THE MAGAZINE

Guest Artist: Ginevra Mastrocola, 19, Brera Academy of Fine Arts, Milan
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Guest Artist: Ginevra Mastrocola, 19, Brera Academy of Fine Arts, Milan

For Ginevra Mastrocola, art is both refuge and reckoning. In Monomania, created while still a student at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts, she stages a sparse, meditative installation that asks viewers to sit with silence, uncertainty, and the fear of creative inadequacy — revealing how vulnerability itself can become a material for making.

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Monet in Winter
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Monet in Winter

Winter was never bleak in the hands of Claude Monet. In snow-covered views of Argenteuil, Lavacourt, and the wheat fields beyond Paris, Monet found not desolation but light — soft skies, muted colour, and the quiet poetry of everyday life slowed by winter. This selection revisits how the Impressionist painter transformed cold, fleeting moments into scenes of calm and warmth.

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The Most Perfect Holiday Painting: Antoine Vollon’s “Mound of Butter”
Art Tamar Avishai Art Tamar Avishai

The Most Perfect Holiday Painting: Antoine Vollon’s “Mound of Butter”

At first glance, Antoine Vollon’s Mound of Butter seems almost absurd: an enormous, glistening heap of dairy, painted with reverence and weight. But look longer, and the still life reveals itself as something more enduring — a meditation on abundance, material pleasure, and the rituals that anchor us to season and memory. Few paintings capture the spirit of holiday indulgence with such unsentimental grace.

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Six Favorite Dance Movies in NYC *Unranked
Dance, Lifestyle Myala Callender Dance, Lifestyle Myala Callender

Six Favorite Dance Movies in NYC *Unranked

New York has long been a city where dance unfolds in studios, on stages, and in the streets. This unranked selection of six dance films — spanning ballet, musical theatre, documentary, and street styles — offers a way to revisit the city’s rhythms, tensions, and joys, and to see how movement has helped generations of New Yorkers tell their stories on screen.

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Natascha Mair, Principal Dancer, on “Sugar Hill:” “We all inspired each other!”
Dance Christina Ezrahi Dance Christina Ezrahi

Natascha Mair, Principal Dancer, on “Sugar Hill:” “We all inspired each other!”

After years of performing traditional Nutcracker roles, Natascha Mair found herself inside a very different holiday world. In Sugar Hill — a jazz-driven reimagining set in 1930s Harlem and scored to music by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn — classical ballet meets swing, hip hop, and jazz. In conversation, Mair reflects on collaboration across styles, artistic exchange, and why this Nutcracker feels less like tradition and more like discovery.

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Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn’s “The Nutcracker Suite”
Classical Music Christina Ezrahi Classical Music Christina Ezrahi

Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn’s “The Nutcracker Suite”

Holiday traditions have a way of wearing thin. In their 1960 Nutcracker Suite, Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn offered an antidote to seasonal fatigue, recasting Tchaikovsky’s familiar melodies in swing, brass, and wit. The result is not parody but reinvention — a reminder that even the most canonical works can still surprise when filtered through a different musical imagination.

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Street Artist JR at the Paris Opera: Back to the Cave
Art, Dance Christina Ezrahi Art, Dance Christina Ezrahi

Street Artist JR at the Paris Opera: Back to the Cave

While the Paris Opera undergoes restoration, JR has turned its scaffolding into something more than a temporary skin. Retour à la caverne imagines the opera house as a return to humanity’s first artistic impulse — the cave — culminating in a nocturnal performance choreographed by Damien Jalet to music by Thomas Bangalter. With dancers moving like bats beneath embroidered handprints, the project collapses distinctions between street art, ballet, ritual, and monument.

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A Ballet Dancer’s Take: On Balletcore
Dance, Lifestyle Hannah Lipman Dance, Lifestyle Hannah Lipman

A Ballet Dancer’s Take: On Balletcore

Balletcore promises satin ribbons, slick buns, and legwarmers warmed by nostalgia. But for dancers who have lived inside the studio, the aesthetic can feel strangely hollow. In this essay, former professional dancer Hannah Lipman traces the distance between ballet as fantasy and ballet as discipline, asking whether fashion’s current obsession can move beyond costume to honor the labor, rigor, and movement that define the art form itself. When brands collaborate with dancers like India Bradley of New York City Ballet, Balletcore begins to shift—from static style to something closer to lived motion.

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“X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X” at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City Shares the Transformational History of Black American Activist, Malcolm X
Classical Music Olivia Merola Classical Music Olivia Merola

“X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X” at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City Shares the Transformational History of Black American Activist, Malcolm X

Anthony Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X brings American history to the Metropolitan Opera with urgency and force. Sung in English and led by a commanding Will Liverman, the opera reframes the life of Malcolm X as a modern, politically resonant work—one that feels unmistakably of the present.

