On the map, Güstrow looks like a gentle pause — a modest Mecklenburg town tucked between lakes and flat winter fields, an hour south of the Baltic coast. But anyone who walks its crooked lanes or slips into the cool hush of its churches discovers a place vibrating with an unexpected intensity. Güstrow is notContinue reading “Güstrow: Ernst Barlach Territory”
Category Archives: History
The Golden Age of Christmas Cards
Before Instagram posts and glossy adverts, the Christmas card was the medium through which the season’s spirit was captured and shared. Sent across continents and tucked into mantelpieces, these small works of art carried not only festive greetings but also the design sensibilities of their age. Today, they remain symbols of both tradition and creativityContinue reading “The Golden Age of Christmas Cards”
Marlene Dietrich: The Art of the Impossible
There are movie stars, and then there is Marlene Dietrich—a figure so luminously strange, so disciplined in her myth-making, that she remains less a screen persona than a cultural temperature. To watch Dietrich today is to witness a kind of controlled detonation: the narrowed gaze, the sculptural cheekbones, the drawling wit that lands like aContinue reading “Marlene Dietrich: The Art of the Impossible”
The Soundtrack of the Season – Santa Claus is Back in Town
Every December, as fairy lights twinkle across frosted windows and champagne glasses clink at candlelit parties, the same question arises: what is the definitive Christmas soundtrack? Music, after all, is the invisible garland that binds together the rituals of the season — from midnight masses to after-dinner slow dances. Some songs are frothy, sequined confectionsContinue reading “The Soundtrack of the Season – Santa Claus is Back in Town”
A Life Lived in Service to the Planet: Iain Douglas-Hamilton
Dr Iain Douglas-Hamilton, who peacefully passed away last night, aged 83, was the pioneering zoologist whose six-decade campaign for Africa’s elephants reshaped both science and global conservation policy. From his early fieldwork in Tanzania in the 1960s to his role in exposing the mass slaughter driven by the ivory trade in the 1970s and 80s,Continue reading “A Life Lived in Service to the Planet: Iain Douglas-Hamilton”
Martin Parr, photographer who transformed the everyday into cultural testimony, dies aged 73
Martin Parr, the British photographer whose saturated colours, wry humour and unflinching eye reshaped documentary photography, has died aged 73 at his home in Bristol on 6 December 2025. Born in Epsom, Surrey, in 1952, Parr’s interest in photography was encouraged early by his grandfather, himself a keen amateur. He studied at Manchester Polytechnic inContinue reading “Martin Parr, photographer who transformed the everyday into cultural testimony, dies aged 73”
The History of Perfume: From Sacred Ritual to Modern Luxury
Perfume is among the oldest of human luxuries, a bridge between ritual, desire, and identity. To wear fragrance is to participate in a tradition stretching back millennia, from ancient temples to Parisian ateliers. Its story is both chemical and cultural — the distillation of plants and resins into invisible art, and the shaping of personalContinue reading “The History of Perfume: From Sacred Ritual to Modern Luxury”
Style Over Substance? Cinema’s Four Dialects of Surface
“Style over substance” is one of cinema’s laziest insults. It assumes that style is decoration, that substance is depth, that the two can be peeled apart like shell and kernel. But cinema is not literature in disguise. It is an art of surfaces: light, rhythm, color, sound, the textures that move us before plot orContinue reading “Style Over Substance? Cinema’s Four Dialects of Surface”
In Memoriam: Frank Gehry (1929–2025)
Frank Gehry, the visionary architect whose sculptural, boundary-breaking buildings transformed skylines across the world, has died at the age of 96. His death marks the end of an era in contemporary architecture, one defined by daring imagination, irreverence toward convention, and the belief that buildings could be as emotionally resonant as art. Born in TorontoContinue reading “In Memoriam: Frank Gehry (1929–2025)”
Ina Garten: The Barefoot Legacy of American Cooking
Ina Garten is not just a celebrity chef — she is an institution. Known to millions as the “Barefoot Contessa,” she has spent over two decades redefining what it means to cook at home. In a culinary world often obsessed with complexity, Garten made simplicity elegant. Her recipes, written with precision and warmth, have guidedContinue reading “Ina Garten: The Barefoot Legacy of American Cooking”
