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T: The NYTimes Style Magazine

Where style meets culture.

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Would you like a plot with sculpted topiaries or something wilder? Do you fancy a space that privileges calm or one so lush it overwhelms the senses?

Tap the link in our bio to take our quiz and find out what style of garden best suits your personality.

Written by @aileenkwun. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


841
14
1 days ago


Would you like a plot with sculpted topiaries or something wilder? Do you fancy a space that privileges calm or one so lush it overwhelms the senses?

Tap the link in our bio to take our quiz and find out what style of garden best suits your personality.

Written by @aileenkwun. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


841
14
1 days ago

Would you like a plot with sculpted topiaries or something wilder? Do you fancy a space that privileges calm or one so lush it overwhelms the senses?

Tap the link in our bio to take our quiz and find out what style of garden best suits your personality.

Written by @aileenkwun. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


841
14
1 days ago

Would you like a plot with sculpted topiaries or something wilder? Do you fancy a space that privileges calm or one so lush it overwhelms the senses?

Tap the link in our bio to take our quiz and find out what style of garden best suits your personality.

Written by @aileenkwun. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


841
14
1 days ago

Would you like a plot with sculpted topiaries or something wilder? Do you fancy a space that privileges calm or one so lush it overwhelms the senses?

Tap the link in our bio to take our quiz and find out what style of garden best suits your personality.

Written by @aileenkwun. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


841
14
1 days ago

Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago

Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago

Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago


Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago

Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago

Ojai, California, a laid-back town at the base of the Topatopa Mountains, some 15 miles from the sea, has long been a year-round destination for Angelenos (the larger city lies about 80 miles to the southeast), but it’s most compelling in spring, when the air is fragrant with citrus and the farmer’s markets are flush with strawberries, cherries and artichokes. It’s also when warmer temperatures start making the swimming holes scattered around Los Padres National Forest, just north and west of town, especially enticing.

Though it’s been a creative hub and spiritual center for decades, lately Ojai has seen an influx of creative people along with the opening of new businesses. We asked four insiders to share their recommendations for hotels, restaurants, shops and hiking trails.

Tap the link in our bio for the full guide, written by Ella Riley-Adams (@ellara). Photos by @stephen_goldstein.


2.5K
54
1 days ago

Compared with the shoulders and back, the face is an underappreciated candidate for massage. But the muscles in our forehead, temples, jaw and elsewhere are constantly at work, shaping expressions and warehousing tension. What’s more, regular kneading is not only relaxing; it can improve both skin elasticity and blood flow, with the potential to sculpt the face by reducing puffiness.

At the link in our bio, four experts — Sandra Lanshin Chiu (@treatmentbylanshin), a Brooklyn-based acupuncturist; the aesthetician Edyta Jarosz, the makeup artist @josephcarrillo and the aesthetician @raquelmedinacleghorn — share tips on how to add facial massage to your beauty routine.

Written by @lauraregensdorf. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


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4
3 days ago

Compared with the shoulders and back, the face is an underappreciated candidate for massage. But the muscles in our forehead, temples, jaw and elsewhere are constantly at work, shaping expressions and warehousing tension. What’s more, regular kneading is not only relaxing; it can improve both skin elasticity and blood flow, with the potential to sculpt the face by reducing puffiness.

At the link in our bio, four experts — Sandra Lanshin Chiu (@treatmentbylanshin), a Brooklyn-based acupuncturist; the aesthetician Edyta Jarosz, the makeup artist @josephcarrillo and the aesthetician @raquelmedinacleghorn — share tips on how to add facial massage to your beauty routine.

Written by @lauraregensdorf. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


425
4
3 days ago

Compared with the shoulders and back, the face is an underappreciated candidate for massage. But the muscles in our forehead, temples, jaw and elsewhere are constantly at work, shaping expressions and warehousing tension. What’s more, regular kneading is not only relaxing; it can improve both skin elasticity and blood flow, with the potential to sculpt the face by reducing puffiness.