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AI as an Artifical Brush: Refik Anadol
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AI as an Artifical Brush: Refik Anadol

In AI as an Artificial Brush, Turkish-American artist Refik Anadol reimagines painting for the algorithmic age. Drawing on machine learning, memory, and data, his hypnotic works—seen at institutions like Museum of Modern Art—blur the line between human imagination and artificial “dreaming,” asking whether creativity can exist without the human hand.

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In Defense of Dogs Playing Poker
Art Tamar Avishai Art Tamar Avishai

In Defense of Dogs Playing Poker

Long dismissed as kitsch, Dogs Playing Poker has become one of the most recognisable images in American visual culture. In this sharp, good-humoured essay, Tamar Avishai revisits Cassius Marcellus Coolidge’s iconic painting A Friend in Need (1903), arguing that pleasure, accessibility, and humour have always had a place in art. Moving between connoisseurship and popular taste, the piece asks a simple question: why shouldn’t art also be allowed to amuse?

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Cloud Gate: 50 Years of Singing the Song of the Wanderers
Dance Crystal Gong Dance Crystal Gong

Cloud Gate: 50 Years of Singing the Song of the Wanderers

For half a century, Cloud Gate Dance Theatre has reshaped contemporary dance through a language rooted in Chinese philosophy and lived experience. Founded by Lin Hwai-min and now led by Cheng Tsung-lung, the company blends meditation, martial arts, and modern choreography into works of striking physical and emotional intensity. As Cloud Gate marks its 50th anniversary, this article reflects on its legacy—and its continued relevance on the global stage.

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Choreographer and Composer Olivier Tarpaga (USA/Burkina Faso): Translating Emotion to Movement
Dance Mei Protzel Dance Mei Protzel

Choreographer and Composer Olivier Tarpaga (USA/Burkina Faso): Translating Emotion to Movement

For choreographer and composer Olivier Tarpaga, dance begins not with narrative but with feeling. Drawing on experiences rooted in Burkina Faso and the United States, his work transforms global politics, memory, and trauma into visceral movement. In this TWoA profile, Tarpaga discusses translating emotion into choreography—inviting audiences to experience, rather than interpret, the human stories unfolding on stage.

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Guest Artist: Sara Cancelliere, Accademia di Brera, Milan, Italy
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Guest Artist: Sara Cancelliere, Accademia di Brera, Milan, Italy

For 18-year-old artist Sara Cancelliere, art is both a universal language and an intimate act of self-discovery. In this TWoA guest feature, Cancelliere discusses Sogni di un viaggio (2022), a mixed-media self-portrait exploring the idea of the journey—at once physical, emotional, and unconscious. Created while studying at the Accademia di Brera in Milan, the work reflects a young artist’s search for identity through memory, material, and imagination.

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Finding Magic in Music: Haruki Murakami
Classical Music Melis Seven Classical Music Melis Seven

Finding Magic in Music: Haruki Murakami

Music is one of the magical aspects of Haruki Murakami’s books, shaping their rhythm, mood, and sense of unreality. From jazz records playing in dim kitchens to classical works that unlock memory and introspection, sound becomes a narrative device as powerful as language itself. In this TWoA essay, Melis Seven traces how Murakami’s lifelong relationship with music informs his writing—blurring the boundaries between listening, dreaming, and storytelling.

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How to Become a Cello: Royal Ballet Principal Marcelino Sambé in Cathy Marston’s “The Cellist,” Royal Ballet, 20 October – 2 November 2023
Dance, Classical Music, Interviews Christina Ezrahi Dance, Classical Music, Interviews Christina Ezrahi

How to Become a Cello: Royal Ballet Principal Marcelino Sambé in Cathy Marston’s “The Cellist,” Royal Ballet, 20 October – 2 November 2023

What does it mean to dance an instrument rather than a character? In this TWoA interview, Marcelino Sambé discusses creating the role of “The Instrument” in The Royal Ballet’s The Cellist, choreographed by Cathy Marston. Reflecting on loss, embodiment, and musical intimacy, Sambé reveals how movement, sound, and emotion merge in this haunting tribute to cellist Jacqueline du Pré.

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Listen to Jacqueline du Pré!
Classical Music Christina Ezrahi Classical Music Christina Ezrahi

Listen to Jacqueline du Pré!

Few musicians have left a mark as indelible as Jacqueline du Pré. In this TWoA listening feature, Christina Ezrahi revisits du Pré’s iconic interpretation of Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E minor, conducted by Daniel Barenboim. Instinctive, emotionally raw, and deeply human, the performance captures the essence of an artist whose playing continues to move listeners decades on.

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Happy Birthday, Pablo Picasso!
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Happy Birthday, Pablo Picasso!

Few artists have shaped modern art as profoundly as Pablo Picasso. In this TWoA birthday feature, Melis Seven looks beyond the familiar masterpieces to uncover five lesser-known facts—from Picasso’s precocious childhood to his role in reinventing painting, sculpture, and modern visual language. A concise celebration of an artist whose influence remains impossible to escape.

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