Tag Archives: Art

THE NEW YORK TIMES – MONDAY, MAY 11, 2026

As Trump Heads to Beijing, China Is ‘Locked and Loaded’ for a Fight

As President Trump and Xi Jinping prepare to meet this week, Beijing is signaling that it is ready for a showdown over trade.

What Middle Powers Fear About the Trump-Xi Summit

Asian nations worry that President Trump might trade security commitments for better economic terms with China.

Iran Lists Demands That Trump Deemed ‘Unacceptable’

Tehran demanded U.S. war reparations, recognition of its sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz and an end to American sanctions, Iranian state media reported.

Oil Prices Rise as Prospects for U.S.-Iran Peace Deal Fizzle

What Middle Powers Fear About the Trump-Xi Summit

Asian nations worry that the president might trade security commitments for better economic terms with China during his planned meeting with Xi Jinping this week.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2026

Mass Layoffs Hit Iran as Businesses Buckle Under Wartime Pressures

Iran was already struggling economically before 2026 brought widespread instability. A government-imposed internet shutdown has crippled an entire sector.

Strait of Hormuz Remains Effectively Blocked After Naval Skirmishes

Putin’s Forces Are Barely Inching Along on the Battlefield

The Russian military has yet to solve a fundamental problem: how to make big advances in eastern Ukraine when drones are everywhere.

‘No Seat for Me’: Virginia Democrats Are Forced to Play Musical Chairs

A court ruling that struck down an election map swiftly ended some Democratic House candidacies and pushed others into much tougher races.

Vance or Rubio? Trump Muses on Successor as the ‘Kids’ Fill Bigger Roles.

Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are boosting their profiles, generating speculation about the 2028 presidential nomination.

Trump Celebrated Victory in Venezuela. Will That Bring Its People Back?

Dire conditions prompted an exodus from the country. After its leader’s ousting, the question is whether things have changed enough to make a return appealing.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, MAY 9, 2026

How China’s Leader Lost Faith in His Generals

Xi Jinping spent 13 years building a military to rival that of the United States. But the stronger the Chinese forces grew, the less he trusted the generals he had handpicked to run them.

A Less Muscular Victory Day Parade Shows Putin’s Growing Vulnerability

The event, shrunken because of security fears, adds to a sense that Moscow and other Russian cities can no longer be insulated from the war.

Long Overlooked, Caspian Sea Provides Strategic Trade Route for Iran

The landlocked body of water has taken on new significance, with Russia shipping military and commercial goods to bolster Tehran’s ability to withstand the U.S. assault.

10 Days That Shook the House Map and Democratic Confidence

Republicans are charging ahead in the nation’s redistricting race, and showing new bullishness after months of growing midterm fears.

How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, MAY 8, 2026

U.S. Job Market Remained Solid in April, Even as Energy Costs Rose

Data showed that employers added 115,000 jobs and unemployment was steady at 4.3 percent.

When You’re ‘Fired From Retirement’

People return to work for many reasons, but the biggest is financial need. As costs remain high, more retirees could be looking to re-enter the job market.

Tehran Accuses U.S. of ‘Reckless’ Attacks After Exchange of Fire in Strait

Iran’s foreign minister accused the U.S. of undermining diplomacy as Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Tehran’s response to a peace proposal was expected today.

China Sees a ‘Giant With a Limp’ as U.S. Drains Weapons on War in Iran

America’s ability to deter China in a war over Taiwan is weakened, Chinese analysts say, giving Beijing leverage in an upcoming summit with President Trump.

U.A.E. Expels Pakistani Workers, as Pakistan’s Peacemaking Creates a Rift

As Pakistan mediates between the U.S. and Iran, its ties to the Emirates have deteriorated. Pakistani workers say they are now being sent home en masse.