At the link in our bio, four experts — Sandra Lanshin Chiu (@treatmentbylanshin), a Brooklyn-based acupuncturist; the aesthetician Edyta Jarosz, the makeup artist @josephcarrillo and the aesthetician @raquelmedinacleghorn — share tips on how to add facial massage to your beauty routine.

Written by @lauraregensdorf. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


425
4
3 days ago

Compared with the shoulders and back, the face is an underappreciated candidate for massage. But the muscles in our forehead, temples, jaw and elsewhere are constantly at work, shaping expressions and warehousing tension. What’s more, regular kneading is not only relaxing; it can improve both skin elasticity and blood flow, with the potential to sculpt the face by reducing puffiness.

At the link in our bio, four experts — Sandra Lanshin Chiu (@treatmentbylanshin), a Brooklyn-based acupuncturist; the aesthetician Edyta Jarosz, the makeup artist @josephcarrillo and the aesthetician @raquelmedinacleghorn — share tips on how to add facial massage to your beauty routine.

Written by @lauraregensdorf. Illustration by @sacha.strange_. Animation by @jonathanaeden.


425
4
3 days ago


On a March evening in Honolulu, the chef Sheldon Simeon (@chefwonder) celebrated the launch of his second cookbook, “Ohana Style,” with a dinner featuring many of its recipes. “I wanted to showcase food that is supersimple — feel-good stuff,” Simeon said.

The dishes included hot dogs simmered in shoyu, their ends fringed to resemble octopus tentacles; fried chicken sprinkled with a salty-sour sinigang powder; ahi dip with cream cheese and sour cream, served with taro chips and shrimp chips; and pan-fried tuna patties. A pohole (fiddlehead fern) salad with tomatoes and cured shiitakes was a last-minute addition, after a friend handed Simeon a bunch of freshly picked pohole at the airport. “That’s how a party comes together,” Simeon said.

Tap the link in our bio to see all the details from the celebration. Written by @marthacheng. Photos by cole_barash.


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7
4 days ago

On a March evening in Honolulu, the chef Sheldon Simeon (@chefwonder) celebrated the launch of his second cookbook, “Ohana Style,” with a dinner featuring many of its recipes. “I wanted to showcase food that is supersimple — feel-good stuff,” Simeon said.

The dishes included hot dogs simmered in shoyu, their ends fringed to resemble octopus tentacles; fried chicken sprinkled with a salty-sour sinigang powder; ahi dip with cream cheese and sour cream, served with taro chips and shrimp chips; and pan-fried tuna patties. A pohole (fiddlehead fern) salad with tomatoes and cured shiitakes was a last-minute addition, after a friend handed Simeon a bunch of freshly picked pohole at the airport. “That’s how a party comes together,” Simeon said.

Tap the link in our bio to see all the details from the celebration. Written by @marthacheng. Photos by cole_barash.


826
7
4 days ago

On a March evening in Honolulu, the chef Sheldon Simeon (@chefwonder) celebrated the launch of his second cookbook, “Ohana Style,” with a dinner featuring many of its recipes. “I wanted to showcase food that is supersimple — feel-good stuff,” Simeon said.

The dishes included hot dogs simmered in shoyu, their ends fringed to resemble octopus tentacles; fried chicken sprinkled with a salty-sour sinigang powder; ahi dip with cream cheese and sour cream, served with taro chips and shrimp chips; and pan-fried tuna patties. A pohole (fiddlehead fern) salad with tomatoes and cured shiitakes was a last-minute addition, after a friend handed Simeon a bunch of freshly picked pohole at the airport. “That’s how a party comes together,” Simeon said.

Tap the link in our bio to see all the details from the celebration. Written by @marthacheng. Photos by cole_barash.


826
7
4 days ago

On a March evening in Honolulu, the chef Sheldon Simeon (@chefwonder) celebrated the launch of his second cookbook, “Ohana Style,” with a dinner featuring many of its recipes. “I wanted to showcase food that is supersimple — feel-good stuff,” Simeon said.

