Recalling his mother’s final days in Artforum’s September 1989 issue, the late critic Pier Luigi Tazzi wrote that she spoke to him “with the same cautious delicacy that two lovers might use upon discovering, joined in an embrace or immediately after, the strongest, most mysterious, and serious part of the love that unites them and reveals them and this gentleness covers all violence, as it does all pain.” Read in light of ongoing discussions around caregiving and the relational work of motherhood see Nikki Columbus’s contribution to the magazine’s Summer issue Tazzi’s intimate account of his
MOTHERHOOD IS TRENDING in the art world a renaissance, if you will, not seen since . . . well, the Renaissance. Long considered a career liability for young artists and art workers, motherhood has been embraced as a topic by women who are having children at an older age, after achieving some level of professional success as seen in recent works by Camille Henrot, Tala Madani, and Laurel Nakadate. The motif has multiplied in thematic exhibitions with such imaginative titles as “Mothering” (Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, 2021–22), “Mother!” (Louisiana Museum of Modern Art,
$1 7 million glass house in Maryland divides the internet scsuntimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scsuntimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A fun way to live in nature? Or a privacy nightmare?
The listing for a $1.7 million glass house on the banks of Maryland s Gunpowder River has polarized internet commenters and inspired plenty of jokes.
Instead of walls, the house has grids of square window panes. It s topped with a bright red roof and includes a brick silo that holds a spiral staircase.
Automated window shades can lower in just about any part of the house to offer privacy. Still, some observers find the home s see-through exterior a little weird. Those who live in glass houses . get dressed in the basement, one woman wrote on Twitter.