SPECTACLE MAGAZINE —- SPRING 2026 PREVIEW

SPECTACLE MAGAZINE: This inaugural issue features the “mechanical culture” of Lego to luxury watchmaking in sailing, profiling Gumball 3000 founder Maximillion Cooper and Eastnor Castle’s Imogen Hervey-Bathurst……

Gone fishing: In the Andean foothills of Northern Patagonia, the wild trout are biting

Ivo Dawnay

The casa grande could be an ancient chalet in the Austrian Tyrol. A steeply gabled roof to slough off the winter snow, dandelion-yellow paintwork, and inside a treasure trove of all an outdoorsman loves. Antlers jostle for space on every wall. There is a tack room thick with the leathery tang of saddles, a bathroom

Colm Tóibín explores the art of short story writing

Amy Raphael

hen I was 20 and tentatively trying to write, every single person I knew read Ian McEwan’s First Love, Last Rites (1975). It not only gave the short story a good name, but it also gave writing a good name. It was like a punk moment converted into fiction. People used the word “macabre,” but there was a sort of excitement about the characters, the strangeness of the stories, the shortness of some of the stories and just how much contemporary urban life was in them.

Zack Christenson

Exploring the world’s oceans with the world’s most interesting man

Zack Christenson

“You can just do things.”

It’s a popular phrase on X, usually in response to someone accomplishing something remarkable, taken to mean that there’s nothing stopping you from doing something out of the ordinary. SpaceX might post video of a rocket landing – “you can just do things.” Victor Vescovo might be the living embodiment of the phrase.

My first introduction to Vescovo was an email from him, extending an invitation to be a guest at his table for the Explorers Club Annual Dinner. The name was vaguely familiar to me but didn’t immediately register. Who was this mysterious correspondent?

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, MAY 7, 2026

War and Energy Shortages Boost China’s Influence

The war in Iran has left China’s neighbors appealing for help, handing Beijing the kind of sway it has long sought.

The Long Journey From the Strait of Hormuz to the Gas Tank

Even if the waterway reopened today, oil would take more than a month to reach consumers. The economic shock from the war in Iran could take far longer to ease.

World in Waiting Game Over Iran’s Response to U.S. Peace Proposal

Trump to Host Brazil’s Leader After Months of Ups and Downs

President Trump and President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who have had a rocky relationship, will meet for talks on security, trade and critical minerals.

German Leaders Clash With Spy Chiefs Over Domestic Threat From Iran

Intelligence agents have privately warned of the potential of hybrid attacks from Iran-linked groups. But political leaders, including Chancellor Friedrich Merz, have publicly played down the risk.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY —- MAY 8, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘The Trump Whisperer’ – A king charming in America….

It’s fair to say that the Guardian Weekly does not cover many royal visits, but King Charles III’s US state visit was the most consequential of his reign so far. The king’s ostensible purpose was to celebrate America’s 250 years of independence but last week’s trip was freighted with other agendas, most important of which was to flatter his host, Donald Trump. Washington bureau chief David Smith’s cover story shows how “like a rapier wrapped in ermine, Charles managed to tame Trump while rebuking Trumpism”.
Both David and our veteran foreign affairs commentator Simon Tisdall unpick the skill with which Charles spoke truth to this capricious and egotistical president and gave both sides of the heavily divided Congress much to praise. It was a performance of high diplomacy at a time of huge tension in the transatlantic relationship and beyond.

But the charm didn’t wash in New York where, as Adam Gabbatt’s sketch shows, the shadow of Jeffrey Epstein and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, Charles’s disgraced brother, lurked while the mayor, Zohran Mamdani, brought up the spectre of colonialism in the shape of the Koh-i-noor diamond, snatched under disputed circumstances.