The dishes included hot dogs simmered in shoyu, their ends fringed to resemble octopus tentacles; fried chicken sprinkled with a salty-sour sinigang powder; ahi dip with cream cheese and sour cream, served with taro chips and shrimp chips; and pan-fried tuna patties. A pohole (fiddlehead fern) salad with tomatoes and cured shiitakes was a last-minute addition, after a friend handed Simeon a bunch of freshly picked pohole at the airport. “That’s how a party comes together,” Simeon said.

Tap the link in our bio to see all the details from the celebration. Written by @marthacheng. Photos by cole_barash.


826
7
4 days ago

On a March evening in Honolulu, the chef Sheldon Simeon (@chefwonder) celebrated the launch of his second cookbook, “Ohana Style,” with a dinner featuring many of its recipes. “I wanted to showcase food that is supersimple — feel-good stuff,” Simeon said.

The dishes included hot dogs simmered in shoyu, their ends fringed to resemble octopus tentacles; fried chicken sprinkled with a salty-sour sinigang powder; ahi dip with cream cheese and sour cream, served with taro chips and shrimp chips; and pan-fried tuna patties. A pohole (fiddlehead fern) salad with tomatoes and cured shiitakes was a last-minute addition, after a friend handed Simeon a bunch of freshly picked pohole at the airport. “That’s how a party comes together,” Simeon said.

Tap the link in our bio to see all the details from the celebration. Written by @marthacheng. Photos by cole_barash.


826
7
4 days ago

These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


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4 days ago


These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


3.8K
36
4 days ago

These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


3.8K
36
4 days ago

These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


3.8K
36
4 days ago

These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


3.8K
36
4 days ago

These are the overlooked films you should see, according to the director Charles Burnett (@1charlesburnett); Rajendra Roy (@rajendraroyinsta), the chief curator of film at New York’s Museum of Modern Art; the Canadian filmmaker and actor @xavierdolan; the director Ava DuVernay (@ava); and the actress @danielledeadwyler.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story, written by Lovia Gyarkye (@simplylovia), in T’s Culture issue.

Pictured here:

Ivan Dixon (left) and Abbey Lincoln in Michael Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man” (1964). Courtesy of the Everett Collection

Michael Douglas in Curtis Hanson’s “Wonder Boys” (2000). © Paramount Pictures/Photofest

Maka Kotto (left) and Eriq Ebouaney in Raoul Peck’s “Lumumba” (2000). Entertainment Pictures/Alamy

Isaac Julien (left) and Tilda Swinton in Julien and Bernard Rose’s “Derek” (2008). Courtesy of Isaac Julien

A scene from Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl” (2024). Courtesy of A24


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36
4 days ago

The actor Barry Keoghan, one of this year’s T Culture issue cover stars, discusses the rock anthem he sings with his three-year-old son.

Tap the link in our bio to read Keoghan’s full interview, along with the rest of the issue. Video directed by @snakegarcia_. Edited by Megan Lovallo (@megalova).


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4 days ago

Our Mother’s Day gift ideas include a bird house built by a Vermont guitar maker, vegan seaweed caviar and thought-provoking card decks.

Tap the link in our bio to see the whole guide.

Written by @mackenzieoster, Natalia Rachlin (@nat_rach) and Angela Koh (@ang.koh). Photos courtesy of the brands.


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Our Mother’s Day gift ideas include a bird house built by a Vermont guitar maker, vegan seaweed caviar and thought-provoking card decks.

Tap the link in our bio to see the whole guide.

Written by @mackenzieoster, Natalia Rachlin (@nat_rach) and Angela Koh (@ang.koh). Photos courtesy of the brands.


1K
15
5 days ago

Our Mother’s Day gift ideas include a bird house built by a Vermont guitar maker, vegan seaweed caviar and thought-provoking card decks.

Tap the link in our bio to see the whole guide.

