon Golub is still getting to the real at the Brooklyn Museum of Art
Charles Saatchi and Eli Broad both collect him, but only 13 US museums have examples of this artistic rebel’s work
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi announces gift of 100 works of art, worth £500,000, to the Arts Council Collection
Is the gift an act of virtuous self-regard?
ArchiveMuseums & Heritage
Saatchi & Gagosian to collaborate?
Charles Saatchi and Larry Gagosian are discussing a joint gallery, reports Roger Bevan
ArchiveArt market
PaceWildenstein picks up the estate of Barbara Hepworth but delays its plan to open in London
Also in London, Lotta Hammer's gallery in Fitzrovia and "Some of my best friends are geniuses" curated by Jake Chapman
ArchiveAuction houses
Contemporary art sales 1992: Saatchi succeeds at Sotheby's and Freud nude provokes Christie's bidding war
Contemporary art sales '92 auction report
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
As Charles Saatchi's collection of young British art opens at the Royal Academy, we ask what drives the collector to buy, and risk, so much
The Art Newspaper was given access to the Saatchi archive to chart the transformations of this world famous collector’s taste
ArchiveCharles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi: the man and the market. The Art Newspaper was given access to the Saatchi archive to chart the transformations of this world famous collector’s taste
As “Sensation!”, the exhibition of the Saatchi collection of young British art, opens at the Royal Academy we ask what drives Saatchi to buy, and risk, so much