Highlights

  1. The T List

    Popeye the Art Icon

    Plus: a Milan hotel in a 19th-century mansion, summery, New England-inspired cushions and more recommendations from T Magazine.

    Left: Martin Wong’s “Oy! (Veh)” (1991). Right: Wong at home in San Francisco, 1980.
    Left: Martin Wong’s “Oy! (Veh)” (1991). Right: Wong at home in San Francisco, 1980.
    CreditLeft: © Martin Wong Foundation, courtesy of the Martin Wong Foundation and P·P·O·W, New York. Right: Florence Wong Fie
  1. The Artist Transforming His Studio Into a Cathedral of Color

    David Novros has spent years finessing and repainting site-specific artworks in his SoHo space.

    By

    Untitled paintings in progress at David Novros’s studio in New York’s SoHo neighborhood.
    CreditJason Schmidt
  2. Michael Heizer Measures His Art in Miles and Tons

    It took the artist half a century of toil in the most remote parts of Nevada to build what may be the most extreme contemporary monument ever made. Now what?

    By M.H. MillerDina Litovsky and

    Heizer in his apartment with 3-D printed models of rock sculptures. A picture of his dog, Tomato Rose, is behind him.
    CreditDina Litovsky
  3. An Artist of the Unimaginable

    How Michael Heizer’s massive projects have transformed the American landscape.

    By

    Michael Heizer’s artworks “Convoluted Line A” and “Convoluted Line B” installed at Gagosian gallery on West 21st Street in Manhattan.
    CreditDina Litovsky
    Letter from the Editor
  4. New York Is Getting Sleepier. These Artists Are Wide Awake.

    The city is going to bed earlier, but there are still those harnessing the creative power of the night.

    By Ligaya MishanKate GuadagninoMiguel MoralesCoco Romack and

    Jane Benson, photographed with her twins in her Manhattan home studio on Dec. 10, 2025.
    CreditRichard Barnes
  5. How Artists Beat the Blues

    Ten creative people share their strategies for thriving, or at least getting by, in difficult times.

    By

    CreditSacha Strange

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Artist’s Questionnaire

More in Artist’s Questionnaire ›
  1. James Barnor Has Photographed Ghana Since the 1940s. He Remembers Everything.

    The 96-year-old on postcolonial history, his first camera and the importance of talking to younger artists.

    By

    The photographer James Barnor at his home, within an elderly housing complex west of London.
    CreditCeline Marchbank
  2. The Artist Who Makes Clay Look Like Navels, Nipples and Vertebrae

    For more than five decades, the ceramist Magdalene Odundo has been creating abstract, time-intensive vessels that recall bodies in motion.

    By

    The British Kenyan artist Magdalene Odundo at her studio in Farnham, Surrey. Beside her is the potter’s wheel on which she hand-builds her vessels. Behind her, to the left, is the larger of her two kilns.
    CreditTami Aftab
  3. The Role of Cindy Sherman Will Be Played by Cindy Sherman

    The pioneering artist discusses working alone, finding her doppelgängers and selling her first prints for less than $50.

    By

    She also collects mannequin heads, dolls and tiaras and often uses these props as the first point of inspiration for a new series.
    CreditEmiliano Granado
  4. The Artist Who Keeps Remaking His Childhood Home

    Do Ho Suh, whose major survey exhibition in London opens this week, discusses the power of architecture and finding motivation from mistakes.

    By

    The artist Do Ho Suh in his North London studio. Behind and beside him are the spools of colorful filament and a sewing machine he uses for his “thread drawings.”
    CreditKalpesh Lathigra
  5. Inside the Former ‘Underworld’ Where Ai Weiwei Makes Art

    Ahead of his largest-ever exhibition in the U.S., the dissident artist reflects on collecting jade and living below ground.

    By

    The artist and activist Ai Weiwei in his Berlin studio, photographed behind textile samples from an in-progress work.
    CreditKathrin Tschirner
  1. How to Be Cultured

    A highly idiosyncratic compendium of what you need to know right now.

    By T Magazine

  2. Can You Acquire the @ Symbol?

    What it actually means for a museum to obtain, and then care for, an unconventional, difficult or even nontangible artwork.

    By M.H. Miller

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