Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times. Source link
Read More »Paul P.’s Spectral Paintings of Queer Life
The artist Paul P. is a painter whose power comes from representing a scarcely documented, in-between generation of queer life. Source link
Read More »Investigators Say a High-Profile Dealer Trafficked 2,000 Looted Artifacts
In an arrest warrant for Edoardo Almagià, a Princeton-educated antiquities dealer, the Manhattan district attorney’s office detailed what it described as decades of illicit transactions. Source link
Read More »Suzanne Nossel, PEN America Leader, to Leave Embattled Organization
Suzanne Nossel, who has led the free expression group since 2013, is leaving after a year of intense criticism of its response to the war in Gaza. Source link
Read More »Young Thug Pleads Guilty in YSL Case Nearly a Year Into Trial
The star Atlanta rapper admitted to six counts, including participating in criminal street gang activity, ending his role in the longest trial in Georgia history. Source link
Read More »Review: A Vocally Splendid ‘Ragtime’ Raises the Roof
Joshua Henry stars in an exhilarating gala revival of the 1998 musical about nothing less than the harmony and discord of America. Source link
Read More »‘Culte’ Is a Fascinating Romp Through the Dawn of French Reality TV
A new docudrama recounts the conflicts and controversy surrounding “Loft Story,” a French twist on “Big Brother” that divided critics and generations. Source link
Read More »‘Juror #2’ Review: Clint Eastwood Hands Down a Tough Verdict
In his latest (and perhaps last) movie as a director, Eastwood casts a skeptical eye at the criminal justice system in a mystery starring Nicholas Hoult. Source link
Read More »Review: Bill T. Jones’s ‘Still/Here’ Returns After 30 Years
At the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Bill T. Jones’s “Still/Here” returns, free of the AIDS-era context in which it premiered. Source link
Read More »Sally Rooney and Others Call for Boycott of Israeli Cultural Institutions
Thousands of people, including prize winning writers, signed a letter pledging not to work with “complicit” organizations. Many others opposed the call in a separate letter. Source link
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