The Clark Art Institute exhibit spotlights French prints, photos and drawings from 1840–70 steeped in the imaginary and ...
Indian weddings today are undergoing a quiet but decisive shift—from over-the-top decked up mandaps and expansive banquet ...
MIT Technology Review’s senior editor for AI shares what he’s been thinking about lately.
The Takeout on MSN
The Age-Old British Lunch Tradition That Was Actually Made Up
This famous lunch in Britain is a classic standard at homes and pubs, but it's history, and its name, is more folklore than ...
The Grammy-winning musician reflects on turning real-life band dynamics into a Tony-winning play ahead of its Playhouse ...
An aspiring novelist named David Trent is the antihero of Matthew Pearl’s newest book. Over the course of a couple years, ...
Vancouver Sun on MSN
Vancouver theatre: Kick off 2026 with these 5 must-see plays in January
After a post-Christmas breather, Vancouver theatre returns for the new year with a definite international flavour. Maybe it’s ...
Two brothers attempt to escape their father’s gangland past in a tense, tender debut that moves between Thatcher-era Northumberland and southern Spain ...
The prolific director profiles the creative forces behind the French New Wave. In partnership with Transmission Films, we ...
If you’ve read and loved Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 novel, Hamnet will be high on your new year’s viewing list. And Chloé Zhao’s ...
The Nation on MSN
Why We Keep Reading “All Quiet on the Western Front”
A new translation vividly renders the sadly evergreen influence of the Erich Maria Remarque’s World War I novel.
As vinyl sleeves grew into larger creative canvases, musicians in the 1970s increasingly turned to visionary photographers, ...
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