Written by @mackenzieoster, Natalia Rachlin (@nat_rach) and Angela Koh (@ang.koh). Photos courtesy of the brands.


1K
15
5 days ago

Our Mother’s Day gift ideas include a bird house built by a Vermont guitar maker, vegan seaweed caviar and thought-provoking card decks.

Tap the link in our bio to see the whole guide.

Written by @mackenzieoster, Natalia Rachlin (@nat_rach) and Angela Koh (@ang.koh). Photos courtesy of the brands.


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15
5 days ago

In March 1965, almost two years before she’d meet John Lennon and form their infamous alliance, @yokoono staged “Cut Piece,” a groundbreaking work of performance art, at Carnegie Recital Hall in New York. Ono, then an avant-garde artist known for her involvement in the Fluxus movement, sits impassively onstage next to a pair of fabric shears. She is dressed in clothes of obvious quality (an elegant black sweater suit with pearl buttons, a silk slip underneath, fishnet pantyhose), which members of the audience, strangers to the artist, are invited to approach and snip off.

“Cut Piece” — in its enactment of public violence, escalating sense of dread and implication of the audience as voyeurs — was a pivotal work of feminist art that would inspire numerous others. It also feels relevant in our own cultural moment, when many of the long-held gains of feminism, both legal and cultural, seem on the brink of being lost forever.

Ono, who has a new exhibition, “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind,” opening at @thebroadmuseum in Los Angeles next month, is at the center of this new interest in feminist art, but she’s not alone. In July, London’s @Tate Modern, where the Ono show originated, will mount a significant retrospective of the work of Ana Mendieta, the Cuban American multidisciplinary artist. And this spring, Marina Abramović (@abramovicinstitute) is presenting new and old work at the @gallerieaccademiavenezia in Venice, the first living female artist to have a major solo exhibition there.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story about the performance artists who are finally getting their due. Written by @amandafortini. Photos © Yoko Ono, courtesy of Minoru Niizuma; © Yoko Ono.


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39
5 days ago

In March 1965, almost two years before she’d meet John Lennon and form their infamous alliance, @yokoono staged “Cut Piece,” a groundbreaking work of performance art, at Carnegie Recital Hall in New York. Ono, then an avant-garde artist known for her involvement in the Fluxus movement, sits impassively onstage next to a pair of fabric shears. She is dressed in clothes of obvious quality (an elegant black sweater suit with pearl buttons, a silk slip underneath, fishnet pantyhose), which members of the audience, strangers to the artist, are invited to approach and snip off.

“Cut Piece” — in its enactment of public violence, escalating sense of dread and implication of the audience as voyeurs — was a pivotal work of feminist art that would inspire numerous others. It also feels relevant in our own cultural moment, when many of the long-held gains of feminism, both legal and cultural, seem on the brink of being lost forever.

Ono, who has a new exhibition, “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind,” opening at @thebroadmuseum in Los Angeles next month, is at the center of this new interest in feminist art, but she’s not alone. In July, London’s @Tate Modern, where the Ono show originated, will mount a significant retrospective of the work of Ana Mendieta, the Cuban American multidisciplinary artist. And this spring, Marina Abramović (@abramovicinstitute) is presenting new and old work at the @gallerieaccademiavenezia in Venice, the first living female artist to have a major solo exhibition there.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story about the performance artists who are finally getting their due. Written by @amandafortini. Photos © Yoko Ono, courtesy of Minoru Niizuma; © Yoko Ono.


1.1K
39
5 days ago

In March 1965, almost two years before she’d meet John Lennon and form their infamous alliance, @yokoono staged “Cut Piece,” a groundbreaking work of performance art, at Carnegie Recital Hall in New York. Ono, then an avant-garde artist known for her involvement in the Fluxus movement, sits impassively onstage next to a pair of fabric shears. She is dressed in clothes of obvious quality (an elegant black sweater suit with pearl buttons, a silk slip underneath, fishnet pantyhose), which members of the audience, strangers to the artist, are invited to approach and snip off.

