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Art and Photography
On Authenticity, Acquisition, and the Secret Lives of Objects
Nicole Cherubini and Natalie Lemle Discuss the Stories That Ancient Artifacts Can Carry
By
Nicole Cherubini
| May 19, 2026
William Kentridge: That Which I Have Drawn
“We are always a collage under construction—taking this fragment, editing out another, consciously or unconsciously.”
By
William Kentridge
| May 12, 2026
Schiaparelli and Spark: On the Fashion of
The Girls of Slender Means
Lilian Pizzichini Looks for The Dress at the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Schiaparelli Exhibition
By
Lilian Pizzichini
| May 11, 2026
Ocean Vuong: Photographer First, Writer Second?
Sarah Moroz on a Recent Exhibition of the Poet-Turned-Novelist Who’s Always Had a in Camera Hand
By
Sarah Moroz
| May 7, 2026
Who wants a $32,000 copy of
Runaway Bunny
?
Field notes from a visit to the Antiquarian Book Fair.
By
Brittany Allen
| May 1, 2026
Five great book critics writing today (and where to find them).
By
Brittany Allen
| April 27, 2026
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Honoré de Balzac’s Greatest Fear? Being Photographed
By
Emily Doucet
| April 27, 2026
Brad Neely on Embracing Errors When Making Art
By
Brad Neely
| April 24, 2026
Prone To Be Productive: In Praise of Writing in Bed
By
Megan O'Grady
| April 21, 2026
$2M worth of stolen rare books have been returned to the Whitney family.
And it only took 37 years.
By
Brittany Allen
| April 20, 2026
Here’s what’s been making us happy
this
week.
By
Brittany Allen
| April 10, 2026
If you read cursive, the Newberry has a job for you.
By
Brittany Allen
| April 1, 2026
A new series on Charles Dickens takes your favorite Victorian novelist to the streets.
By
Brittany Allen
| March 24, 2026
In Defense of Pet Portraiture as a Worthy Art Form
Morgan Day on the Practice of Artistic Tradition
By
Morgan Day
| March 24, 2026
DIY Creativity: What Conserving Art and Writing Fiction Have in Common
Karma Brown In Praise of Hands-On Experience When Drafting and Researching a Novel
By
Karma Brown
| March 19, 2026
Who’s behind London’s hottest new bookstore? Freud’s librarian grandson!
By
Brittany Allen
| March 18, 2026
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Howard A. Rodman on Melville, Empire, and the Audacity of Resurrecting Literary Giants
May 21, 2026
by
Hassan Tarek
How 'At Close Range' Set the Tone for Rural Crime Storytelling
May 21, 2026
by
Keith Roysdon
What to Watch Now, International Edition: Z (1969)
May 21, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Isaac Fitzgerald writes with a folksy wit that might come off as an affectation were…"