Spotlight | A small town in Germany
Landstuhl, the heart of the largest American military community outside the US, considers its future after Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw 5,000 troops, reports Deborah Cole

Environment | A gift of wings
Patrick Barkham takes off for a flight of wonder with The Lost Words duo, who have reunited for a new book on endangered birds

Feature | A balm for tiger mother myths
Rebecca Liu explores why a certain image of the tiger mum – strict, cold and demanding – is ubiquitous in popular culture

Opinion | Antiracists need to stand up for us all
Another attack on the UK’s Jewish population demands a clear show of solidarity from those who march to protect minorities, argues Jonathan Freedland

Culture | Moose magic on the loose
How do cameras capture Sweden’s seasonal TV hit, the Great Moose Migration? Malcolm Jack travels to an uninhabited island in the Ångerman river to ask the show’s makers

GAGOSIAN QUARTERLY – SUMMER 2026 PREVIEW

Gagosian Quarterly: The latest issue features an excerpt from Sharad Chari’s recent essay on Ellen Gallagher, musing on his visit to the artist’s studio in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Sebastian Smee writes of Francis Bacon’s time in Paris, Adam D. Weinberg ruminates on Giuseppe Penone’s enduring engagement with bronze, and Derrick Adams joins Tessa Bachi Haas in conversation ahead of his first mid-career survey.

With the opening of the 61st Biennale di Venezia, a number of the magazine’s features engage with the history and contemporary culture of the storied city. Jenny Saville speaks with art historian Stefania Ventra to mark her major exhibition at Ca’ Pesaro–Galleria Internazionale d’Arte Moderna. In an essay bridging the Republic of Venice and the twenty-first century, Ben Street explores the timeless resonance of Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo’s tragicomic frescoes. And Nancy Spector discusses her bold pairing of Richard Prince and Arthur Jafa in an exhibition at the Fondazione Prada.

In the world of literature, Helen Oyeyemi shares the second installment of her fiction series As You Wish, Mary Gaitskill speaks with Jill Mulleady about their recent Picture Books collaboration inspired by Faust, Wyatt Allgeier interviews Andrew Durbin on the occasion of his new dual biography of Peter Hujar and Paul Thek, and Alana Pockros guides us through the refractive wonderlands of novelist Elaine Kraf.

Elsewhere in the issue, Carlos Valladares ponders Charli XCX’s mockumentary The Moment, Janne Sirén examines Anselm Kiefer’s mythological figures, and three luminaries from the worlds of design, fashion, and food—Ronan Bouroullec, Michèle Lamy, and Enrique Olvera—consider the furniture of Donald Judd.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2026

White House Insists Iran War Is Over, Even While Missiles Fly

The White House is turning to rhetorical leaps as President Trump tries to put the biggest political crisis of his presidency behind him

Oil Prices Tumble After Trump Claims Progress in Talks

Oil prices fell sharply after President Trump announced there had been “great progress” toward a deal with Iran. The U.S. paused an operation to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz.

5 Trump-Backed Challengers Beat Incumbents Who Defied President in Indiana

President Trump sought revenge against legislators who wouldn’t approve redistricting. Only one of them prevailed, and one race is too close to call.

In Romania, Living With Weapons of War Spilling Into NATO Territory

Four years of battle in Ukraine is taking a toll on neighboring Romanians. Even if the war has not crossed the border, drones have done so.

Deadly Russian Strikes Rip Into Ukrainian Cities

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, MAY 5, 2026

Trump Promised Transparency in Venezuela, but Oil Secrets Linger

U.S. and Venezuelan officials have promised a new era of accountability after Nicolás Maduro’s downfall. But Venezuela’s oil industry remains a black hole.

Hegseth Calls U.S. Military Effort in Strait of Hormuz Defensive and Temporary

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said U.S. naval efforts to escort ships through the strait were a defensive effort, after an Iranian official warned of escalation.

What to Know About the Growing Saudi Arabia-U.A.E. Rift

Trump Tries to Downplay Economic Effects of the War

Secret Recordings, Hidden Shares and a Family Rift at South Korea’s LG

An inheritance dispute over the former chairman’s estate has prompted a criminal complaint over how the family behind the conglomerate divides its assets.