
Arts And Letters
The Black Artists Claiming More Space Than Ever Before
New monumental works are filling landscapes and galleries, where they argue for the freedom and power to play.
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New monumental works are filling landscapes and galleries, where they argue for the freedom and power to play.
By
Gaetano Pesce was the guest of honor at a meal celebrating his show at the Future Perfect gallery in the Hollywood Hills.
By Liam Freeman and
Plus: Roberto Lugo’s Afrocentric ceramics, wooden accessories and more from T’s cultural compendium.
There wasn’t a style that reflected his approach to design. So Harry Nuriev made up his own.
By Nick Haramis and
In his compact walk-up, Nicholas Obeid combines objects of his own design and flea-market finds to create an escape from the city below.
By Nick Marino and
Plus: an exhibition of Stanley Whitney’s grid paintings, sculptural meditation accessories and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Each timepiece is named after the brand’s patriarchs, spanning three generations of craftsmen.
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The new creative director of Etro shares his favorite flea-market finds, and a few creations of his own.
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The eternally useful furniture piece is available in new, unusually pleasing forms.
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Giorgio Taroni’s home overlooking Lake Como has become a cabinet of curiosities, filled with collections of oil paintings, books, ancient coins and vintage postcards.
By Nancy Hass and
It’s the objects in each of these spaces — as well as those in her own, T’s editor in chief writes — that bring the place to life.
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Ramdane Touhami has turned a haute bohemian landmark into an audacious showcase for his inimitable, fearless creativity.
By Nancy Hass and
Knits that range from quiet neutrals to high-contrast brights.
By Jessica Madavo and
What’s so funny about our dystopian future? Just ask Josh Kline.
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Ramdane Touhami has turned a haute bohemian landmark into an audacious showcase for his inimitable, fearless creativity.
By Nancy Hass and
Giorgio Taroni’s home overlooking Lake Como has become a cabinet of curiosities, filled with collections of oil paintings, books, ancient coins and vintage postcards.
By Nancy Hass and
A couple has restored and reimagined a nearly decimated building as a home and a cultural hub, revealing the complexity of the city’s past.
By Hussein Omar and
New monumental works are filling landscapes and galleries, where they argue for the freedom and power to play.
By
By transforming once-kosher recipes with new flavors, shapes and techniques, chefs are innovating on, and safeguarding, time-honored breads and desserts.
By Jenny Comita, Mari Maeda and Yuji Oboshi and
We asked five chefs and culinary experts to determine the most delicious and memorable plates in the food-obsessed French capital. Here are the results.
By Kurt Soller, Sara Lieberman, Katherine McGrath, Zoey Poll, Lindsey Tramuta and
A pair of internationally minded writers, a chef, an architect and a landscape photographer made a list of the most extraordinary adventures a person should seek out. Here are the results.
By Alwa Cooper, Ashlea Halpern, Debra Kamin, Aileen Kwun, Miguel Morales, Dan Piepenbring and
A group of fashion experts — editors, historians and a designer — convened over Zoom to make a list of the clothes that shaped the world.
By Nick Haramis, Max Berlinger, Rose Courteau, Jessica Testa and
Four writers and one bookseller gathered over Zoom to make a list devoted to fiction in which the city is more than mere setting.
By Rose Courteau, Kate Guadagnino and
We asked six chefs and food experts to create a list of the most delicious and memorable plates in town.
By Dan Piepenbring, Kurt Soller, Amiel Stanek, Korsha Wilson and
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