Criticism

Is the Twenty-First Century a Creative Void?

Critics mourn a bygone cultural era. But nostalgia for the new isn't new.
Louise Lawler’s yellowy dye-destruction print of Warhol’s “Round Marilyn”

Searching for Seamus Heaney

What I found when I resolved to read him

James Schuyler’s Genius

Why our greatest poet of the everyday has become a poet of the moment

The Elusive Poet of Desire

Why biographers can’t pin Cavafy down

Reading the Declaration of Independence as Holy Text

How the American creed emerged—and evolved—over 250 years

Terrence Malick’s Disciples

Why the auteur is the most influential director in Hollywood

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Criticism

America the Brutal

Why The Brutalist isn’t really about architecture
February 18, 2025

The Kings of College Radio

What happened when R.E.M. went mainstream
February 5, 2025

A Miracle at the Met

Siena: The Rise of Painting brings together an astonishing group of artworks
January 15, 2025

Inheriting Impressionism

Monet and Ja’Tovia Gary among the water lilies
December 10, 2024

The Sexual Histories of Alan Hollinghurst

In Our Evenings, the novelist grapples with a divided Britain
December 10, 2024

The Surrealists Move to Mexico City

What Leonora Carrington and her peers found in their new home
December 10, 2024

Chantal Akerman’s Elusive Interiors

What the filmmaker’s portrayal of women reveals—and withholds
September 9, 2024

How Mike Kelley Became Himself

The artist’s search for subcultural America
September 9, 2024

Is Blasphemy Illiberal?

Salman Rushdie’s thoroughly modern controversies
September 9, 2024