
Entertaining With
How to Throw a Festive Korean-Inspired Dinner Party
The designer Rejina Pyo and the store owner Alex Eagle host an artful but laid-back dinner for friends, with a menu by Pyo’s husband, the chef Jordan Bourke.
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The designer Rejina Pyo and the store owner Alex Eagle host an artful but laid-back dinner for friends, with a menu by Pyo’s husband, the chef Jordan Bourke.
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Three artists and a pair of curators came together at The New York Times to attempt to make a list of the era’s essential artworks. Here’s their conversation.

Summer brings with it a certain set of private rites and rituals. Salvatore Scibona writes about the joys of lying nude on a hot day.
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Cary Leibowitz and Simon Lince’s New York retreat brims with bright streamers, a faux fireplace by Robert Venturi — and royal commemorative mugs.
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The chef and slow-food pioneer has picked up antique cups from around the world — which now remind her of her travels.
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The filmmaker and her family gathered to cook a dinner that is a nod to their grandmother’s home city of Changchun in northern China.
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The Belgian designer shares a glimpse inside his flower-filled estate.
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The hotelier Marie-Louise Sciò’s tried-and-true pasta dish requires little more than tomatoes, basil — and a bit of technique.
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The home goods retailer John Derian fills his 18th-century beach house with unlikely novelties.
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Appointed to the role of artistic director in April, the designer pulled together a “shotgun” couture collection. T followed along before the show.
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The artist Hiroshi Sugimoto’s first architectural project in New York City is a defiant celebration of a bygone age.
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For her next act, the pop star will become the first black woman in charge of a major luxury fashion house in Paris. Here, she gives T magazine an exclusive first look.
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In 1964, her book about a decade-long affair with the legendary artist was a succès de scandale. Now, it’s back in print.
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The chef Amber Guinness, who runs the Arniano Painting School from her family’s country house in Tuscany, shares her tips for easygoing entertaining.
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We asked 15 playwrights to create original works around their visions of America in 2024. Six of them were read onscreen.


Terrence McNally’s original play “Muses of Fire,” written exclusively for T’s Culture issue.

At 80, the legendary playwright reflects on his forward-looking art.

Lynn Nottage’s original play “Submerged,” inspired by artwork by Lorna Simpson, written for T’s Culture issue.
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