The 25 Photos That Defined the Modern Age
A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955.
By M.H. MillerBrendan EmbserEmmanuel Iduma and
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![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/05/30/t-magazine/art/30tmag-t25-photography-slide-XBKV/30tmag-t25-photography-slide-XBKV-threeByTwoMediumAt2X.png?auto=webp)
A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955.
By M.H. MillerBrendan EmbserEmmanuel Iduma and
In uncertain times, religious sisters are often invoked as vessels for collective doubt.
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In fiction, Ali Sethi wrote about being queer in Pakistan. Now he’s singing his story.
By Emily Lordi and
The set and costume designer Tom Scutt has conjured a surreal, New York-inspired version of the fictional Kit Kat Club for the latest revival of the 1966 musical “Cabaret.”
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Why ‘Uncle Vanya’ Is the Play for Our Anxious Era
Despite debuting 125 years ago, Anton Chekhov’s drama of claustrophobia, resentment and despair feels perfectly suited to present day America.
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In film and on TV, he was a sign of cultural progress. Then he was a tired stereotype. Then he disappeared. So why do we want him back?
By Mark Harris and
A Night With New York’s Lesbian and Bisexual Backgammon League
At the invitation-only art world games evenings, painters, gallerists, collectors and assistants mingle and compete on a level playing field.
By
In a recent crop of films and television shows, grown men are obsessed with their mothers — even if they’re not the monsters audiences expect them to be.
By Mark Harris and
In London, a Rare Space Where Musicians, Artists and Curators Work Side by Side
A look at a creative incubator where the singer Sampha rubs shoulders with the fashion designer Grace Wales Bonner.
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We’re Entering a Joyful New Era of Lesbian Fashion
Pairing silky garments with butch suiting, women are pushing back against stereotypical ideas about dressing, on the red carpet and beyond.
By
How Female Bodybuilders Became Fashion’s Latest Muses
An industry long known for revering willowy bodies is taking a new interest in muscle.
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How Contemporary Artists Are Taking Papier-Mâché Out of the Classroom
A new wave of self-taught craftspeople are using the medium to make playful, thought-provoking works.
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When a Job Becomes a Literal Hell
In an era of continual burnout, artists and filmmakers are now imagining what it looks like when workers finally explode.
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Why Wellness Culture Has Cozied Up to Leeches
The bloodsucking worms might conjure an era of vampiric pseudoscience, but their powerful jaws are inspiring new applications.
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Krysta Rodriguez has found an avid audience for her new side business: creating dramatic interiors.
By Juan A. Ramírez
Plus: a palace-inspired hotel in Jaipur, colorful French hand fans and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Caitie Kelly
For Pride Month, we asked people ranging in age from 34 to 93 to share an indelible memory. Together, they offer a personal history of queer life as we know it today.
By Nicole Acheampong, Max Berlinger, Jason Chen, Kate Guadagnino, Colleen Hamilton, Mark Harris, Juan A. Ramírez, Coco Romack, Michael Snyder and John Wogan
Where the Tony nominee takes refuge: a “sweet little house” on five bosky acres in Connecticut.
By Joanne Kaufman
What T Magazine’s editors and contributors are eyeing for our own paternal figures, including Western gear and mini synthesizers.
By Ella Riley-Adams
Scott Sartiano proposed bringing his Manhattan-based members-only hot spot, Zero Bond, to a historic village inn. Local residents are not rolling out the red carpet.
By Jacob Bernstein and Anna Kodé
The model and actress has three new titles: Netflix rom-com star, union boss and C.E.O. of a beauty brand aimed at women over 40.
By Jessica Testa
Moonlight Rollerway has been hosting some of the city’s best skate parties for more than 60 years.
By Liz Brown
Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymanson — the chef-owners of the restaurant Kismet — hosted a Mediterranean and Middle Eastern-inspired feast to celebrate their first cookbook.
By Jean Trinh
Plus: a vase designed by Alice Waters, sculptures made from recycled CDs and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Roxanne Fequiere
Boots Riley, Earl Sweatshirt, Jennifer Egan, Amaarae and more tell us about their new projects.
Interviews by Kate Guadagnino
Advice on quashing doubt and maximizing procrastination, according to Joan Baez, Kim Gordon, Bill T. Jones and Myha’la.
Interviews by Kate Guadagnino
Six people, from Lorraine O’Grady to Wallace Stevens, who found a new creative calling – or received long-overdue recognition — later in life.
By Jason Chen
Six artists on the first steps of getting into character, or making a painting.
Interviews by Laura May Todd
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This season’s beginners, from Ice Spice to Tyla to Sarah Pidgeon.
Interviews by Juan A. Ramírez and Emily Lordi
Marina Abramović, David Henry Hwang and others reveal their juvenalia.
Interviews by Julia Halperin, Kate Guadagnino and Juan A. Ramírez
From Ralph Ellison to Harper Lee, those who made great work in one field — before their creative lives went in a different direction.
By John Wogan and M.H. Miller
Seven artists on the challenges and joys of starting over, sometimes in a totally new field.
Interviews by Michael Snyder, M.H. Miller and Emily Lordi
Longtime collaborators on how their partnerships formed and why they’ve endured.
Interviews by Ella Riley-Adams, Nick Haramis, Nicole Acheampong, Julia Halperin and Coco Romack
Musicians, writers and others revisit the work that started it all for them, and what (if anything) they might have done differently.
Interviews by Lovia Gyarkye and Nicole Acheampong
It takes courage to start. And far more to continue.
By Aatish Taseer
T’s Culture issue looks at the many ways to begin.
By Hanya Yanagihara
We spoke to 150 artists, some planning retrospectives and others making their debut, to ask about the process of starting something.
To toast the Salone del Mobile and the 20th anniversary of T Magazine, the designer Ramdane Touhami transformed the Villa Necchi Campiglio into an ode to the letter T.
By Laura May Todd
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Plus: a Venetian retreat, hand-knotted rugs and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Gisela Williams
Albert Moya has optimized his apartment, part of a 14th-century estate in the hills of Florence, for work and lounging.
By Kurt Soller and Ricardo Labougle
Plus: a chef’s guesthouse in Bali, art that explores girlhood — and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Any night at the Upper East Side’s nearly 70-year-old cabaret still feels like a big night out.
By Reggie Nadelson
How the “Dune” actor made a home in a place he once resisted.
By Nick Haramis
Plus: winter balms, minimalist leather bags — and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Eimear Lynch
Sabato De Sarno, who showed his first collection for the Italian fashion house last year, discusses his creative touchstones.
By Laura May Todd
‘I’ve been here a while,’ said Lillias White, who plays Hermes in the Tony-winning musical. ‘Hence the clutter.’
By Joanne Kaufman
Mirroring, mimicking and doubling are everywhere these days. What does this say about our collective sense of identity?
By Aatish Taseer
Plus: hand-painted sweatpants, a chef’s hotel in Seattle and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Jinnie Lee
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Why pop culture now flirts with extraterrestrials as much as it fears them.
By June Thomas
Plus: celestial jewelry, a new restaurant in the Himalayas and more recommendations from T Magazine.
By Caitie Kelly
How do you memorialize the people you loved and lost? Object by object, the CNN anchor is trying to figure it out.
By Rukmini Callimachi
Plus: embroidered silk handbags, handcrafted silverware and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Plus: fringe accessories, a musician inspired by stream-of-consciousness audio messages and more from T’s cultural compendium.
It’s a history “based on the necessity of opening up and looking beyond, instead of suffocating in, the small space of the self — not only to avoid being pigeonholed but also to exercise the muscle of sympathy.”
By Jesse Green
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