“Cut Piece” — in its enactment of public violence, escalating sense of dread and implication of the audience as voyeurs — was a pivotal work of feminist art that would inspire numerous others. It also feels relevant in our own cultural moment, when many of the long-held gains of feminism, both legal and cultural, seem on the brink of being lost forever.

Ono, who has a new exhibition, “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind,” opening at @thebroadmuseum in Los Angeles next month, is at the center of this new interest in feminist art, but she’s not alone. In July, London’s @Tate Modern, where the Ono show originated, will mount a significant retrospective of the work of Ana Mendieta, the Cuban American multidisciplinary artist. And this spring, Marina Abramović (@abramovicinstitute) is presenting new and old work at the @gallerieaccademiavenezia in Venice, the first living female artist to have a major solo exhibition there.

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story about the performance artists who are finally getting their due. Written by @amandafortini. Photos © Yoko Ono, courtesy of Minoru Niizuma; © Yoko Ono.


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5 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


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26
6 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


2.5K
26
6 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


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6 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


2.5K
26
6 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


2.5K
26
6 days ago

This past weekend, the hotelier @marielouisescio hosted her take on the annual Sagra del Carciofo, or Artichoke Festival, at @lapostavecchiahotel, the 1640 property her family bought in the 1980s along the Roman coast. In addition to celebrating the vegetable, the occasion marked the unveiling of the hotel’s new outdoor pool, set amid greenery with sweeping views of the sea. Sciò, the C.E.O. and creative director of Pellicano Hotels, welcomed friends, including the Tom Ford creative director Haider Ackermann and the model Edie Campbell, for a weekend of festivities. On Friday evening, a table at the hotel’s restaurant, Da Aurelio, was set with tea lights, heads of lettuce and blooming alliums for three courses of artichoke dishes, like a risotto and beef carpaccio. The party continued on Saturday with a seaside lunch of fresh rigatoni with artichokes and pecorino served from a cheese wheel, alongside a tower of Italian sweets: custard and strawberry tartlets, maritozzi filled with cream and miniature versions of torta caprese, a type of flourless chocolate cake. The festival concluded with dancing on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

Written by @mackenzieoster. Photos and videos courtesy of La Posta Vecchia; Photo 3 by @robertakrasnig.


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26
6 days ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


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32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


2.5K
32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


2.5K
32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


2.5K
32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


2.5K
32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


2.5K
32
1 weeks ago

Do you recognize these flowers?

For T’s Culture issue, the floral designer @alexwcrowder, the landscape architect Ahmad Sardar Afkhami (sardardesignstudio) and the author Stephen Orr (@steporr) weighed in on the most culturally important flora — and how to spot them.

Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @juliahalperin. Illustrations by @ryutomiyake.


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32
1 weeks ago

Jeffrey Wright (@jfreewright), one of this year’s T Culture issue cover stars, marvels at the beauty of a beloved jazz classic.

At the link in our bio, Wright shares his favorite performances, films, foods and more.

Video directed by @snakegarcia_. Edited by Megan Lovallo (@megalova).


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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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13
1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


1.4K
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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


1.4K
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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


1.4K
13
1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


1.4K
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1 weeks ago

For T’s latest issue — about everything you should know in order to be cultured — we asked four designers and a historian to weigh in on the clothes that altered the history of fashion. (Marjan Pejoski’s swan dress, which the Icelandic singer @bjork wore to the 2001 Oscars, is among them.) Tap the link in our bio to see the full list.

Written by @emiliapetrarca. Photos: Steve Granitz/A.P.; Jack Mitchell/Getty Images; Bert Stern/Condé Nast via Getty Images; Peter Simins/WWD/Penske Media via Getty Images; Guy Marineau/Condé Nast Archives


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1 weeks ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

Advantages of Anonstories

Explore IG Stories Privately

Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.


Private Instagram Viewer

View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.