The story of Danish design is usually told through clean-lined chairs and functionalist architecture, but just as vital is the quieter artistry of ceramics and glass. Among its masters, Arne Bang (1901–1983) holds a singular place. A sculptor, ceramicist, and designer, he spent much of his career at Holmegaard Glassworks, shaping objects that married modernContinue reading “Arne Bang: Sculpting Denmark in Clay and Glass”
Category Archives: History
Tracey Emin: From Cool Britannia to Enduring Voice
Tracey Emin has always been more than the enfant terrible of the Young British Artists. Emerging in the 1990s as one of the central figures of Cool Britannia, she became a cultural lightning rod: provocative, confessional, uncompromising. Her work — from the notorious My Bed (1998) to her searing neon texts — has often beenContinue reading “Tracey Emin: From Cool Britannia to Enduring Voice”
Marina Abramović: The Body as Threshold, the Artist as Medium
It is Marina Abramović’s birthday today, so to celebrate we wrote a feature on her. Few contemporary artists have so thoroughly reshaped the very idea of performance as Marina Abramović. For five decades, she has pushed the limits of endurance, intimacy, vulnerability, and the porous border between artist and audience. Her work is at onceContinue reading “Marina Abramović: The Body as Threshold, the Artist as Medium”
Royal Copenhagen at 250: Porcelain, Craft, and the Danish Imagination
In 2025, Royal Copenhagen celebrates 250 years of porcelain making — a quarter of a millennium of craft, culture, and design. Founded in 1775 under the patronage of Queen Juliane Marie, the manufactory has become Denmark’s most enduring emblem of elegance and national identity. From its signature blue-and-white “Blue Fluted” pattern to bold contemporary reinterpretations,Continue reading “Royal Copenhagen at 250: Porcelain, Craft, and the Danish Imagination”
Tom Stoppard — 1937–2025
Tom Stoppard, one of the most influential and inventive playwrights of the modern era, died on 29 November 2025 at his home in Dorset. He was 88. Born Tomáš Sträussler in 1937 in Czechoslovakia, Stoppard fled the Nazi occupation with his family as a child, eventually settling in England — a displacement that would laterContinue reading “Tom Stoppard — 1937–2025”
The Art of Walls: A History of Wallpaper and Its Contemporary Masters
Wallpaper has always been more than decoration. It is history written on walls: a medium that reflects the tastes, technologies, and aspirations of each era. From hand-painted Chinese panoramas to William Morris florals, from mid-century geometrics to today’s avant-garde designs, wallpaper has reinvented itself countless times. To trace its story is to understand how styleContinue reading “The Art of Walls: A History of Wallpaper and Its Contemporary Masters”
The Brontë Family: A Furnace of Genius on the Yorkshire Moors
Introduction There are literary families, and then there are the Brontës—six children raised in a remote parsonage on the Yorkshire moors, who transformed personal grief, imaginative play, and strict Victorian constraints into novels that altered the course of English literature. Their story is not simply about genius blooming in isolation; it is about a familyContinue reading “The Brontë Family: A Furnace of Genius on the Yorkshire Moors”
“A House That Became a Photograph”: The Stahl House, Its History, and Why Its Sale Matters Now
High above the lights of Los Angeles, a thin plane of steel and glass floats over the city grid. For more than six decades, the Stahl House — better known as Case Study House #22 — has been less a private residence than an image in the collective imagination: Julius Shulman’s famous night-time photograph ofContinue reading ““A House That Became a Photograph”: The Stahl House, Its History, and Why Its Sale Matters Now”
James Baldwin: Voice of Fire, Witness of a Century
James Baldwin was one of the 20th century’s most essential writers, a man whose voice carried the urgency of politics, the intimacy of confession, and the beauty of poetry. He was novelist, essayist, playwright, and activist, but above all, he was a witness: to America’s racial history, to the lives of the dispossessed, and toContinue reading “James Baldwin: Voice of Fire, Witness of a Century”
Truman Capote: A Legacy of Style and Story
Truman Capote was one of the most indelible voices of 20th-century literature. His name evokes both glittering soirées and devastating solitude, but beyond the gossip and social whirl, he was above all a craftsman: a master stylist whose sentences could shimmer with lightness or cut with precision. His legacy is not the scandals that doggedContinue reading “Truman Capote: A Legacy of Style and Story”
