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Highlights

  1. A New Way of Looking at the Nude

    The artists redefining portraits of the human body for a more inclusive age.

     By

    Sasha Gordon’s “Trimmings” (2023).
    Sasha Gordon’s “Trimmings” (2023).
    Credit© Sasha Gordon. Courtesy of the artist, Matthew Brown, Los Angeles and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York. Photo: Todd-White Ar
    1. My Obsession

      Is 2,000 Bags Too Many?

      The visual artist Pipilotti Rist’s collection is what happens, she says, “when a 60-something-year-old Central European woman doesn’t throw anything away.”

       By

      Pipilotti Rist at her Zurich studio, holding the first bag she ever owned, made of lacquer and purchased from a street vendor in Naples, Italy.
      Pipilotti Rist at her Zurich studio, holding the first bag she ever owned, made of lacquer and purchased from a street vendor in Naples, Italy.
      CreditThibault Montamat
    2. Page 76

      An Illustrated Guide to Spring’s New Books

      Exclusively for T, Marcus Jahmal envisions what happens on page 76 of novels by Neel Mukherjee, Valerie Martin and others.

       By

      Jahmal’s “Jungle Scene” (2024).
      Jahmal’s “Jungle Scene” (2024).
      Credit© Marcus Jahmal. Courtesy of the artist and Anton Kern Gallery, New York. Photo: Frankie Tyska
  1. An Artist Who Aims to Be as Eclectic as a Tumblr Feed

    Anthony Cudahy’s lush, figurative works are inspired, in equal parts, by news footage, family photographs and Renaissance paintings.

     By

    The painter Anthony Cudahy at his Brooklyn studio.
    CreditDaniel Terna
    T Introduces
  2. Meet One of America’s Most Elusive Artists

    Joan Jonas’s maximalist, category-defying work combines video, performance, folklore, sculpture and ecology. At 87, she still has no intention of simplifying anything.

     By Susan Dominus and

    The visual artist Joan Jonas, photographed at her loft and studio in SoHo, New York, on Nov. 30, 2023.
    CreditEmiliano Granado
    arts and letters
  3. 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.

     By

    From left: an urn by Mark Gagnon; a fig medallion by Casa Gusto; “Madonna Inn” by Emmely Elgersma; Bernie Kaminski’s rendering of a medicine cabinet; an urn by Corrie Beth Hogg; a peacock figure by Stray Dog Designs; “Julio” by Joel Hernandez; a vase by Jacqueline de la Fuente; and “We Have the Tools We Need to Get Free,” by Betty Turbo.
    CreditSharon Radisch
    Notes on the Culture
  4. Pat Steir’s Blue Period

    The painter discusses her latest work, her previous career in the New York City welfare department and why she tries to make a brushstroke every day.

     By

    The artist Pat Steir in her studio in New York.
    CreditEmiliano Granado
    Artist’s Questionnaire
  5. Is There Something Radical About Painting Flowers?

    Many artists who made their names in figurative work are now creating a different sort of portrait.

     By

    Credit© Dalton Gata. Courtesy of Gata and Galería Agustina Ferreyra, Mexico City/San Juan
  1. Danielle Mckinney Never Thought Her Paintings Would Be Seen Like This

    The artist, whose portraits explore leisure and repose, has suddenly found success in the notoriously fickle gallery world.

     By

    The artist Danielle Mckinney, photographed at her Jersey City, N.J., studio on Dec. 20, 2023, in front of “She” (2023).
    CreditPhotograph by Sean Donnola. Artwork: © Danielle Mckinney. Courtesy of the artist, Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York and Aspen
  2. 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.

     By

    Caius Pawson (fourth from left, leaning against the wall), the founder of the record label Young, photographed with the residents of Young Space in northeast London on Nov. 30, 2023.
    CreditSiân Davey
    The Building Where It Happens
  3. An Artist Who Uses Plants as Camouflage

    At the Guggenheim in New York, Joiri Minaya's digital collages reveal the power of concealment.

     By

    CreditElliott Jerome Brown Jr.
    On View
  4. An-My Lê Seeks Herself in the Landscape

    The artist reflects on witnessing war up close — and then photographing it at a distance.

     By

    The artist An-My Lê in her Downtown Brooklyn studio.
    CreditRamona Jingru Wang
    Artist’s Questionnaire
  5. The Gallery That Has Never Lost an Artist

    Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers built one of the art world’s most powerful businesses by not following conventional wisdom.

     By

    The gallerists Monika Sprüth, left, and Philomene Magers in Magers’s office in Berlin. On the wall behind them is Rosemarie Trockel’s “Untitled” (2002).
    CreditFlorian Thoss; art: Rosemarie Trockel, “Untitled,” 2002, wool (patchwork) on canvas © Rosemarie Trockel / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2023

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Artist’s Questionnaire

More in Artist’s Questionnaire ›
  1. Ellen Gallagher’s Futuristic Archives

    The artist discusses marine life and African American myth from her studio in the Netherlands.

     By

    The American artist Ellen Gallagher in her studio in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
    CreditMarlena Waldthausen
  2. Jordan Wolfson Enjoys Being at the Center of the Storm

    The artist discusses violence, AI, his latest work and how he comes up with his ideas.

     By

    The sculptor Jordan Wolfson reclines near the entrance of his Los Angeles studio.
    CreditJoyce Kim
  3. Eddie Martinez Defers to the Desires of His Paints

    At his studio in Queens, the artist’s routine includes turkey meatballs, cut-up Crocs and the patience to let his materials set his pace.

     By

    The artist Eddie Martinez in his Ridgewood, Queens, studio, with a pile of canvas cutouts from failed paintings in front of him and the beginnings of a new “White Out” painting behind him.
    CreditDeSean McClinton-Holland
  4. Ja’Tovia Gary Sets Her Sights on Love

    The experimental artist discusses Black Southern storytelling, the blues and the guilt-free pleasures of a romance novel.

     By

    The artist Ja’Tovia Gary in her Dallas studio.
    CreditDiane Durant
  5. Frank Bowling’s Geographies

    The restless innovation of the influential painter is on display in a retrospective in California.

     By

    Frank Bowling, in his London studio.
    CreditJill Mead / Guardian / eyevine/Redux
  1. On View

    A Modern, Tragic Portrait of the Sea

    At Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco, Wardell Milan’s works — which blend drawing, painting and collage — depict scenes of both comfort and chaos.

    By Yaniya Lee

     
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