100 years of Le Corbusier: what does he mean to today’s architects?

The towering and divisive figure who transformed architecture published his manifesto for modernism in 1923.

Pilvi Takala and the Art of Awkwardness

The Finnish artist is quietly taking notes as the people around her lose their shit.

A. G. Sulzberger on the Battles Within and Against the New York Times

The paper’s publisher discusses bias in reporting, the Times’ financial comeback, and criticisms of its coverage of Trump, trans issues, and the war in Ukraine.

What is the point of profit?

Because “to make shareholders rich” isn’t good enough anymore.

Richard Saul Wurman: “There’s a Louis Kahn Cult, and I’m a Member!”

Dan Klyn, who teaches information architecture at the University of Michigan, is currently researching and writing a biography entitled Richard Saul Wurman’s 5 Lives.

Historians are learning more about how the Nazis targeted trans people

In the fall of 2022, a German court heard an unusual case. It was a civil lawsuit that grew out of a feud on Twitter about whether transgender people were

Artist as Art Form

In work that segues from gorgeous fields of color to everyday inanities, Daniel Eatock defies categories, proving he has one muse: the process itself.

Joan Didion, the Death of R.F.K. and the Solution to a Decades-Old Mystery

Over 40 years later, “The White Album” is regarded as a masterpiece of nonfiction and a pre-eminent account of the ’60s as a cultural era.

Why the Internet Hates Gay People

A conversation with Alexander Monea about his recent book on the history of search engines, content moderation, AI, and the ways they form biases against queerness.

What is Queer Space?

Queerness is not yet here. Queerness is an ideality.

Trans activism isn’t just about pronouns and bathrooms. It’s about class struggle

The new field of ‘trans Marxism’ teaches us that we shouldn’t be fighting for inclusion but for liberation.